Maud Ainslie was born in November 1870 in Louisville, Kentucky. She studied with Arthur Wesley Dow in Ipswich, Massachusetts before 1900. About 1912, she visited Provincetown, Massachusetts, an art... Read full biography
Maud Ainslie was born in November 1870 in Louisville, Kentucky. She studied with Arthur Wesley Dow in Ipswich, Massachusetts before 1900. About 1912, she visited Provincetown, Massachusetts, an art colony which became her summer home until her death. She worked there with William Zorach and other... Read full biography
Maud Ainslie was born in November 1870 in Louisville, Kentucky. She studied with Arthur Wesley Dow in Ipswich, Massachusetts before 1900. About 1912, she visited Provincetown, Massachusetts, an art colony which became her summer home until her death. She worked there with William Zorach and other printmakers executing and exhibiting block prints. In Louisville, Ainslie was quite active in the arts community. As a 1909 charter member of the Louisville Art Association, she helped promote an... Read full biography
Maud Ainslie was born in November 1870 in Louisville, Kentucky. She studied with Arthur Wesley Dow in Ipswich, Massachusetts before 1900. About 1912, she visited Provincetown, Massachusetts, an art colony which became her summer home until her death. She worked there with William Zorach and other printmakers executing and exhibiting block prints. In Louisville, Ainslie was quite active in the arts community. As a 1909 charter member of the Louisville Art Association, she helped promote an appreciation of the visual arts in the city. The Association mounted exhibitions of artists with a national reputation. Ainslie was president of the Handicraft Guild from 1927 to 1929, and served as president on the Art Center's first Board of Directors... Read full biography
Maud Ainslie was born in November 1870 in Louisville, Kentucky. She studied with Arthur Wesley Dow in Ipswich, Massachusetts before 1900. About 1912, she visited Provincetown, Massachusetts, an art colony which became her summer home until her death. She worked there with William Zorach and other printmakers executing and exhibiting block prints. In Louisville, Ainslie was quite active in the arts community. As a 1909 charter member of the Louisville Art Association, she helped promote an appreciation of the visual arts in the city. The Association mounted exhibitions of artists with a national reputation. Ainslie was president of the Handicraft Guild from 1927 to 1929, and served as president on the Art Center's first Board of Directors in 1929. Primarily known as a painter and printmaker, Maud Ainslie died July 6, 19... Read full biography
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