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Clare Leighton

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Clare Leightonborn London, England, 1898; died Connecticut, 1989

In 1915, Clare Leighton began formal studies at the Brighton College of Art, and during the early 1920s, continued her training at the Slade School of Fine Art. She executed her first wood engraving in 1922 while enrolled at the Central School of Art and Design in London. A year later her engravings were shown in the Society of Wood Engravers annual exhibition, and she began to receive critical attention. During this period she also taught in public and private schools and traveled in Europe.

During the late 1920s and 1930s, Leighton came to the United States on a number of lecture tours. At the onset of World War II, she moved to America. Initially she lived on Long Island but later moved to Baltimore. In 1943 Leighton taught at Duke University and in 1945 became an American citizen. She eventually settled in Woodbury, Connecticut, where she worked until the late 1980s.

During her extensive career, Leighton carved more than 900 woodblocks, and designed numerous book illustrations, bookplates, engravings, illustrations, and mosaics and stained glass windows. Although known primarily for her work as a printmaker, she also was the author of seven books.

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In the Beginning
Clare Leighton
1955
Out of the Depths
Clare Leighton
1952