Felicity Campbell (born 1909) was a British painter and illustrator.
Campbell was born and brought up in Sussex in southern England and, after being home-schooled, studied art in Paris, Rome and The Hague. [1] In London she studied lithography and illustration with E. J. Sullivan. [2] As well as working as a commercial artist, Campbell painted miniatures and illustrated a number of books. [2] She also created works in pastels, watercolours and pencil and exhibited at the Royal Academy in London during the early 1960s and with the International Society of Sculptors, Painters and Gravers and at Walker's Gallery. [1] [2] For a time she lived at Guestling in Sussex. [2]
Margaret Gabrielle Vere Long, who used the pseudonyms Marjorie Bowen and Joseph Shearing, was a British author who wrote historical romances, supernatural horror stories, popular history and biography.
Lota Bowen (1872–1935) was a British painter. She was a member of the Society of Women Artists, the Society of Painters in Tempera, and the 91 Art Club, a Chelsea club for women artists. Born in Armley, Yorkshire, she studied in Ludovici's studio London; later in Rome under Santoro and in the night classes of the Circolo Artistico. Her pictures are principally landscapes and mainly in private collections. Among the most noted are: On the Venetian Lagoons; Old Stone Pines, Lido, Venice; Evening on Lake Lugano; Evening Glow Dolomites; The Old Bird Fancier; and Moonrise on Crowborough, Sussex; all exhibited at the Royal Academy. She also painted portraits and figure subjects and was noted for her "broad swinging brush and great love of 'tone'".
Julian Phelps Allan, formerly Eva Dorothy Allan, OBE was an English sculptor active between 1923 and 1960. In addition to her sculpting, she served in both the First and Second World Wars, eventually becoming a colonel in the Auxiliary Territorial Service and the first President of the ATS War Office Selection Board.
Millicent Margaret Fisher Prout was a highly successful and productive artist who helped improve perceptions of modern art in Britain.
Anne Marjorie Robinson, sometimes Annie Marjorie Robinson, (1858–1924) was a British painter who also exhibited examples of her sculptures and miniatures.
Marjorie Frances Bruford known as Midge Bruford was a British artist associated with the Newlyn School of artists. Although born in Eastbourne, Bruford was an active participant in several of the artist groups based in Cornwall throughout her adult life.
Marjorie May Bacon, later Marjorie Macbeth-Raeburn was a British printmaker and painter.
Elsie Marian Henderson, later Baroness de Coudenhove, was a British painter and sculptor notable for her animal paintings.
Nora Lucy Mowbray Cundell was an English painter of figure subjects, flowers and landscapes in oil and watercolours.
Sarah Sophia Beale was a British portrait painter and author who wrote about art and architecture.
Marjorie Baylis Barnard, known as Mary Baylis Barnard, (1870–1946) was a versatile British painter, notably of flowers but also of landscapes, interiors and genre scenes.
Edith Carr was a British artist, notable as a portrait and miniature painter.
Olivia Mary Bryden (1883–1951) was a British portrait painter and decorative artist.
Frances Crawshaw was a British painter in oils and watercolours and also a botanical artist.
Esmé Mary Evelyn Currey was a British artist, known for her printmaking and for her paintings.
Susan Margaret Horsfield, later Susan Platts is a British painter and former art teacher who works in a variety of media.
Erica Mildred White (1904–1991) was a British artist, notable as a sculptor and portrait painter.
Marjorie May Incledon (1891–1973) was a British artist, notable as a painter and stained glass artist.
Molly Rose Le Bas later Molly Brocas Burrows was a British artist and sculptor.
Muriel Amy Jackson (1902–1989) was a British painter and illustrator.