Jessie Constance Alicia Traill (1881 - 1967)
1881-07-29Australia1967-05-15AustraliaUnited Kingdom, France, Australia, England
Jessie Constance Alicia Traill
Jessie Constance Alicia Traill was an Australian printmaker. Trained by Frederick McCubbin at the National Gallery of Victoria Art School, and by painter and printmaker Frank Brangwyn in London, Traill worked in England and France in the period immediately preceding World War I. During the war she served in hospitals with the Voluntary Aid Detachment. Traill is best known for a series of prints created in the early 1930s depicting the construction of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Critic and art historian Sasha Grishin describes her as "one of the great Australian artists of the 20th century".
Date and place of birt: | 29 july 1881, Australia |
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Date and place of death: | 15 may 1967, Australia |
Nationality: | United Kingdom, France, Australia, England |
Period of activity: | XIX, XX century |
Specialization: | Artist, Engraver, Landscape painter, Marine painter, Painter, Portraitist |
Genre: | Cityscape, Genre art, Industrial landscape, Landscape painting, Marine art, Portrait, Rural landscape |
Art style: | Realism |
Technique: | Aquatint, Engraving, Etching, Oil, Oil on canvas, Watercolor |