Though Whitfield received
undergraduate instruction in education and worked for several years as both a schoolteacher and a
principal, her struggles with
rheumatoid arthritis forced her to leave the profession in the early 1900s. She began
watercolor painting in the 1930s and became well known in the Arkansas area for her accurate depictions of native plant life. In 1935, she appeared in a publication about female leaders titled
American Women. The Whitfield-Bliss School for Girls, sometimes listed as the Mount Morris Park School, operated as a girls'
boarding and
day school from 1896 until 1901 at 41. W. 124th St. in
Harlem, Manhattan. The
row house had previously served as a private residence and would eventually serve as a community meeting house for several decades once the school was closed. The school was successful until Inez's arthritis forced them to close in 1901 as she sought treatment outside of the state of New York. As of 2022 the building still stands, now known as the Antioch Church of God.
Artist In the 1930s, Inez began the project that would soon become her life's passion: painting the native wildflowers of Arkansas. By the time she died in 1951, she had painted more than five hundred original
watercolor paintings of wildflowers, organized according to location and blooming season. She traversed the area's many hiking trails in her wheelchair to collect the perfect flowers to paint, eventually becoming so well known that strangers would bring her plants from all over the state that they thought were particularly excellent specimens. She had an especially good relationship with many of the local
Boy and
Girl Scouts, who would happily help her scavenge for the best example of a particular flower. Whitfield replanted nearly all of the flowers she used as references as soon as she was done with them. In her lifetime, Whitfield exhibited her watercolor paintings at the
Rockefeller Center, the gallery at the Garden of Nations, the
University of Colorado in
Boulder, and the Hot Springs Fine Arts Center. She was given a posthumous solo exhibition at the latter in 1986 as part of Arkansas'
Sesquicentennial Celebration. == Collections ==