Estella Canziani: Difference between revisions

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Canziani, Estella}}
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[[Category:British illustrators]]
[[Category:British illustrators]]
[[Category: British artists]]
[[Category:British artists]]
[[Category: British folklorists]]
[[Category:English folklorists]]
[[Category: English travel writers]]
[[Category:Folklorists]]
[[Category: 1887 births]]
[[Category:English travel writers]]
[[Category: 1964 deaths]]
[[Category:1887 births]]
[[Category:1964 deaths]]





Revision as of 08:38, 10 December 2008

Estella (Louisa Michaela) Canziani (12 January 1887 - 23 August 1964) was a British portrait and landscape painter, an interior decorator and a travel writer and folklorist.

Born in London, she was the daughter of the painter Louisa Starr (1845-1909) and Enrico Canziani (1848-1931), an Italian civil engineer. She lived all her life in the family home at 3 Palace Green, in the grounds of Kensington Palace. She trained as an artist, studying first at the 'Copernicus', a Kensington school run by Sir Arthur Cope and Erskine Nicol, then at the Royal Academy schools. She exhibited at the RA London, Liverpool, Milan, Venice and France. Her most famous work was a water colour entitled The Piper of Dreams, exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1915. Reproductions of the work are said to rivalled Holman Hunt's The Light of the World in popularity. She travelled extensively throughout Europe, particularly in Italy. Her paintings document the clothes and lifestyle of the local people living in remote villages in Northern Italy. She also worked as a book illustrator. She published three travel books: Costumes, Traditions and Songs of Savoy (1911), "Piedmont (1913) and Through the Apennines and the Lands of the Abruzzi (1928), her writings gaining her membership of the Royal Geographical Society. She published a number of articles in the journal of the Folklore Society. She also published an autobiography: Round About Three Palace Green (1939). A large part of her collection is preserved in the Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery.

Canziani was a member of the Royal Society of British Artists, Arts and Crafts Society, Society of Manual Decorators and Painters in Tempera, Society for Protection of Birds, Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, and the Folklore Society.

Reference

Glenn Hooper, Tim Youngs, Perspectives on Travel Writing, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2004 ISBN 0754603660, 978075460366

External links

Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery: Estella Canziani [1]

Pitt Rivers Museum: England: The Other Within: Estelle Canziani: [2]

The Folklore Society: The Pearly Festival: Estella Canziani [3]