Phoebe Anna Traquair was a significant and important figure in British art. She contributed widely to the Arts and Crafts movement, and was one of the first women artists in Scotland to achieve... Read full biography
Phoebe Anna Traquair was a significant and important figure in British art. She contributed widely to the Arts and Crafts movement, and was one of the first women artists in Scotland to achieve professional recognition. Like many artists of the Arts and Crafts era she worked across diverse branches... Read full biography
Phoebe Anna Traquair was a significant and important figure in British art. She contributed widely to the Arts and Crafts movement, and was one of the first women artists in Scotland to achieve professional recognition. Like many artists of the Arts and Crafts era she worked across diverse branches of the arts, producing embroideries, manuscript illumination, bookbinding, enamelwork, furniture decoration, easel painting and mural decoration, which led to international recognition. Traquair was... Read full biography
Phoebe Anna Traquair was a significant and important figure in British art. She contributed widely to the Arts and Crafts movement, and was one of the first women artists in Scotland to achieve professional recognition. Like many artists of the Arts and Crafts era she worked across diverse branches of the arts, producing embroideries, manuscript illumination, bookbinding, enamelwork, furniture decoration, easel painting and mural decoration, which led to international recognition. Traquair was born in Dublin in 1852, the third daughter of physician Dr William Moss and his wife Teresa Richardson. Phoebe Anna Moss attended art and design classes at the Royal Dublin Society; as a student she was assigned the task of providing fossil fish... Read full biography
Phoebe Anna Traquair was a significant and important figure in British art. She contributed widely to the Arts and Crafts movement, and was one of the first women artists in Scotland to achieve professional recognition. Like many artists of the Arts and Crafts era she worked across diverse branches of the arts, producing embroideries, manuscript illumination, bookbinding, enamelwork, furniture decoration, easel painting and mural decoration, which led to international recognition. Traquair was born in Dublin in 1852, the third daughter of physician Dr William Moss and his wife Teresa Richardson. Phoebe Anna Moss attended art and design classes at the Royal Dublin Society; as a student she was assigned the task of providing fossil fish illustrations for the young Scots palaeontologist, Ramsay Heatley Traquair, then keeper of the museum at the Royal Dublin Society.... Read full biography
Phoebe Anna (Moss) Traquair - Art Prices in Auction LotsAuction Lots