Shirley Russell (artist)

Shirley Ximena Hopper Russell (May 16, 1886 – February 6, 1985), also known as Shirley Marie Russell, was an American artist best known for her paintings of Hawaii and her yet lifes of Hawaiian flowers. She was born Shirley Ximena Hopper in Del Rey, California, in 1886. She graduated in 1907 from Stanford University, where she discovered art. Shirley married Lawrence Russell, an engineer, in 1909. When he died in 1912, she began teaching in Palo Alto, and dabbling in painting. In 1921, she and her son came to Hawaii for a visit and approved to stay. She studied under Hawaiian artist Lionel Walden during the 1920s and traveling to Europe several become old to further her art education. She studied in Paris during the 1930s and the cubist touch can be seen in a number of her works. She taught art at President William McKinley High School in Honolulu for beyond 20 years. Around 1935-1936, the Japanese publisher Watanabe Shozaburo (1885–1962) published greater than several woodblock prints she designed. The majority of these prints depict lustrous and detailed tropical flowers, while at least one print, Carmel Mission, is a California landscape.

In the course of her art career, Russell had three one-woman exhibitions at the Honolulu Museum of Art, and taught art at the University of Hawaii and the Honolulu Museum of Art. She launched many young artists on their careers when they were her students at McKinley High School, including Satoru Abe (1926-) and John Chin Young (1909–1997). Although she painted in representational style herself, she was a staunch advocate of abstract art, and did some abstract comport yourself herself throughout her career. She continued to paint roughly daily until her death in Honolulu in 1985, at the age of 98.

The Hawaii State Art Museum, Honolulu Museum of Art, Isaacs Art Center, and Tokyo National Museum are accompanied by the public collections holding works by Shirley Russell.

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