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  1. 7 de abr. de 2013 · Elizabeth Keith catalogue raisonné.This book contains contains a short biography of her life and shows 108 of Elizabeth Keith’s known prints presented in sections for China, Korea, the Philippines, Malacca and Singapore and Japan.

  2. 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.

  3. primary name:Keith, Elizabeth. Details. individual; printmaker; British; Female. Life dates. 1887-1956. Biography. Landscape and figure artist working in watercolours and woodcuts. Born in Scotland and was self-taught. Visited Japan in 1915, where her sister had married an English publisher living in Tokyo, and remained in the Far East for nine ...

  4. Elizabeth KEITH. Japanese Children of Yesterday is a color woodcut created in 1925 by Elizabeth Keith. An alternate title is Two Little Girls Playing Ball. It is pencil signed within the image in the lower right. Japanese Children of Yesterday was printed by Watanabe on Japanese laid hosho. The edition was projected at 100 but never completed.

  5. Biography. Elizabeth Keith, watercolorist, illustrator, and printmaker, was born in Aberdeenshire, Scotland on 30 April 1887. When her family moved to London, she grew increasingly distant, choosing to spend her time drawing. Despite her lack of formal art education, she developed into a talented watercolorist and began cultivating an interest ...

  6. by Elizabeth Keith Designs. $188. Elizabeth Keith Designs was created to bring smiles to gardens around the world. The creators of this unique and beautiful home and garden pieces offer an extensive line that will inspire, calm, and delight your senses. Each face is cast from cement and the metal which is 14 gauge steel comes with a rusted patina.

  7. 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. Sometimes a mountain-top would appear like the dome of a great ...