ARTISTS AND ILLUSTRATIONS his day, and his books boast the talents of such artists as Frederic Remington, Rufus Zogbaum, Gilbert Gaul, AF Harmer, EW Deming, violet oakley, Charles Post http://www.bbhc.org/charlesKing/KingandArtists.html
Extractions: ARTISTS AND ILLUSTRATIONS A special feature of the Novel Adventures exhibit is attention to the illustrations within Charles King's books. King was a popular writer in his day, and his books boast the talents of such artists as Frederic Remington, Rufus Zogbaum, Gilbert Gaul, A.F. Harmer, E.W. Deming, Violet Oakley, Charles Post, and many others. King's writing style was both detail-oriented and dramatic, with vivid descriptions of crucial scenes. The artists took full advantage of both King's drama and his realism, resulting in many illustrations that can be matched with particular sections of King's texts. The artists listed below are featured in the Novel Adventures : The Life and Writing of General Charles King exhibit.While this is not a comprehensive list of all artists who illustrated King's works, it does include most major artists associated with his books Connell, E.M. (Unidentified artist)
Drexel Digest Approved under the authority of Philip Terranova, Vice President for University Relations. Art Historian to Lecture on Golden Age Illustrator violet oakley. http://www.drexel.edu/univrel/digest/archive/110503/
Extractions: Drexel faculty and staff are invited to take a break at the Benefits Fair today, November 5, 2003, from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. in Mandell Theater lobby in the Creese Student Union Complex (33rd and Chestnut Streets). Talk with representatives from Drexel's benefit plans while doing some holiday shopping at the Atrium Book and Gift Fair, enjoying a free chair massage, entering the raffle for extravagant mystery prizes, learning about Global Fit Health Club discounts or being screened for skin cancer. For more information, visit http://www.drexel.edu/hr/ or http://www.drexel.edu/admin/hr_hs/
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Violet Oakley / Arthur Phillips & Loraine Oakley / Benjamin Thorp Boniface Episcopal Church at 10 o clock Tuesday morning when Miss violet oakley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George oakley, was united in marriage to Arthur http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~calumet/mar126.htm
Extractions: This page is part of the site located at http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~sheboygan/ There is no charge or fee to access this site or any information on it. If you have arrived here from somewhere else, such as a pay site, and are in a frame, you can click the above url to access this page directly. This marriage was contributed by: Bev Oakley
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Ancestry.com - Biographical Cyclopedia Of U.S. Women oakley, violet, artist, daughter of Arthur Edmund and Cornelia Swain oakley, was born near New York City. Her grandfathers, George http://search.ancestry.com/db-bcaw/P177.aspx
Extractions: Login Subscribe Help? You are here: Search Biographical Cyclopedia of U.S. Women Results Biographical Cyclopedia of U.S. Women Viewing records of total records Global Search Results When she returned to her own state from these expeditions, she received a distinguished ovation and lectured before large audiences where she made a deep impression by reason of her remarkable personality, which is immediately felt by all who come in touch with her. Her ever fresh enthusiasm is shown in her sparkling descriptions of the starry sky. Miss Cannon is no blue-stocking, but a most human sort of scientist, on the best of terms with all around her. None better than she can popularize Astronomy, as is shown by the part she plays in the receptions at the Harvard Observatory, and at the exhibition evenings of the American Astronomical Society. The editors are indebted for the sketch of Miss Cannon to Sarah F. Whiting, Professor Emeritus of Physics and Astronomy, Wellesley College. Miss Whiting was a pioneer of women in science: the first woman admitted as a guest to the physical laboratories of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; the first woman to develop in a college of major rank a department of Physics, in which she introduced the laboratory method, and a department of Astronomy, in which regular daytime observations were made. Miss Cannon says that she chose the subject of stellar spectra at Harvard because her study at Wellesley College under Professor Whiting had made her intensely interested in spectrum analysis.
Extractions: Newark, Delaware 19717-5267 Biographical Note American artist Howard Pyle (1853-1911), who founded the Brandywine School of Art, was one of the pre-eminent illustrators of his time. He also maintained a successful painting and teaching career. Pyle taught at Drexel Institute in Philadelphia, at the Art Institute in Chicago, and at the Art Student League in New York. In 1898 with financial backing from Drexel Institute, Pyle founded a summer art school at Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania; the summer school proved successful and continued until 1903. In 1900 Pyle resigned his position at Drexel and founded the Howard Pyle School of Art in Wilmington. After his death many of his students worked tirelessly to collect much of his work into a repository, which ultimately became the Delaware Art Museum in Wilmington, Delaware. Pyle's students were some of the most renowned American artists of the golden age of American illustration. Stanley Arthurs, Elizabeth Shippen Green Elliott, Gayle Hoskins, William H.D. Koerner, Thornton Oakley, Violet Oakley, Katharine Pyle, N. C. Wyeth, Maxfield Parrish, Henry J. Peck, Frank Schoonover, and Jessie Wilcox Smith were among the cadre of his famous students who created images that became part of the popular culture of the early twentieth century.
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Extractions: Dates: 1904-1956 Series I, Correspondence, is organized into five subseries: Henrietta Cozens, Elizabeth Shippen Green Elliott, Violet Oakley, Jessie Willcox Smith, and Other People. Some subseries are organized into Incoming and Outgoing, as appropriate. Box Folder Contents Date HENRIETTA COZENS: OUTGOING Smith, Jessie Willcox , Maxine 1935 Sep 23 HENRIETTA COZENS: INCOMING n.d. Binney, Isabelle N. Cozens, Delia Includes letter to Ellen Cozens, n.y. Aug 14. 1904-1908, n.d. Cozens, Will Elliott, Huger Some letters also addressed to Jessie Willcox Smith. Emerson, Edith Some letters also addressed to Jessie Willcox Smith. Letter dated 1927 Nov 2 encloses copy of letter from Violet Oakley to Emerson, 1927 Oct 26. Evans, Susan
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