Miriam Tindall in Russian-inspired costume for a student production, from a 1924 publication
Born
Miriam Pauline Tindall
1901
Norwood, Pennsylvania
Died
January 13, 1973
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Occupation
Artist
Miriam Pauline Tindall Smith (1901 – January 13, 1973) was an American artist, based in Philadelphia. She made paintings, murals, sculptures, and costume designs.
Smith was a painter active mainly in Philadelphia in the 1930s and 1940s.[7][8] She was known for her murals, including scenic murals inside the Empire State Express rail cars,[9] and a mural for the 1939 New York World's Fair, depicting "the triumph of asbestos over the elements".[10] Also in 1939, she finished a large mural depicting the Sermon on the Mount and other Gospel scenes, in the sanctuary of the Immanuel Lutheran Church in Norwood, as a memorial for her mother.[11][12] She also designed theatrical costumes[4] and masks.[13][14][15] She worked for the Public Works Administration during the 1930s.[16]
Smith and her husband were active in the alumni organization for the Pennsylvania Museum School of Industrial Art.[3] In 1955, Smith had a solo show at the Allentown Art Museum.[17]
Personal life and legacy
Miriam Tindall married fellow artist William Singerly Smith in 1926. She died in 1973, in her seventies.[18] In 2019, Immanuel Lutheran Church in Norwood held a celebration and re-dedication, marking the 80th anniversary of her mural there.[19]
References
^Chester High School, Our 1919 Annual (1919 yearbook): 49. via Ancestry