Elizabeth O'Neill Verner
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Elizabeth O'Neill Verner | |
|---|---|
| Born | December 21, 1883 |
| Died | April 17, 1979 (aged 95) |
| Education | Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts |
| Occupations | Artist, author, lecturer, and preservationist |
Elizabeth O'Neill Verner (December 21, 1883 – April 17, 1979) was an American artist, author, lecturer, and preservationist who was one of the leaders of the Charleston Renaissance.[1] She has been called "the best-known woman artist of South Carolina of the twentieth century."[2]
Elizabeth Quale O'Neill was born Dec. 21, 1883, in Charleston, South Carolina. She first studied art with Alice Ravenel Huger Smith.[2] In 1901, after attending a Catholic girls’ school in Columbia, South Carolina,[3] she enrolled at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, where she studied for two years with Thomas Anshutz.[2]
When she left the academy, she taught art in Aiken, South Carolina, for a time.[2] She then returned to Charleston, where she took up her art studies with Smith as well as with Gabrielle D. Clements and Ellen Day Hale.[4] Inspired by Clements and Hale, she was a founding member of the Charleston Etchers Club[5] and helped to found the Southern States Art League.[2] In 1907, she married E. Pettigrew Verner, with whom she had two children.[2]
