Artist, Wife, Mother
Ardath was born November of 1935 in Kalamazoo, Michigan and spent her formative
years moving around the states with her mother and sisters, Anne and Beth, for their father’s
News Editor jobs. The girls went to schools in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Texas. They were in
Sweetwater, Texas during WWII while their father, Louis, covered stories in the Pacific and
mother, Francille, served as a Red Cross supervisor.
Ardath graduated from Sioux City Highschool in Iowa where she enjoyed being a gifted
piano accompanist, flute player, singer, and beautiful Homecoming Queen. She studied
Journalism and Art for three years at Morningside College with a summer term at Cranbrook Art
Academy. While chaperoning her sister Beth in San Francisco, Ardath met the love of her life, a
young Navy Officer out of the Annapolis Academy, Earl Hill. They were married in Sioux City on
Earl’s Thanksgiving leave, and moved to California, where their first son Bruce was born.
Earl left the navy for a Research Engineer position with MIT, just in time for the start of
MITRE corporation in Massachusetts where their daughter Molly was born. Between
assignments from the east coast to NORAD in Colorado, their daughter Rebecca was born near
Ardath’s parents home in Iowa. Their final child, Douglas was born in Colorado Springs.
In March of 1964, the whole family moved to Paris, France while Earl worked for NATO
for three years. While in Europe the family took many trips in their VW Van camping and touring
famous sites and ski areas. Ardath took French art classes and painted several works of the
sights there.
In 1967 they returned to the States on a final trip of the USS United States and settled in
the Stone Haven Community of Annandale, Virginia. Ardath was a constant tutor, great family
cook, soccer-basketball-swim team mom, and a fabulous Girl Scout Leader. She even took time
to be Lake Braddock HS’s first Yearbook editor, and was always volunteering her talents. While
Ardath was on the run with the four kids’ activities, she still made time to sing with the First
Presbyterian Church of Annandale. She was the cool mom that would allow extended sleep
overs and the greatest Halloween parties. Ardath was one of the first Furniture Up-Cyclers and
adopted and refinished many gorgeous antiques to adorn their home.
Once the kids were in High School, Ardath went back to school at NOVA, and received
an AAS degree in Commercial Art. She worked for Impact Communications in the late 1970s,
creating incredibly mod and edgy advertising works of art. From 1981 to 1983 she was able to
golf and study new art forms in Hawaii where Earl had taken an assignment in the Pacific
Command Center.
Back in Virginia from 1983 till 2016, she concentrated on fine arts with a focus on
figurative paintings. Ardath received at least 46 Awards and Distinctions for fine sketches,
paintings and multi-media art from the Springfield, Stamford, Capital Hill, The Art League, and
many other Art Associations. She had studios in The Torpedo Factory and Artemisia of Old
Town Alexandria, where some of her art was sold before it could even be hung for shows. She
had many Solo and Curated Ensemble Shows in the Washington DC and Ocean City, Maryland
areas.
As a member of many Art Leagues, she kept busy as a judge, curator, docent, and
moderator of many art classes. Unfortunately, in 2016 her hands became numb and she had to
give up creating the art she loved. Ardath blamed the chemicals she used in refinishing furniture
and painting. She wrote her own partial obituary to urge all her artist friends to “sell all your
works while you are still able to”.
Ardath suffered from Alzheimer’s and passed October 12, 2021. She is survived by her
husband of 66 years, Earl, their children Bruce, Molly, Becky and Doug and their respective
families, with seven grandchildren, and two great grand-babies. A Celebration of Life Ceremony
is being planned for the Spring of 2022, and an eventual interning of ashes at the Naval
Academy.
Fond memories and testimonials are being stored and encouraged on the Demaine Fairfax
Funeral Home website. Any organization or friends wishing to have some of Ardath’s works of
art should contact Becky at [email protected].
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