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・ Ethel May Jacobson
・ Ethel McClellan Plummer
・ Ethel McCreary
・ Ethel McGary
・ Ethel McMillan
・ Ethel Merman
・ Ethel Merston
・ Ethel Mertz
・ Ethel Minor
・ Ethel Mobley
・ Ethel Moorhead
・ Ethel Morgan Smith
・ Ethel Muckelt
・ Ethel Muggs
・ Ethel Mutharika
Ethel Myers
・ Ethel Newbold
・ Ethel O'Neil
・ Ethel Owen
・ Ethel Pedley
・ Ethel Percy Andrus
・ Ethel Person
・ Ethel Portnoy
・ Ethel Post-Parrish
・ Ethel Pritchard
・ Ethel Proudlock case
・ Ethel R. Harraden
・ Ethel Raby
・ Ethel Ray Nance
・ Ethel Reed


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Ethel Myers : ウィキペディア英語版
Ethel Myers

Mae Ethel Klinck Myers (August 23, 1881 - May 24, 1960) better known as Ethel Myers was a New York Realist artist and sculptor strongly influenced in her work by the goals of the Ashcan School and its leader and famous teacher, Robert Henri. Her earliest subjects for pictures involved her capturing the life of the Lower East Side as well as journeying to slums in other cities such as Boston. Her greatest fame came some years later, after her marriage to New York artist Jerome Myers, when she became known for her figurative bronze statuettes and figurines 〔National Cyclopedia of American Biography〕 "with a quite uncommon sense of humor, and with more than this, a feeling for form and movement that gives them life and conviction."〔New York Sun, January 18, 1913〕 "Her three powerfully expressed sculptured figurines impress this reviewer with the fact that she is worthy of a place alongside of Daumier, Meunier and Mahonri Young." 〔The Brooklyn Eagle, January 1913〕
==Early life==

Mae Ethel Klinck (first named Lillian Cochran) was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1881. Her 20-year-old mother was already seriously ill at the time of her birth and died when Ethel was 4 years old. Ethel's father was already dead and so she became an orphan. She was later adopted by Michael and Alfiata Klinck, an affluent couple who renamed her Mae Ethel Klinck.〔Spanierman Gallery, Artist Biography of Ethel K. Myers〕 After the death of her husband, Alfiata and her daughter, moved between Brooklyn and Orange, N.J. which helped provide Ethel with a strong early education in both public and private schools. It was also her adoptive mother who encouraged Ethel to train on the piano in hopes of her becoming a concert pianist.
Ethel found her piano studies drudgery. "I decided I wanted to be a painter. I never had any other idea. So in my second year in the Newark high school I left and went to the National Academy in New York City, then on Twenty-Third Street. They sent me to Walter Satterlee, whose studio was in the old YMCA building across the street. After several months I took the examination at the Academy and failed. They sent word to me that if I would try again I would get in — but I said no — I have gone to the Chase School. There I became monitor of a class, and afterward became assistant director and teacher with John Douglas Connah, director. It was there that I was instrumental in getting Robert Henri in the school. It had then become the New York School of Art at Sixth Avenue and Fifty-Seventh Street."〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://ques.com/myers/html/ethel_s_autobiographical_notes.html )
Ethel studied at the Chase School (William Merritt Chase) and the New York School of Art from 1898 to 1904. A pet pupil of Chase, she also took the opportunity of studying with Henri, who would have a strong influence on her early art career. Among the others she attended classes with were Edward Hopper, Guy Pène du Bois, Gifford Beal, and Joseph Stella. She also became personally acquainted with the painters George Luks, John Sloan, William Glackens, Arthur B. Davies, Ernest Lawson and Elmer Livingston MacRae.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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