Teapot cosy
- Reference:GB 1694 NMC/0444
- Dates of Creation:c1900-1905
- Name of Creator:
- Physical Description:1 / 1
Scope and Content
Green linen with applique.
Administrative / Biographical History
Daisy Agnes McGlashan (1879-1968) studied design at GSA from 1898 to 1905 becoming influenced by 'the Glasgow Style'. Her marriage to William Anderson in 1909, and the birth of two daughters between 1910 and 1912, restricted her time for painting and design but she continued to design her own clothes and wrote and illustrated children's stories which were published in newspapers including The Glasgow Herald, The Newcastle Chronicle and The Hexham Courant. She started painting again in her sixties specialising in flower studies in pastels and was elected to the Paisley Art Institute, The Glasgow Society of Women Artists and the Glasgow Fine Art Institute, exhibiting regularly at them all. She continued to paint until her death in August 1968.
Acquisition Information
Artist's daughter, Daisy Anderson, 1995.
Note
Daisy Agnes McGlashan (1879-1968) studied design at GSA from 1898 to 1905 becoming influenced by 'the Glasgow Style'. Her marriage to William Anderson in 1909, and the birth of two daughters between 1910 and 1912, restricted her time for painting and design but she continued to design her own clothes and wrote and illustrated children's stories which were published in newspapers including The Glasgow Herald, The Newcastle Chronicle and The Hexham Courant. She started painting again in her sixties specialising in flower studies in pastels and was elected to the Paisley Art Institute, The Glasgow Society of Women Artists and the Glasgow Fine Art Institute, exhibiting regularly at them all. She continued to paint until her death in August 1968.
Physical Characteristics and/or Technical Requirements
Green linen with dull gold and dark applique linen with orange, green and pale green silk embroidery using satin stitch in a stylised design of flowers, leaves and stems. Trimmed with a cord along the curved seam and a narrow band of drawn threadwork along the hem.
Dimensions: 390 x 295 mm / 295 x 392 x 20 mmAdditional Information
Published
Subjects