Adelaide Claxton

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Adelaide Sophia Claxton (10 May 1841 – 29 August 1927)[1] was a British painter, illustrator, and inventor. She was one of the first women artists to make a major part of her living through the commercial press, selling satirical and comic illustrations to more than half a dozen periodicals.

Claxton was born in London, one of two gifted daughters of the British painter Marshall Claxton; both Adelaide and her sister Florence followed their father in becoming painters. However, she did not share her father's taste for large oil paintings. She studied art at Cary's School in the Bloomsbury area of London, where she began to focus on figure painting in watercolor.[2]

In 1850, she traveled with her family to Australia, where she remained for four years before returning to England by way of Calcutta, India.

Career

Personal life and inventions

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