"Remarkable. Extraordinary. Eccentric: The Man Who Drew Eloise Recalls His Muses," by Alexandra Jacos, June 29, 2017, Art & Design section, The New York Times. Long before there was millennial pink... Read full biography
"Remarkable. Extraordinary. Eccentric: The Man Who Drew Eloise Recalls His Muses," by Alexandra Jacos, June 29, 2017, Art & Design section, The New York Times. Long before there was millennial pink there was rose carthame, a chemical but warm paint hue favored by Katharine Sturges Dodge, mother of... Read full biography
"Remarkable. Extraordinary. Eccentric: The Man Who Drew Eloise Recalls His Muses," by Alexandra Jacos, June 29, 2017, Art & Design section, The New York Times. Long before there was millennial pink there was rose carthame, a chemical but warm paint hue favored by Katharine Sturges Dodge, mother of the artist Hilary Knight, and an artist herself. “She used it in cheeks, especially,” Mr. Knight said the other afternoon. “Think pink!” his most famous collaborator, Kay Thompson, belted in the 1957... Read full biography
"Remarkable. Extraordinary. Eccentric: The Man Who Drew Eloise Recalls His Muses," by Alexandra Jacos, June 29, 2017, Art & Design section, The New York Times. Long before there was millennial pink there was rose carthame, a chemical but warm paint hue favored by Katharine Sturges Dodge, mother of the artist Hilary Knight, and an artist herself. “She used it in cheeks, especially,” Mr. Knight said the other afternoon. “Think pink!” his most famous collaborator, Kay Thompson, belted in the 1957 movie Funny Face. And because of the blockbuster success of their fictional and widely franchised character Eloise, the 6-year-old girl who first appeared in Eloise: A Book for Precocious Grown-Ups in 1955 and has been running amok at (and raking it... Read full biography
"Remarkable. Extraordinary. Eccentric: The Man Who Drew Eloise Recalls His Muses," by Alexandra Jacos, June 29, 2017, Art & Design section, The New York Times. Long before there was millennial pink there was rose carthame, a chemical but warm paint hue favored by Katharine Sturges Dodge, mother of the artist Hilary Knight, and an artist herself. “She used it in cheeks, especially,” Mr. Knight said the other afternoon. “Think pink!” his most famous collaborator, Kay Thompson, belted in the 1957 movie Funny Face. And because of the blockbuster success of their fictional and widely franchised character Eloise, the 6-year-old girl who first appeared in Eloise: A Book for Precocious Grown-Ups in 1955 and has been running amok at (and raking it in for) the Plaza Hotel ever since, one might believe Mr. Knight not only thinks but bleeds pink ink. But... Read full biography
Hilary Knight - Artist Info
About Hilary Knight: Books
Books & Publications (6)
Publications based on askART research. List may not be comprehensive.
The 365 Days of Eloise: My Book of Holidays
2015
Knight, Hilary
32 pages (color)
The Circus is Coming
2007
Knight, Hilary (author and illustrator)
56 pages (color)
The Artists Bluebook 34,000 North American Artists to March 2005
2005
AskART.com Inc. - Dunbier, Lonnie Pierson (Editor)
479 pages
Hilary Knight's The Owl and the Pussy Cat (reissue)
2001
Lear, Edward and Hilary Knight
0 pages (color)
Who Was Who in American Art, 1564-1975: Three Volumes