Celia Levetus
Celia Levetus | |
---|---|
![]() Celia Levetus in 1900 | |
Born | Celia Levetus 1874 |
Died | 1936 |
Alma mater | Birmingham School of Art |
Known for | Illustrations |
Movement | Birmingham School |
Celia Levetusalso known asC. A. NicholsonandDiana Forbes(1874-1936) was a Canadian-English author, poet and illustrator of theBirmingham School.
Biography[edit]
Celia Levetus was born in 1874 to English parents living in Montreal. Her father worked in the silverware business and was also a professional singer. Her aunt, Amelia S. Levetus, was an art critic who wrote forThe Studio.In 1878 the Levetus family moved back to England, first living inLondonand then inEdgbaston.Levetus attended theBirmingham School of Art,where she was taught byWalter Crane.[1]
Influenced by Crane as well asWilliam Morris,[2]Levetus became associated with the Birmingham school of illustrators. She illustrated books, designedbookplatesand greeting cards, and contributed to periodicals such as theEnglish Illustrated MagazineandThe Yellow Book.[1]She exhibited her work at venues such as theWalker Art Gallery,theManchester Art Gallery,and the annual exhibition of the Ex Libris Society.[3]
Her most notable work is a series of illustrations for a collection of Turkish fairy tales collected byIgnác Kúnosand translated byRobert Nisbet Bain.[2]In 1895, she contributed toA Book of Nursery Rhymesalong with other Birmingham School illustrators.[1]She also illustratedVerse Fancies,a volume of poems published by her brother, Edward Lewis Levetus, in 1897; a miniature edition ofWilliam Blake'sSongs of Innocence(Wells Gardner & Company,1899); and a full-sized edition of hisSongs of Experience(1902).[4]
After marrying Eric Pearson Nicholson in 1902, she stopped illustrating professionally. She wrote several novels and a volume of poetry (The Comfort-Lady and Other Poems,1911) under the pen names C. A. Nicholson and Diana Forbes. She died in 1936.[1]
Gallery[edit]
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"Aleodor and the Emperor,"Turkish Fairy Tales,1896
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"Boy-Beautiful and His Faithful Servant,"Turkish Fairy Tales,1896
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"Sybil,"Verse Fancies,1897
References[edit]
Citations[edit]
- ^abcdWomen Painters and Illustrators.
- ^abZon 2017,p. 134.
- ^Ex Libris Society 1898,p. 108.
- ^Bromhead 1900,p. 237.
Bibliography[edit]
- Speel, Bob."Celia Levetus (1874-1936)".Women Painters and Illustrators.
- "Modern Book-Plate Designers: No. 14, Miss Celia Levetus".Journal of the Ex Libris Society:108–112. 1898.
- Bromhead, H. W. (1900)."An Illustrator of Blake".The Art Journal.62:237–239.
- Zon, Bennett (2017).Music and Orientalism in the British Empire, 1780s-1940s.Routledge. p. 134.ISBN9781351557597.
External links[edit]
- Kúnos, Ignácz (1896).Turkish Fairy Tales and Folk Tales.Translated by Bain, R. Nisbet. A. H. Bullen.
- Manuscript pictorial border by Celia Levetusheld at University of Birmingham
- 1874 births
- 1936 deaths
- Artists from Montreal
- Writers from Birmingham, West Midlands
- Artists from Birmingham, West Midlands
- English illustrators
- Canadian illustrators
- British women illustrators
- Canadian women illustrators
- Arts and Crafts movement
- Alumni of the Birmingham School of Art
- Canadian people of English descent