Louise Lawson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Louise Lawson (1861[1] - April 5, 1899)[2] was a Neoclassical sculptor and one of the first American women sculptors to have a professional career.
Louise Lawson was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the daughter of L. M. Lawson, dean of the Medical College of Ohio.[3][4] Her mother died when she was young, and her father educated her himself instead of sending her to school.[3] She developed her interest in art early and got her art training at the Art Academy of Cincinnati with Louis Rebisso and Thomas Satterwhite Noble and then in New York at Cooper Union and with sculptor John Quincy Adams Ward.[3][5][6] She then went abroad for three years of study in Paris with Auguste Rodin, on whose advice she went to Rome and Perugia for a further three years of study.[3][5][6] Her first known work, Il Pastore, was made in Rome.[6]