Born in Montclair, New Jersey in 1927, Dodd went on to study art at The Cooper Union in NYC where she became an integral part of the Tenth Street Modernist group and a key founding member of the artist coop Tanager Gallery. Although she frequently exhibited her work from the early 1950s on, it was not until 2012 that she had her first major solo exhibition in the United States at the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art. The country was slow to recognize the quiet power of her distilled imagery, all based on direct observation.
Like many other female artists, Dodd balanced her art-making with motherhood and a teaching career at Brooklyn College and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine. She was married to sculptor Bill King. Her son Ely was born in 1952, the same year she began exhibiting her work. When Dodd divorced King, she faced the future with tenacity and a commitment to her life as an artist. In 1959, she joined with two other artist-mothers, printmaker Eleanor Magid and the late Louise Kruger, to buy a rowhouse together in the East Village, each taking a floor for themselves. They all had young children of the same age. Their story is the subject of a new film, Artists in Residence, which had its world premiere on November 14th, 2025 in New York as part of the DOC NYC film festival.












![DEl Kathryn Barton [Australian b. 1972] the more than human love , 2025 Acrylic on French linen 78 3/4 x 137 3/4 inches 200 x 350 cm Framed dimensions: 79 7/8 x 139 inches 203 x 353 cm](/sites/default/files/styles/image_5_column/public/ab15211bartonthe-more-human-lovelg.jpg?itok=wW_Qrve3)


