Elizabeth Shaw (artist) explained

Elizabeth Shaw
Birth Date:4 May 1920
Birth Place:Belfast, Ireland
Death Place:Berlin, Germany
Occupation:Artist, illustrator and children's book author

Elizabeth Shaw (4 May 1920 – 27 June 1992) was an Irish artist, illustrator and children's book author, active in Germany.[1]

Life and work

Elizabeth Shaw was born in Belfast, Ireland in 1920. In 1933, she moved to England with her family. From 1938 to 1940, she studied under Henry Moore and Graham Sutherland at the Chelsea College of Art and Design in London.[2] In 1940, she contributed to the war effort by working as a mechanic until 1944, when she married Swiss-born sculptor and painter René Graetz. In 1946, they moved to Berlin-Zehlendorf, Germany.In Berlin, she first worked for the satirical journal, Ulenspiegel. After it folded, she worked for the satirical magazine Eulenspiegel. In 1950, she began to also draw caricatures for Neues Deutschland. In 1959, she created lithographic portraits of 43 members of the Akademie der Künste in Berlin. She illustrated stories by Bertolt Brecht and wrote and illustrated her own children's books. She also illustrated books by James Krüss, Gerhard Holtz-Baumert, Heinz Kahlau and Rainer Kirsch. Shaw also drew a monthly comic titled Sonntagmorgen.[3] Shaw died 1992 in Berlin-Pankow.

Awards and honours

Shaw received a number of awards for her work, including the Art Prize of the German Democratic Republic, the Hans Baltzer Prize, the Leipzig Gutenberg Prize[4] and the Käthe Kollwitz Prize from the Akademie der Künste Berlin.

A primary school in Berlin-Pankow is named after Shaw.

Selected works

Children's books

(Most of the books listed above were published by the children's book publisher, Beltz & Gelberg.)

Book illustrations
Anthologies
Autobiographies

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: The Irish artist who charmed East German children. BBC News . 5 June 2022.
  2. [Sarah Haffner]
  3. Web site: Elizabeth Shaw. lambiek.net. 15 July 2021.
  4. http://www.leipzig.de/de/buerger/kultur/literatur/gutenberg/11117.shtml "Die Preisträger des Gutenberg-Preises 1979 – 1988"