Achsah Barlow Brewster

Achsah Barlow Brewster (November 12, 1879 – February 16, 1945) was an American painter and writer, and wife of player Earl Brewster (1878–1957). They are best known today for their close friendship as soon as such prominent figures of the time as D. H. Lawrence, Willa Cather and the Nehru family.

Achsah Leona Barlow Brewster was born in 1878 in New Haven, Connecticut. After graduating from Smith College in 1902, she went to New York City where she studied art below Kenyon Cox, Arthur Wesley Dow, Walter A. Clark and Frank Vincent DuMond at the Art Students League and in imitation of Robert Henri at the New York School of Art. During 1906-07 she studied in France at the Institut des Beaux Arts and the studios of Lucien Simon and Castelluchio. She next visited art galleries in England, Belgium, the Netherlands and Italy. After returning to the United States, she spent three summers at the MacDowell Colony in New Hampshire.

In 1904 Achsah and Earl Brewster were introduced by the poet Vachel Lindsay after he noticed that Earl's imaginary portrait of a girl for a magazine lid closely resembled her. The Brewsters were married in 1910 and suddenly moved to Italy. They never returned to the United States except for a hasty visit in 1923. They lived mostly in southern Italy but with spent mature in France, Greece and Ceylon (Sri Lanka). In 1935 they moved to [ snowview land aboveAlmora, Uttar Pradesh, India, where they lived from 1935 until they died, Achsah in 1945 and Earl in 1957. They had one daughter, Harwood, who was born in 1912 in Paris and became the model for many of Achsah's paintings and the subject of her shimmering memoir, The Child.

The Brewsters' art was influenced by Puvis de Chavannes, the Italian primitive painters and their own spirituality. Together they wrote L'oeuvre de E.H. et Achsah Barlow Brewster (1923), which explained their artistic principles, influences and goals. Subjects of Achsah's paintings included religious figures, children and local people in Ceylon. Her paintings were often large (sometimes murals). She used skilled colors and often included flowers, animals and an imaginative touch. In Paris Maurice Denis and George Desvallières invited Achsah to associate their Atelier d'Art Sacre, but she declined out of event for maintaining artistic independence. Her play a role was exhibited in Paris at the Salon d'Automne, Galerie Cheron, the Salon des Societe des Artistes Independents and the Salon des Tuileries; in Rome at the Secessione and the Pincio Casino and in India at the Roerich Center of Art & Culture in Allahabad and at the Indian Society of Oriental Art in Calcutta. In India some of her paintings were bought to be displayed in public buildings. Recent exhibitions of the Brewsters' work were held in 2001 and in 2007-08 at ACA Galleries in New York City. Achsah's large Sermon upon the Mount, a triptych, is still upon view at St. Georges Church, Crecy-en-Brie, France. In 2008 her painting, Hamadryad, was acquired by the Telfair Museum of Art in Savannah, Georgia.

The Brewsters were remarkable in numbering in the course of their circle of associates many prominent artistic, literary and embassy figures, including D.H. Lawrence and Willa Cather, both of whose writings they influenced, Elihu Vedder, Vachel Lindsay and three generations of the Nehru family. The Brewsters and Lawrences met upon Capri in 1921 and maintained a near friendship and frequent correspondence. After Lawrence's death in 1930, the Brewsters compiled a baby book of his letters to them, with their memories of him. D.H. Lawrence: Reminiscences and Correspondence was published in 1934. Achsah then wrote many rude stories and articles, including The Postmaster's Farewell and Ceylon the Luxuriant, which were published in Asia magazine. Her unpublished memoir, The Child, written in India during 1941-42, recounts the family's archives during the seventeen years from Harwood's birth occurring to the period that she left for speculative in England in 1929.

The personal correspondence of Earl and Achsah Brewster as competently as Achsah's The Child and a memoir by Harwood are housed at Drew University in Madison, New Jersey.

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