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- Anne Harriet Sefton "Fish" - Cat and Flowers
Anne Harriet Sefton "Fish" - Cat and Flowers
Anne Harriet Sefton "Fish" - Cat and Flowers
3078A
(1890-1964)
Cat and Flowers
Pencil
Unframed
29 by 23.5 cm., 11 ½ by 9 ¼ in.
(mount size 41.5 by 35 cm., 16 ¼ by 13 ¾ in.)
Anne Fish was born in Bristol and studied at the London School of Art under Charles Orchardson and John Hassall followed by a time in Paris. In 1918 she married Walton Sefton, an Irish linen merchant, although she always used her maiden name, signing her works “FISH”. A great animal lover, she became particularly well-known for her amusing paintings of cats.
She was also a noted caricaturist and social satirist, contributing drawings to Vogue, Vanity Fair and Tatler in the 1920s and 1930s, and writing and illustrating a number of humorous books of her own. Her illustrations for the “Letters of Eve” in The Tatler spawned films, theatre and three books. After the war the couple moved to St Ives where she painted from her Digey studio and became involved in the management and hanging of the Newlyn Art Gallery.
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