Lily Williams facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Lily Williams
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Born |
Elizabeth Josephine Williams
20 October 1874 Rathmines, Dublin
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Died | 16 January 1940 Ranelagh, Dublin
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(aged 65)
Nationality | Irish |
Known for | portraiture, stamp designs |
Lily Williams ARHA (20 October 1874 – 16 January 1940) was an Irish portrait painter. Aside from her portraiture, she is known for her Irish stamp designs.
Life
Lily Williams was born Elizabeth Josephine Williams in Rathmines, Dublin on 20 October 1874. She initially studied art under Mary Manning, going on to enrol in the Dublin Metropolitan School of Art. She studied alongside Estella Solomons and Cissie Beckett. She was a member of the Dublin Sketching Club. Williams exhibited with the Royal Hibernian Academy annually from 1904 to 1939. She became an associate of the RHA in 1929.
Williams was a Republican and supporter of Sinn Féin, which led to her falling out with her Protestant, Unionist family during the Easter Rising in 1916. Some of her best known paintings feature nationalist themes or are portraits of figures relating to Irish independence. She designed the Irish Free State's Cross of Cong postal stamp in 1922, a design which was used until 1968.
Williams died on 16 January 1940 at her home in Ranelagh, Dublin. The Hugh Lane Gallery hold a half-length portrait by her of Arthur Griffith, in oils. Williams was featured in the 2014 exhibition, Irish Women artists: 1870 - 1970. Her papers are held in the National Library of Ireland.
Selected work
- Portrait of Dr Kathleen Lynn, held in the collections of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
- Hibernia (1907)