Helen Hyde PRICE CHARTS
1868 Lima, New York - 1919 Pasadena, California. Known for: Oriental figure-views painting, woodblock printmaking, illustration.
Helen Hyde was an etcher, illustrator and painter born in Lima, New York, April 6, 1868. She was a pupil of Emil Carlsen in New York, Raphael Collin in Paris, Franz Skarbina in Berlin and Kano... Read full biography
Helen Hyde was an etcher, illustrator and painter born in Lima, New York, April 6, 1868. She was a pupil of Emil Carlsen in New York, Raphael Collin in Paris, Franz Skarbina in Berlin and Kano Tomanobo in Japan. It was enthusiasm for her teacher, Felix Regamey, director of the Musee Guimet in... Read full biography
Helen Hyde was an etcher, illustrator and painter born in Lima, New York, April 6, 1868. She was a pupil of Emil Carlsen in New York, Raphael Collin in Paris, Franz Skarbina in Berlin and Kano Tomanobo in Japan. It was enthusiasm for her teacher, Felix Regamey, director of the Musee Guimet in Paris, that first inspired her interest in Japanese art. When her pictures were refused at the Salon, she returned home determined to give up her chosen profession. Living in San Francisco upon her return... Read full biography
Helen Hyde was an etcher, illustrator and painter born in Lima, New York, April 6, 1868. She was a pupil of Emil Carlsen in New York, Raphael Collin in Paris, Franz Skarbina in Berlin and Kano Tomanobo in Japan. It was enthusiasm for her teacher, Felix Regamey, director of the Musee Guimet in Paris, that first inspired her interest in Japanese art. When her pictures were refused at the Salon, she returned home determined to give up her chosen profession. Living in San Francisco upon her return to America, she found that the Chinese characteristics of that city interested her, and her sketches made in Chinatown became popular. Intent on going to Japan for a few months, she stayed fifteen years, and from her experience there she brought to... Read full biography
Helen Hyde was an etcher, illustrator and painter born in Lima, New York, April 6, 1868. She was a pupil of Emil Carlsen in New York, Raphael Collin in Paris, Franz Skarbina in Berlin and Kano Tomanobo in Japan. It was enthusiasm for her teacher, Felix Regamey, director of the Musee Guimet in Paris, that first inspired her interest in Japanese art. When her pictures were refused at the Salon, she returned home determined to give up her chosen profession. Living in San Francisco upon her return to America, she found that the Chinese characteristics of that city interested her, and her sketches made in Chinatown became popular. Intent on going to Japan for a few months, she stayed fifteen years, and from her experience there she brought to this country an interest in Japanese works. After a years study with the last of the famous school of the Kano artists, a... Read full biography
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