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  1. 28 de ago. de 2015 · Richard Miles' catalog, "Elizabeth Keith: The Printed Works," Pacific Asia Museum (1991), was produced in conjunction with a similarly-titled exhibition held at the Pacific Asia Museum in Pasadena, California that ran from October 1991 through February 1992. At the time, it was a seminal catalog, illustrating 108 of Keith's woodblock prints and ...

  2. 31 de may. de 2020 · Elizabeth Keith, Korean Scholar 1921, woodblock print, 45× 31.7cm. Freer and Sackler Galleries, Washington, D.C. (artwork in the public domain; photograph provided by Google Arts & Culture)

  3. Keith, Elizabeth. Elizabeth Keith was born in Aberdeenshire Scotland, but lived in England for most of her life. In 1915, she traveled to Japan to visit her younger sister and stayed for nine years. During this time, Keith traveled to Korea, China and throughout Japan. In 1919, she exhibited her watercolors of Korea in Tokyo, which caught the ...

  4. 1 de jul. de 2001 · Elizabeth Keith, a self-taught artist specializing in watercolors and drawings, later ventured into the Japanese technique of woodblock printmaking. Her artistic journey took a pivotal turn when her sister married a publisher in Japan, significantly influencing the trajectory of Keith's career and contributing to the artist she is recognized as today.

  5. Elizabeth Keith (30 April 1887 – 1956) was a Scottish artist and writer. She was a print-maker and watercolorist whose works were significantly influenced by her travels to Japan, China, Korea and the Philippines. View full wikipedia entry. This biography is from Wikipedia under an Attribution-ShareAlike Creative Commons License.

  6. 엘리자베스 키스(Elizabeth Keith, 1887년 ~ 1956년)는 동북아시아, 동아시아의 풍속을 소재로 다양한 목판화를 남긴 영국의 여성 판화작가이다. 생애 [ 편집 ] 1887년 스코틀랜드 의 에버딘셔에서 태어나 [1] [2] 1898년 에 런던 으로 이사했다.

  7. Born in the Scottish town of Aberdeenshire, Elizabeth Keith traveled to Japan in 1915, the beginning of a nine-year stay in a number of Asian countries. She found herself deeply attracted to Asia’s beauty and culture. Keith visited Korea several times starting in 1919 and worked on watercolor paintings of the Korean culture and daily lives.