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The Glasgow Art Club was based close by on Bath Street, but they only admitted men (and would continue to do so until the 1980s). Glasgow Society of Lady Artists’ Club, external wall carving. By 1897 the partnership of George Henry Walton and Fred Rowntree had designed and constructed a gallery for the club's fourteenth annual exhibition.
During her career Coventry frequently exhibited with the Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts, showing some 47 pieces there and with the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists which she had joined in 1905. [5] [2] She also exhibited at the Royal Academy, the Royal Cambrian Academy and the Royal Scottish Academy where she showed a total of twenty ...
On her death she left legacies to the Scottish Artists Benevolent Association, gave a fund to the Glasgow Art Club and left a fund to the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists to encourage art by women. The Lauder Prize, named for the best work adjudged in the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists annual exhibition, is named after her. [1] [2]
While writing this she was the President of the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists, she became President in 1934 and remained in this post until 1937. In 1936 she won the Lauder prize. The society now known as the Glasgow Society of Women Artists. [2] De Courcy lived with her sister, Katharine, at 15 Woodside Terrace, Glasgow, until her death.
Crawford was born in the Woodlands area of Glasgow, and at the age of seventeen she enrolled at the Glasgow School of Art where she attended between 1881 and 1888. [1] Along with members of the Glasgow Girls, Crawford was an active participant in the school's programme of events initiated by the school headmaster Frances Newbery, including masques and tableaux vivants.
Geological Society of Glasgow; Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women's Suffrage; Glasgow Art Club; Glasgow Ballad Club; Glasgow Skeptics; Glasgow Society of Lady Artists; Glasgow University Dialectic Society
For the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists, and as it was renamed in 1975; the Glasgow Society of Women Artists Subcategories.
Throughout her career, Annand was involved in arts and arts-related organisations and was Chairman of the Scottish Educational Film Association (SEFA) (Glasgow Production Group) [5] and of the Glasgow Lady Artists Club Trust (becoming in 1975, the Glasgow Society of Women Artists of which she was twice elected President (1977–79 and 1988–91).)