Sophia St John Whitty

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Born4 November 1877
Upper Leeson Street, Dublin, Ireland
Died26 February 1924(1924-02-26) (aged 46)
Knownforwood carving
Sophia St John Whitty
Born4 November 1877
Upper Leeson Street, Dublin, Ireland
Died26 February 1924(1924-02-26) (aged 46)
Alma materSouth Kensington School of Art, Dublin Metropolitan School of Art
Known forwood carving

Sophia St John Whitty (4 November 1877 – 26 February 1924) was an Irish woodcarver, teacher, and cooperativist.[1] Whitty was part of the Irish Celtic cultural revival and the Irish Art and Crafts movement.[2]

Sophia St John Whitty was born at 69 Upper Leeson Street, Dublin on 4 November 1877. Her parents were Richard Lawrence Whitty and Jane Alicia, the daughter of Hugh Palliser Hickman of Fenloe house, Newmarket-on-Fergus, County Clare. Richard Lawrence Whitty was an active freemason, who served as an assistant secretary of the Dublin Masonic orphan schools from 1876 to 1882, and worshipful master of the grand master's lodge in 1882. The stained-glass artist Catherine Amelia O’Brien was her first cousin. The Whittys lived at Hillcot, Whitechurch, County Dublin near the Dublin mountains in the 1880s, and Whitty would spend her holidays at Fenloe House with the Hickman family. Whitty attended the South Kensington School of Art to study wood carving, continuing her studies at the Dublin Metropolitan School of Art.[3]

Artistic career

Later life and legacy

References

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