Dorothy Lake Gregory

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dorothy_Lake_Gregory an entity of type: Thing

Dorothy Lake Gregory (1893–1975) was an American artist best known for her work as a printmaker and illustrator of children's books. She took art classes in public school and at the age of fourteen began making drawings for a New York newspaper. She studied art in Paris in her late teens and thereafter took classes at Pratt Institute, the Art Students League of New York, and the Cape Cod School of Art. Her career as a professional artist began with her participation in an exhibition of paintings at the Art Students League in 1918. Her first book illustrations appeared three years later. She first showed prints in an exhibition held in 1935. She continued as artist, illustrator, and printmaker for most of the rest of her life employing throughout a different style for each of the three medi rdf:langString
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory
xsd:date 1975-10-04
rdf:langString Brooklyn, New York
xsd:date 1893-09-20
xsd:integer 71186909
xsd:integer 1119620369
rdf:langString center
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory
xsd:date 1893-09-20
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, The Birds, undated, oil on canvas board, 10 x 8 inches
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, The Wind, illustration from Happy Hour Stories by Genevieve Silvester and Edith Marshall Peter
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, Henry lifted on many shoulders, illustration from The Box-Car Children by Gertrude Chandler Warner
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, Alice and the White Knight, about 1937, lithograph, 11 1/4 x 15 3/4 inches
rdf:langString Photo of Dorothy Lake Gregory taken about 1974, from an exhibition catalog of the Group Gallery of Provincetown
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, I drew a pistol and fired at him, illustration from Green Fairy Book by Andrew Lang
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, Fisherman's Cottage, undated, hand-colored silver gelatin photographic print, 3 1/2 x 4 5/8 inches
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, Summer on Cape Cod, about 1950, oil on upson board, 10 x 12 inches
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, Betty and Araminta, about 1938, lithograph
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, Landscape, undated, watercolor on paper, 8 x 14 inches
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, The Wreck, about 1935, lithograph, 8 1/2 x 8 1/4 inches
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, A Lady of Long Ago, etching, about 1929, 5 13/16 x 4 inches
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory, Three together, illustration from All Alone with Daddy by Joan Fassler
xsd:integer 30
xsd:date 1975-10-04
rdf:langString horizontal
rdf:langString DLGALadyOfLongAgo.jpg
rdf:langString DLGAliceAndTheWhiteKnight.jpg
rdf:langString DLGBettyAndAraminta.jpg
rdf:langString DLGFiredAtHim1948.jpg
rdf:langString DLGFishermansCottage.jpg
rdf:langString DLGLandscapeWatercolor.jpg
rdf:langString DLGSummerOnCapeCod.jpg
rdf:langString DLGTheBirds.jpg
rdf:langString DLGTheWreck1935.jpg
rdf:langString DLGThreeTogether1969.jpg
rdf:langString DorothyLakeGregoryHenryLifted1924.jpg
rdf:langString DorothyLakeGregoryTheWind1921.jpg
rdf:langString Painter, printmaker, illustrator
rdf:langString American
xsd:integer 1100
rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory (1893–1975) was an American artist best known for her work as a printmaker and illustrator of children's books. She took art classes in public school and at the age of fourteen began making drawings for a New York newspaper. She studied art in Paris in her late teens and thereafter took classes at Pratt Institute, the Art Students League of New York, and the Cape Cod School of Art. Her career as a professional artist began with her participation in an exhibition of paintings at the Art Students League in 1918. Her first book illustrations appeared three years later. She first showed prints in an exhibition held in 1935. She continued as artist, illustrator, and printmaker for most of the rest of her life employing throughout a different style for each of the three media. In 1956, a critic contrasted the "cubistic" painting style of that time with the book illustration style for which she was better known, saying he had heard gallery-goers incredulously remark, "But she can't be the same Dorothy Lake Gregory."
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rdf:langString Dorothy Lake Gregory

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