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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Edith_MaryonEdith Maryon - Wikipedia

    La danse d'Anitra. Louisa Edith Church Maryon (9 February 1872, in London – 2 May 1924, in Dornach, Switzerland ), better known as Edith Maryon, was an English sculptor. Along with Ita Wegman, she belonged to the innermost circle of founders of anthroposophy and those around Rudolf Steiner. [1] Life and work.

  2. Speel, Bib. “L Edith C Maryon ARCA (1872-1924).” The Second Website of Bob Speel. Web. 30 September 2017. Victorian Web Visual Arts Sculpture.

  3. Works. The following is a substantially incomplete list of the works of Edith Maryon . Displayed at the Camden School of Art, where it won a prize. [1] Maryon's brother Herbert Maryon also won a prize, for a wrought metal casket. [1] Displayed at the New Gallery for the 1899 Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society exhibition.

  4. 10 de mai. de 2024 · A commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of Edith Maryon’s Death was held on May 2, 2024, at the Goetheanum, Dornach and the Rudolf Steiner School in Jakobsberg, Basel and organised by the Visual Arts Section and the Edith Maryon Foundation. An exhibition about her work is on display at the Goetheanum until September 15 2024.

  5. Download Free PDF. A Portrait of Edith Maryon, Artist and Anthroposophist. John Paull, PhD. 2018, Journal of Fine Arts. The lost and last portrait of Edith Maryon (1872-1924), presented in the present paper, was painted by the Italian/Australian artist Ernesto Genoni (1885-1975) at Dornach in 1924.

    • John Paull
    • 2018
  6. 13 de mar. de 2014 · A Priestess of Isis. Edith Maryon was a sculptor of children and female figures, active from around 1900. The sculptor L. Edith C. Maryon (she did not go by her first name, Louisa), better known to some as a disciple of Rudolph Steiner, lived in London, studying at the Central School of Arts and Crafts, and then at the RCA.

  7. Edith Maryon (1872-1924) was a sculptural artist attracted to the ideas and teachings of the Austrian New Age philosopher Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925) and his spiritual movement, Anthroposophy. She was “one of the closest colleagues and pupils of Rudolf Steiner” (Halle & Wilkes, 2010, p.82).