'', 1875,
Independence National Historical Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Janvier, who studied and worked under the name Catherine Ann Drinker, studied art at the Maryland Institute with Adolf van der Whelan. In 1865, Janvier and the other Drinker children moved to their cousin Ann Elmslie's house in Philadelphia at 1906 Pine Street. Cathrine Drinker took classes at the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where she studied under
Thomas Eakins. A life drawing class was established for women at the school in 1868.
Ida Waugh and
Emily Sartain were among her fellow students. Janvier taught art at Miss Sanford's School in 1870 and through private lessons. One of her private students was
Cecilia Beaux, with whom she had much in common and became good friends. Cecilia's sister, Aimée Ernesta Beaux, married Henry Sturgis Drinker, Janvier's brother. From 1873 to 1874, she ran Francis Adolf Van der Wielen's school, and Beaux was her student at that time. In the mid 1870s she studied under
Thomas Eakins at the Pennsylvania Academy. In New York, she studied at the
Art Students League. Aside from teaching, Janvier also created marketable paintings of people, still-life, and genre scenes that sold for about $300 () each painting in New York City. The paintings of
Geoffrey Rudel and the Countess of Tripoli (1870),
James Madison (1875),
Daniel at Prayer (1876) and the lithograph
Blessed Are the Meek (1871), all helped to develop her reputation as an artist.
Geoffrey Rudel and the Countess of Tripoli was exhibited at the
Union League of Philadelphia and
James Madison was purchased by the city of Philadelphia and is now in the collection of the
Independence National Historical Park. She exhibited her works of art at PAFA from 1876 to the mid-1880s. Drinker won the
Mary Smith Prize in 1880 for
The Guitar Player, which in 1922 was among the collection of the Neighborhood Guild at
Peace Dale, Rhode Island. At the age of 27, she was the first woman to teach at the academy in 1878. Janviers gave lectures about perspective and wrote the book
Lessons in Perspective. ==Marriage==