Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Elizabeth Corbet Yeats (11 March 1868 – 16 January 1940), known as Lolly, was an Irish educator and publisher. She worked as an art teacher and published several books on art, and was a founder of Dun Emer Press which published several works by her brother W. B. Yeats.

  2. 28 de mar. de 2022 · In 1908 the sisters decided to take their part of the business and formed the Cuala Industries in nearby Churchtown. Elizabeth Yeats had initially begun her career working with William Morris, founder of the Kelmscott Press, and Cuala took inspiration from Morris’s Arts and Crafts movement.

  3. Their Story. In the summer of 1902, Susan and Elizabeth Yeats, along with their father, John B Yeats, moved to Churchtown in county Dublin, so beginning a forty-year period of prodigious creativity, enterprise, and consequent acclaim.

  4. Susan and Elizabeth Yeats, fondly known within the family as ‘Lily & Lollie’, respectively, were notable artists, skilled crafts people and courageous cultural and entrepreneurial innovators, who advanced the emancipation of women through training and education.

  5. 18 de mar. de 2023 · Susan Mary Yeats and Elizabeth Corbet Yeats, born in 1866 and 1868, were sandwiched in their talented family between poet William Butler Yeats and painter Jack.

    • Deirdre Falvey
  6. But what of their sisters, the forgotten Yeats women? Sisters Elizabeth and Lily Yeats share a fleeting derogatory reference in James Joyce's Ulysses where they are labelled the "weird...

  7. 25 de jun. de 2022 · Sisters Elizabeth and Lily Yeats share a fleeting derogatory reference in James Joyce's Ulysses where they are labelled the "weird sisters".