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Mary Potter, OBE (9 April 1900 – 14 September 1981) was an English painter whose best-known work uses a restrained palette of subtle colours. After studying at the Slade School of Fine Art , Potter began her career, exhibiting in London by the early 1920s.
The upstairs gallery space at 11 King's Parade was once home to Charles Lamb, the poet and essayist, along with his sister Mary in 1819. [5] In 1965, the Viewpoint 1965 exhibition held at the gallery featured Geoffrey Clarke (sculpture and stained glass), Mary Potter (paintings), and Dan Arbeid (ceramics). [1]
Mary GrandPré (/ ˈ ɡ r æ n p r eɪ / GRAN-pray; born February 13, 1954) is an American illustrator best known for her cover and chapter illustrations of the Harry Potter books in their U.S. editions published by Scholastic.
Mary Potter (painter) (1900–1981), English painter; Mary C. Potter (born 1930), American psychologist; Mary D' Potter, a 2001 Philippine television series
Mary Adshead (1904–1995), painter, illustrator, designer Eileen Agar (1899–1991), painter and photographer Sam Ainsley (born 1950), painter and tapestry artist
Following the Potters' divorce and Stephen Potter's departure from Aldeburgh, [4] Mary Potter and Britten exchanged houses in 1957, Potter taking Crag House, which Britten had bought in 1947. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Britten lived at the house as his main residence until his death in 1976; after Pears' death a decade later, it was established as the base ...
Mary Potter was born in a rented house at 23 Old Jamaica Road in Bermondsey, South London. She was the fifth child, and the only girl, born to William and Mary Anne (Martin) Potter. One of her brothers was the chess master William Norwood Potter. [1] Mary Potter had a congenital heart and lung disease which left her in frail health, and with a ...
The Little Company of Mary, also known as the Blue Sisters, is a Catholic religious institute of women dedicated to caring for the suffering, the sick, and the dying. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The order was founded in 1877 in Nottingham, England by Mary Potter .