Pauline Elfriede Leps-Estam | |
Birth Name: | Pauline Eschstamm |
Birth Date: | November 3, 1903 |
Birth Place: | Pärnu, Estonia |
Death Place: | Northridge, Los Angeles, California |
Nationality: | Estonian |
Alma Mater: | Tartu Higher Music School, Pallas Art School[1] |
Occupation: | Printmaker |
Spouse: | Erich Leps |
Relatives: | Ida Emilie Adamson |
Pauline Elfriede Leps-Estam (also Estam-Leps, until 1930 Estam, née Eschstamm, November 3, 1903[2] – February 5, 2002)[3] was an Estonian printmaker.[1]
Leps-Estam was born in Pärnu, the daughter of Jaan Eschtamm (later Estam, 1867–1949) and Pauline Catharine Eschtamm (later Estam, née Kalbus; 1870–1961). She started school in 1922 at and continued the following year at the . She studied from 1924 to 1925 at Tartu Higher Music School and from 1929 to 1931 at the Pallas Art School.[1]
Leps-Estam worked as a singing and music teacher in Pärnu until the Second World War. She went to Germany as a war refugee in 1944, and from there to the United States in 1949. She studied printmaking from 1968 to 1975 at the Art Institute of Chicago, and from 1975 to 1980 at Santa Monica College in California.
Her first drawings appeared in 1930 in the magazine . She depicted natural scenes and symbolist compositions in free graphics of a romantic nature.
After the restoration of Estonian independence, over 300 graphic works and twenty book illustrations were sent to the Pärnu Museum in Estonia together with the works of her husband Erich Leps, as well as works by her sister, Ida Emilie Adamson.[4] [5]
Leps-Estam's sister was the artist Ida Emilie Adamson (1898–1989).[1] [6] Her husband was the painter Erich Leps (1901–1965),[3] [7] whom she married on July 11, 1930. Their son was the educational researcher Ants Arvo Leps (1936–2008).[1] [8] [9]