Lilla Cabot Perry (1848 – 1933) was
an American artist who worked in the American Impressionist style, rendering
portraits and landscapes in the free form manner of her mentor, Claude Monet.
Perry was an early advocate of the French Impressionist style and contributed
to its reception in the United States. Perry's early work was shaped by her
exposure to the Boston School of artists and her travels in Europe and Japan.
She was also greatly influenced by Ralph Waldo Emerson's philosophies and her
friendship with Camille Pissarro.
Although it was not until the age of
thirty-six that Perry received formal training, her work with artists of the
Impressionist, Realist, Symbolist, and German Social Realist movements greatly
affected the style of her oeuvre.
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