Julia Searing Leaycraft (November 26, 1885 – December 21, 1960) was an American artist and editor.
Julia Searing Leaycraft | |
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Born | Julia Searing November 26, 1885 Saugerties, New York |
Died | December 21, 1960 (age 75) New York City |
Occupation(s) | Artist, editor, arts administrator |
Relatives | Frank Pidgeon (grandfather) |
Early life and education
editJulia Searing was born in Saugerties, New York, and raised in Kingston, New York, the daughter of John Welch Searing and Annie Eliza Pidgeon Searing.[1] Her father was a lawyer and newspaper editor, and her mother was a writer and suffragist.[2][3][4] Her grandfather, Frank Pidgeon, was a noted baseball player in the nineteenth century.[5]
Searing graduated from Vassar College in 1906,[6] and made further studies in art with the Art Students League of New York, and at the Woodstock School of Landscape Painting.[7]
Career
editAs a young woman, Searing was on the staff of New Idea, and managing editor at The Delineator. During World War I, she worked in publicity for the YWCA. She taught art at the Slater Memorial Museum in Connecticut.
Leaycraft was founder and first president of the Intercollegiate Bureau of Occupations, an employment service for college-educated women.[8] She was also a founding member of the Women's City Club of New York. She was chair of the art department at the Dalton School from 1928 to 1932. She was elected vice-president of the Woodstock Library Association in the 1930s.[9][10]
With her children grown, she spent more time on painting and printmaking in the 1930s and 1940s, but she was also involved in the National Youth Administration, in building what became the Woodstock School of Art.[11] She exhibited her art, with shows in Woodstock, Albany, and New York City. She was active in the Woodstock Artists Association, the National Association of Women Artists, and other professional organizations. In 1947, she chaired a committee to raise funds for a war memorial in Woodstock.[12] In 1959 she contributed folk song lyrics, remembered from her childhood, to a concert of Catskills-area traditional music.[13]
Publications
editPersonal life
editSearing married lawyer and real estate broker Edgar Crawford Leaycraft in 1913. They had two children. She moved to Woodstock with her children in the 1920s, and lived there with another artist, Anita Miller Smith, in 1922 and 1923. The Leaycrafts divorced in 1929.[19] She died in 1960, in New York City, at the age of 75.[20]
References
edit- ^ "Julia Leaycraft was Prominent in Art Circles". The Kingston Daily Freeman. 1960-12-23. p. 12. Retrieved 2023-06-20 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Searing, Annie Eliza Pidgeon (1885). A Social Experiment. G. P. Putnam's Sons.
- ^ de Vries, Susan (2017-07-28). "A Suffragette Restores Her Dream Home, an 18th Century Stone Cottage in Kingston, N.Y." Brownstoner. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
- ^ "How One Woman Solved the Housing Problem". House Beautiful. 49: 393–395. May 1921.
- ^ John Thorn, "Finding Frank Pidgeon", Our Game (October 3, 2011).
- ^ "Vassar's Class Day". New-York Tribune. 1906-06-12. p. 8. Retrieved 2023-06-20 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Leonard, John W. (1976). Woman's who's who of America : a biographical dictionary of contemporary women of the United States and Canada, 1914-1915. New York, American Commonwealth Co. p. 31.
- ^ "College Women Give Much Aid to Unemployed". Albuquerque Morning Journal. 1914-12-27. p. 2. Retrieved 2023-06-20 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Woodstock Library Officials are Chosen". The Kingston Daily Freeman. 1935-06-18. p. 5. Retrieved 2023-06-20 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Woodstock Names Library Officers". The Kingston Daily Freeman. 1939-06-15. p. 18. Retrieved 2023-06-20 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Weber, Bruce (2021-10-01). "High Woods sculptor was a key figure at the Woodstock NYA Work Center". Hudson Valley One. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
- ^ "Work Started to Raise Funds for War Memorial". The Kingston Daily Freeman. 1947-11-14. p. 5. Retrieved 2023-06-20 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Mountain Folk Song Program Scheduled Sunday at Guild". The Kingston Daily Freeman. 1959-03-17. p. 2. Retrieved 2023-06-20 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Leaycraft, Julia Searing (July 1915). "The Intercollegiate Bureau of Occupations of New York". The Cornell Countryman. 12 (9): 734–736.
- ^ Leaycraft, Julia Searing; Bush, Mary L. (March 1917). "The College Alumna's Work". Columbia University Quarterly. 19 (2): 145–156.
- ^ Leaycraft, Julia Searing (December 25, 1918). "An American Christmas in Many Tongues". The Outlook. 120 (16): 665–668.
- ^ Leaycraft, Julia Searing (March 1919). "The Y.W.C.A. in the Magazines". The Association Monthly. 12 (3): 114.
- ^ Leaycraft, Julia Searing (April 1919). "Publicity, Interpreter". The Association Monthly. 12 (4): 114–115.
- ^ "Mate Critical Dictator; WIfe Granted Decree". Daily News. 1929-10-16. p. 398. Retrieved 2023-06-20 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Julia S. Leaycraft, Editor and Artist". The New York Times. 1960-12-23. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
External links
edit- Matthew T. Leaycraft, "Julia Searing Leaycraft: Independence, Identity, and a Woman’s Life as an Artist" Learning Woodstock Art Colony (December 31, 2022); a blog post about Leaycraft, by one of her grandsons, with many images of her, her family, and her art
- Julia Searing Leaycraft at askART