Aglaia Coronio (née Ionides; 1834 – 20 August 1906, Greek: Αγλαΐα Κορωνιού) was a British embroiderer, bookbinder, art collector and patron of the arts.[1][2][3]
Early life
editOf Greek descent, she was the elder daughter of businessman and art collector Alexander Constantine Ionides, who had immigrated to London from Constantinople (present day Istanbul) in 1827.[2] Her older brother was Constantine Alexander Ionides (b. 1833); her younger siblings were Luca or Luke (b. 1837), Alexander or Alecco (b. 1840) and Chariclea Anthea Euterpe (b. 1844).[4]
Later life
editCoronio became a confidante of William Morris and a friend of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. William Morris taught her about Chaucer and bookbinding; Coronio is reportedly one of the first women to become a bookbinder in the late nineteenth century.[2][3] She and her cousins Marie Spartali Stillman and Maria Zambaco were known among friends as "the Three Graces," after the Charites of Greek mythology (the youngest of whom was also "Aglaia").
She married Theodore John Coronio.[1] On 20 August 1906, the day after the death of her daughter, Coronio died after stabbing herself in the neck and chest with a pair of scissors.[5]
References
edit- ^ a b "Mrs. Coronio - Collection Introduction". www.rossettiarchive.org. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
- ^ a b c "Letter to Aglaia Coronio Annotations – William Morris". Retrieved 19 April 2024.
- ^ a b Tidcombe, Marianne (1996). Women bookbinders, 1880-1920. New Castle, DE, USA : London: Oak Knoll Press ; British Library. ISBN 978-1-884718-23-6.
- ^ Harvey, Charles; Press, Jon (1996). "The Ionides Family and 1 Holland Park". Art, Enterprise and Ethics: Essays on the Life and Work of William Morris (PDF). pp. 2–14.
- ^ ODNB
- Parry, Linda. "Coronio, Aglaia". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/62800. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.); cited as ODNB