Instructor Price was in New York in 1917 when she taught art to children who attended public schools at the Neighborhood Art School of
Greenwich House. The program was funded by Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney to teach children painting, drawing, pottery, wood carving, and sculpting. In the winter of 1919–1920, Price exhibited the children's work, as part of an art education campaign with other schools, at the suggestion of
Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh.
Works Inspired by the painters from
Siena and
Florence during the
Italian Renaissance, "Her work combines a Sienese delicacy of line with a modern freedom in the use of color," wrote a
New York Times critic. Examples of such work, including
Mallows (1929) and
Delphinium Pattern (ca. 1933), were included in ''The Painterly Voice: Bucks County's Fertile Ground
, a 2011 exhibition of the James A. Michener Art Museum. She also painted landscapes, genre scenes, and ships, including a unique series of Spanish treasure ships. One of her floral paintings, made of a Marsh Mallow, was appraised at $40,000 to $60,000 by Robin Starr on the PBS Antiques Roadshow'' in 2011. She created murals of 18th and 19th-century needlework samplers in 1931 with Lucille Howard, who she shared a studio and was also a member of the
Philadelphia Ten. The murals were made for the clubhouse of the American Woman's Association in New York at 353 West 57th Street.
Exhibitions She exhibited her works in 1914 at the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and in Washington, D.C. at the
Corcoran Gallery of Art Biennial. She continued to exhibit at the Pennsylvania Academy annually for most years between 1917 and 1943.
Membership As an early member of the
Philadelphia Ten, a group of women artists begun in 1921, she organized exhibits and participated in solo and group shows in many galleries in
New York City,
Philadelphia and
Washington, D.C., including
Grand Central Art Galleries, the
Whitney Museum of American Art, the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the Corcoran Gallery of Art and the National Academy of Design. She was also a member of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts fellowship, American Woman's Association,
American Artists Professional League, the Art Alliance of Philadelphia, Allied Artists of America, Fine Arts Society of Arkansas, Phillips Mill Community Art Association, and
The Plastic Club. ==Price family==