
Katherine Adams Bulliet AUCTION RECORDS
1880 Corydon, Indiana - 1946. Known for: Modernist, abstract painting.
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Katherine Bulliet (1880-1946) was born in Corydon, Indiana, and studied with local artists Sidney Crosier and James Russell. A member of The Wonderland Way Art Club and active in Illinois and... Read full biography
Katherine Bulliet (1880-1946) was born in Corydon, Indiana, and studied with local artists Sidney Crosier and James Russell. A member of The Wonderland Way Art Club and active in Illinois and Southern Indiana art communities, Bulliet had a contemporary edge that set her apart from her peers. Her... Read full biography
Katherine Bulliet (1880-1946) was born in Corydon, Indiana, and studied with local artists Sidney Crosier and James Russell. A member of The Wonderland Way Art Club and active in Illinois and Southern Indiana art communities, Bulliet had a contemporary edge that set her apart from her peers. Her work, which was closely aligned with Modernist painters of the day, featured abstract imagery and dramatic settings. Bulliet regularly exhibited in New York and Chicago art shows. Submitted by Ann... Read full biography
Katherine Bulliet (1880-1946) was born in Corydon, Indiana, and studied with local artists Sidney Crosier and James Russell. A member of The Wonderland Way Art Club and active in Illinois and Southern Indiana art communities, Bulliet had a contemporary edge that set her apart from her peers. Her work, which was closely aligned with Modernist painters of the day, featured abstract imagery and dramatic settings. Bulliet regularly exhibited in New York and Chicago art shows. Submitted by Ann Harlow, editor of “200 Years of Indiana Art: A Cultural Legacy,” by Mark Rushman, for the upcoming edition of American Art Review 28:3 (May-June 2016)
Katherine Bulliet (1880-1946) was born in Corydon, Indiana, and studied with local artists Sidney Crosier and James Russell. A member of The Wonderland Way Art Club and active in Illinois and Southern Indiana art communities, Bulliet had a contemporary edge that set her apart from her peers. Her work, which was closely aligned with Modernist painters of the day, featured abstract imagery and dramatic settings. Bulliet regularly exhibited in New York and Chicago art shows. Submitted by Ann Harlow, editor of “200 Years of Indiana Art: A Cultural Legacy,” by Mark Rushman, for the upcoming edition of American Art Review 28:3 (May-June 2016)

