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illustrator, printmaker, craftsperson and painter, was born in Newcastle, daughter of Mabel and Arthur W. Cornish. She studied art privately with Albert Collins and attended Julian Ashton 's Sydney Art School in 1930-33 (one of her woodcuts was published in The Art Student in 1931). At some stage she also studied with Adelaide Perry . In 1913 she joined the Arts and Crafts Society of NSW, where she exhibited embroidery and china painting until the 1920s. A member of the Society of Women Artists in the 1920s, Cornish exhibited with its reformed version, the Women’s Industrial Arts Society, in 1936. She also showed with the Painter Etchers. Cornish died at Cremorne, Sydney on 13 July 1940. After her death, her uncle offered her designs to the NSW Society of Arts and Crafts (apparently in 1940); some are in the Society’s Archives.

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Writers:
Staff Writer
Date written:
1996
Last updated:
2007

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Related events
  • Women's Industrial Arts Society exhibition (exhibited at)
  • Arts and Crafts Society of NSW (exhibited at)
  • Overlooked but not forgotten: Adelaide Perry and her students (exhibited at)
  • Women hold up half the sky (exhibited at)
  • Sydney by Design: Wood and linoblock prints by Sydney women artists between the Wars (exhibited at)
  • Women's Industrial Arts Society exhibition (exhibited at)
  • Arts and Crafts Society of NSW (exhibited at)
  • Overlooked but not forgotten: Adelaide Perry and her students (exhibited at)
  • Women hold up half the sky (exhibited at)