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grantwood001
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Grant Wood print published in his lifetime Stone City
18 1/2inch X 24 1/4inch print of rural scene by Grant Wood mounted on artist board. Printed by Raymond and Raymond Inc. in 1937-38. These prints were authorized by Joslyn Art Museum alone.The print is dark with some insect damage near lower left, otherwise fine. It is marked with a CRR in a circle in lower left, probably indicating Raymond & Raymond Company or Copyright. Somewhat unreadable on lower right margin is [Copyright Raymond & Raymond]. Label on reverse is typewritten [Grant Wood, Stone City]. These prints are scarce and very collectable.
Condition: Used
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sow001
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pair of Millicent Sowerby prints in original oak frames
12 1/4inch X 14 1/4inch matched quartersawn oak Arts & Crafts style frames containing 6inch X 8inch original prints, one signed, by Milicent Sowerby, labeled on reverse, Kahn's Art Gallery, Easton, PA, each in very fine condition Millicent Sowerby was born in Northumberland, England, the daughter of designer and illustrator John G. Sowerby. When Sowerby was young, her father wrote and illustrated books for children, copying the style of Kate Greenaway, later turning to landscapes. In an attempt to help their family’s finances, Sowerby and her sister Githa collaborated on children’s books. Githa wrote the stories and verses while Sowerby illustrated them for over twenty years. Sowerby was also a prolific illustrator of children’s picture post cards, depicting scenes from Shakespeare, and Kate Greenaway type girls. Later, she designed thirty sets of cards for a yearly series called ‘Postcards for the Little Ones’.
When Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland went out of copyright in 1907, like other illustrators, Sowerby was commissioned to illustrate it
Well into her eighties, Sowerby remained a watercolorist and painted flowers.
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