Caroline Fanny Williams

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Caroline Fanny Williams
Mapledurham, Berkshire

Caroline Fanny Williams (1836–1921) was an English landscape painter during the Victorian era, and a member of the Williams family of painters.

Caroline Fanny Williams was born on 25 December 1836 in

St. Marylebone, London. Her father George Augustus Williams (1814–1901) was a popular landscape artist and a member of the Williams family of painters. She learned to paint from her father, and her works are somewhat similar to his in subject and treatment, but with much brighter colors. Her technical ability was the equal or better to that of many of her male counterparts of the time, but despite the support of her father, she lived in an age where society did not encourage women in the arts.[1]

She exhibited at the

Society of Lady Artists where she was a regular contributor.[2] She never married, and died under her maiden name on 30 December 1921 at Forest Hill, London. Three examples of her work are on display at the Reading Museum & Town Hall in Berkshire
.

Notes

  1. ^ Reynolds (1975), p. 39-40.
  2. ^ Graves (1884), p. 256; Paviere (1968), p. 139; and Reynold (1975), p. 169-178.

References

  • Graves, Algernon (1884). Dictionary of artists who have exhibited works in the principal London exhibitions from 1760–1893. London: George Bell & Sons. 265 p.
  • Pavière, Sydney Herbert (1968). Dictionary of Victorian landscape painters. Leigh-On-Sea, England: F. Lewis. 143 p. .
  • Reynolds, Jan (1975). The Williams family of painters. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Antique Collectors Club. 331 p. .

External links