Dressler
Smith is a painter and pastel colorist who favors tranquil landscapes and
ethnic images, crediting the inspiration of her art to "the beauty of
things created by God and not by man." She captures that beauty in a
way which invokes both awe and reverence, and is designed to touch the
human spirit.
Many of her works focus on landscapes of sunrises, morning
light and morning skies which, for her, symbolize new beginnings. She
has chosen pastel as her primary medium because of its vibrancy. The
clean, rich colors of pure pigment, combined with her affinity for nature
and all things spiritual, result in landscapes filled with peace and
tranquility, and a place to start anew.
In addition to her work as a painter, Dressler is developing recognition as an artist in designing stained glass windows. A sample of her stained glass designs, Sunday Morning, created for St. John Baptist Church in East Camden, NJ, is available on this site. Currently, she is designing stained glass windows for the First Nazarene Baptist Church in Camden, NJ, and for the Asbury United Methodist Church in Woodlynne, NJ.
Dressler
dreamed of becoming a professional artist from the time she was a small
child. After attending art classes in the Philadelphia Art Museum, Fleisher's Art Memorial and the Hussian School of Art, she received her B.F.A. from Moore College of Art in 1980. Currently,
this remarkable painter continues to pursue her passion for artistic
expression while sharing lessons learned with others as an adjunct faculty
member at Camden County College and through artist in residence programs in New Jersey.
Residing in southern New Jersey, Dressler is represented by Artworks Gallery in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Her
work has been exhibited by Johnson & Johnson, Dow Jones and the New
York City Port Authority, as well
as the Franklin Institute Science Museum and the Footsteps Gallery in
Philadelphia. Additional pieces are in the private collections of a
number of corporations, including Blue Cross / Blue Shield of Pennsylvania,
Verizon Telephone and Rutgers University. She continues to participate actively in art shows, including the current 30th anniversary exhibit, “Silent Voices, Loud Echoes,” at the African American Museum of Philadelphia, which will be open to the public through December, 2006.
Among her recent accomplishments, the Campbell Soup Foundation commissioned Dressler during 2004 to create a
4’ x 9’ Tryptic commemorating 30 years of summer programs
for children. Also through the Campbell Soup Foundation, she donated
a paper quilt done with school children in Camden, NJ.
Dressler was selected to create "The Future of Camden,"
as one section of a three-part mural for Camden's newly restored City
Council chambers. The completed panels — each 17 ft. tall by 6.5
ft. wide — are the primary focal point of the room, which was
rededicated on April 2, 2003.

During 2001, Dressler was selected to create an original work, “Transformation,”specifically for the Executive Leadership Conference ; a copy of the painting was given to
each attendee at their annual banquet in Washington, D.C. She was also a featured artist in the May, 2001, edition of
Essence Magazine.
Dressler
has continually given back to the communities that have provided her
with a rich source of inspiration. In recent years, she donated one
of her pieces to Paine College, a historically black college in Augusta,
GA. In October, 2000, Dressler was the featured artist for the Arthritis
Foundation's South Jersey Art Show. A portion of her proceeds from the
show were donated to benefit the foundation's research and quality of
life program. And her magnificent
series of 21 stained glass windows, titled "Sunday
Morning," was a gift to her church.
In prior
years, she received the Applause Award from the Markheim Art Center
in Haddonfield, NJ, for her achievements in visual art. Additional awards
include the 1993 Candace Award from the Coalition of 100 Black Women
and, in 1996, the Chisholm Award for achievement in art from the Philadelphia
Congress of the National Political Congress of Black Women. In 1995,
she designed the cover for the Days of Hope Calendar sponsored by Core
States Bank, for which they received the Pepper Pot Award.
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