Cornelia MacIntyre Foley | |
Birth Name: | Cornelia MacIntyre |
Birth Date: | January 31, 1909 |
Birth Place: | Honolulu, Hawaii |
Death Place: | Severna Park, Maryland |
Field: | Painting, printmaking, sculpture |
Training: | Huc-Mazelet Luquiens, Madge Tennent, Henry Tonks |
Movement: | Hawaiian modernism |
Cornelia MacIntyre Foley (1909 – 2010), was an American painter from Hawaii.
Cornelia MacIntyre was born in Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii on January 31, 1909.
She began her art training under the first art instructor the University of Hawaii, Huc-Mazelet Luquiens (1881–1961). Foley continued her art education at the University of Washington, and spent two years in London at the Slade School of Art as a pupil of Henry Tonks (1862–1937). From London, she returned to Hawaii, where she studied with Madge Tennent from 1934 to 1937.
Subsequently, she married Lieutenant Paul Foley (who became a Rear Admiral in the United States Navy). During 1937–1941, the couple lived in Long Beach, California and in Seattle, Washington in 1941–1942. Cornelia Foley died January 18, 2010, in Severna Park, Maryland.[1]
Foley is best known for her voluptuous paintings of Hawaiian women, such as Hawaiian Woman in White Holoku from 1937. Major paintings by Foley are held by the Honolulu Museum of Art and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri.[2] A cast concrete outdoor fountain, known as the Varhey Circle Fountain, which she created with Henry H. Rempel, is on the campus of the University of Hawaii at Manoa.[3]