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  1. Description. Photograph of a half-length portrait of Princess Louise seated facing right, her face captured in profile. She holds a book in her left hand. She wears a pearl necklace, pearl drop earrings, a light colour dress and a dark colour cardigan. A vase of flowers features on the left hand side of the photograph.

  2. Princess Louise Dionaldo is on Facebook. Join Facebook to connect with Princess Louise Dionaldo and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to share and makes the world more open and...

  3. 1 de abr. de 2019 · In part 5 of our series on Princess Louise, the daughter of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, Ann Galliard explores the friendship between the princess and the sculptor Joseph Edgar Boehm - a friendship frowned upon in some quarters. The professional status of artists changed significantly after the 1860s. Previously, very few artists had the ...

  4. 12 de ago. de 2016 · Louise studied sculpting under Joseph Edgar Boehm. Her self-portrait bust conveys both technical mastery and interpretive depth. She presents herself in conventional dress and hairstyle. Her gaze, though, is direct and detached, even skeptical—the opposite of demure. Rumors circulated about the unconventional princess.

  5. Louise’s marriage to the Marquess of Lorne was arranged by her mother in an attempt to bring her free-spirited daughter into line. Although arranged, and despite Lorne’s probable homosexuality, the marriage was initially happy, but by the 1880s the couple were spending increasing amounts of time living separate lives, and Louise was devoting more time to her art.

  6. Signature. Louise Alexandra Marie Irene Mountbatten (born Princess Louise of Battenberg; 13 July 1889 – 7 March 1965) was Queen of Sweden from 29 October 1950 until her death in 1965 as the wife of King Gustaf VI Adolf. Born a princess of the German House of Battenberg, Louise was closely related to the ruling families of Britain as a great ...

  7. 30 de mar. de 2020 · Princess Louise continued her sculpture work into her latter years, and in 1902, designed a memorial to the colonial soldiers who had fallen in the Boer War. It can now be seen in the South Transept of St Paul’s Cathedral. Later that year, she began a nude study on a married woman suggested by the English painter, Sir William Blake Richmond.