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Eleanor Allen Moore

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Nationality
  
British

Name
  
Eleanor Moore


Eleanor Allen Moore

Born
  
26 July 1885
Glenfield, Glenwherry, County Antrim

Died
  
September 17, 1955, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Eleanor Allen Moore (26 July 1885 – 17 September 1955) was a British painter who was born in Northern Ireland, but became one of the group of painters known as the "Glasgow Girls".

Contents

Early life and education

Moore was born in Glenfield, Glenwherry, co. Antrim in 1885. In 1888 she moved with her family to Ayrshire, Scotland, where her father worked as a minister at Loudoun Old Parish Church. She attended Kilmarnock Academy. From 1902 to 1907 she studied drawing and painting at the Glasgow School of Art, where she was a contemporary of Norah Neilson Gray.

WW1

During WW1 Moore served as a voluntary aid detachment nurse at Craigleith Hospital in Edinburgh.

Postwar period

In 1922, Moore married Dr Robert Cecil Robertson and she gave birth to their daughter, Ailsa, the following year. In 1925, the family moved to Shanghai, China, where Robertson was appointed with the Shanghai Municipal Council. Moore continued to paint in Shanghai, where she was inspired by the street scenes and by the Yangtze River Delta. Moore and her daughter were evacuated from Shanghai to Hong Kong during the Sino-Japanese War in 1937, and returned to Scotland soon after, though she had stopped painting. Her husband, Dr Robertson, remained in Hong Kong until his death in 1942.

Death

Moore died in a hospital in Edinburgh in 1955.

Posthumously

Moore and her husband were the subject of an exhibition in 1997 which was held at the Dick Institute, Kilmarnock, which holds several of her works including a large three quarter length self-portrait. Moore was included in the Glasgow Girls exhibition in Kirkcudbright in 2010 and a book on the Glasgow Girls by Alisa Tanner, Tanner is Moore's granddaughter.

Examples of work

A self-portrait

References

Eleanor Allen Moore Wikipedia


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