Louise Abel (sculptor)

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Angels, c. 1920. Architectural faience. Cincinnati Art Museum

Louise Abel (September 7, 1894–1981) was a German-American sculptor and ceramist.

Abel was born in Widdern, Württemberg, German Empire, and in 1909 immigrated to the United States with her parents. She studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Stuttgart, as well as the Cincinnati Art Academy, the Art Students League in New York, The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, the Barnes Foundation, the Pratt Institute, the Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, and the University of Cincinnati College of Liberal Arts. From 1919 to 1932 she worked as a decorator and sculptor at the Rookwood Pottery Company, where she sculpted many of the company's animal and figural works. In 1959 she returned to Germany.

References[edit]

  • German Immigrant Artists in America: A Biographical Dictionary, Peter C. Merrill, Scarecrow Press, 1997, page 1. ISBN 9780810832664.
  • The Book of Rookwood Pottery, Herbert Peck, Crown Publishing Group, 1988, page 142.
  • American arts & crafts from the collection of Alexandra & Sidney Sheldon, Katherine Plake Hough, Palm Springs Desert Museum, 1993, page 55.
  • Women artists in the United States: a selective bibliography and resource guide on the fine and decorative arts, 1750–1986, Paula L. Chiarmonte, G.K. Hall, 1990, page 474. ISBN 9780816189175.

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