Artist

Elisabet Ney

born Munster, Germany 1833-died Austin, TX 1907
Also known as
  • Elizabeth Ney
  • Franzisca Bernardina Wilhelmina Elisabet Ney
  • Franzisca Bernardina Wilhelmina Elisabeth Ney
Born
Munster, Germany
Died
Austin, Texas, United States
Active in
  • Texas, United States
Biography

The first woman to study at the prestigious Munich Academy, Ney began her career in her native Germany. Disillusionment with German politics brought her to a utopian community in Georgia in 1870; when it failed she and her husband settled on a plantation near Austin, Texas. Because of her socialist and feminist views, and her refusal to take her husband's name or to acknowledge their legal relationship, Ney was unpopular wih her Texas neighbors and had difficulty establishing her career in America. Persistence eventually triumphed: she received commissions, was consulted regarding sculpture for the State Capitol, and created monumental figures of Texas heroes for the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893. What was once her studio in Texas today is the Elisabet Ney Museum.

Elizabeth Chew Women Artists (brochure, Washington, DC: National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution)

Works by this artist (626 items)

Werner Drewes, Central Density, 1973, oil on canvas, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase, 1975.116
Central Density
Date1973
oil on canvas
On view
Werner Drewes, Pointed Brown and Floating Circles, 1933, oil, pen and ink, and pencil on wood panel, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Patricia and Phillip Frost, 1986.92.17
Pointed Brown and Floating Circles
Date1933
oil, pen and ink, and pencil on wood panel
On view
Werner Drewes, Suspended Forms, woodcut, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the artist, 1977.21.11
Suspended Forms
woodcut
Not on view
Werner Drewes, Summer Bouquet (no. 242), color woodcut, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the artist, 1968.9.81
Summer Bouquet (no. 242)
color woodcut
Not on view