Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 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.

  2. British artist Elizabeth Keith traveled to East Asian and Southeast Asian countries and depicted the people and culture therein in the early 20th century. She is one of the few Western artists whose oeuvre consists of artworks with Asian subjects only.

    • Elizabeth Keith1
    • Elizabeth Keith2
    • Elizabeth Keith3
    • Elizabeth Keith4
    • Elizabeth Keith5
  3. The Scottish artist Elizabeth Keith was among only a handful of foreign visitors to Korea in the early twentieth century. She journeyed to the Diamond Mountains during her stay in the 1920s and wrote of her experience: “I would not have missed the grandeur for all the danger.

  4. Elizabeth Keith | Artist | Ronin Gallery. Home. - Artists. - Keith, Elizabeth (1887 - 1956 ) 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.

  5. www.artnet.com › artists › elizabeth-keithElizabeth Keith | Artnet

    Elizabeth Keith was a Scottish printmaker and watercolorist. View Elizabeth Keith’s artworks on artnet. Learn about the artist and find an in-depth biography, exhibitions, original artworks, the latest news, and sold auction prices.

    • British
  6. 7 de abr. de 2013 · Elizabeth Keith – The Printed Works. Elizabeth Keith catalogue raisonné. This book contains contains a short biography of her life and shows 108 of Elizabeth Keiths known prints presented in sections for China, Korea, the Philippines, Malacca and Singapore and Japan.

  7. 15 de jun. de 2018 · Elizabeth Keith. Woodblock prints. Democracy of art. Colonial Korea. Introduction. “I want the democracy of the arts established,” declared William Morris in his lecture on the decorative arts at Oxford in 1883.