Amelia Bauerle
British painter, illustrator and etcher
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Amalie Mathilde Bauerle (12 November 1873 – 4 March 1916), known as Amelia Bauerle, was a British painter, illustrator and etcher. She also used the anglicised name Amelia Matilda Bowerley.
12 November 1873
Amelia Bauerle | |
|---|---|
| Born | Amalie Mathilde Bauerle 12 November 1873 Bayswater, London, United Kingdom |
| Died | 4 March 1919 (aged 45) |
| Alma mater | South Kensington School of Art Slade School of Fine Art |
| Known for | Painting, Illustration, Printmaking |
| Movement | Art Nouveau |


Early life
Career
Bauerle studied at the South Kensington School of Art and the Slade School of Fine Art at the Kensington Museum in London.[1] At the Slade School she trained as an etcher under Frank Short.[4] She then travelled in Italy and Germany.[1]
Bauerle exhibited paintings at the Royal Academy from 1897 until her death,[1] and also exhibited in Paris and America.[2] She was an associate member of the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers.[2]
Bauerle also contributed illustrations, typically Art Nouveau in style, to The Artist Engraver, The Yellow Book and magazines Sphere, Graphic, and Windsor.[2] She often depicted young children, flowers, angels or mermaids in her work.[5] Other work included providing the illustrations for children's books, such as The Child Lover's Calendar (1909), The Wonderful Visit (1902)[6] and A Wonder Book for Girl's and Boys (1903).[7]
When the 1911 census was enumerated, Bauerle was living at a boarding house in Langhorne Gardens, Folkestone, her occupation was recorded as artist and her marital status was single.[8]
Death
Exhibitions and catalogues
Selected book illustrations
- Ismay Thorn. Happy-go-lucky. Roseleaf Library, London, 1894.[8]
- W. E. Cule, Sir Constant: Knight of the Great King. Andrew Melrose, London, 1899.
- Frederic William Farrar. Allegories. Longmans & Co., London, 1898.[10][8]
- Alfred Tennyson. The Day-Dream (poem) In: Flowers of Parnassus. vol. 7. [1900, etc.] 8º.[8]
- Nathaniel Hawthorne. A Wonder Book for Girl's and Boys, Ward, Lock, & Co., London, 1903.[7]