The Filson Historical Society Digital Projects

Browse Items (30 total)

  • 987PC52X_071.jpg

    Enid Bland Yandell (center), Janet Scudder (left), and two other women pose on scaffolding in front of a caryatide in Lorado Taft's studio in Chicago. Enid along with Janet worked in Taft's studio together during the World's Columbian Exposition, better known as the 1893 Chicago World's Fair.
  • 987PC52X_036.jpg

    Enid Bland Yandell (center) stands with a group of women in the woods. All the women are holding bouquets of flowers.
  • 987PC52X_166.jpg

    Enid Bland Yandell painting or drawing a nude female figure, no date.
  • 987PC52X_012.jpg

    Enid Bland Yandell (on right) poses with three unidentified women.
  • 987PC52X_002.jpg

    Enid Bland Yandell poses with her dogs in front of a house.
  • enid_sample010.jpg

    Watercolor of color theory and had written notes created by Enid Bland Yandell. Date is unknown, but it was probably created during her time at the Art Academy of Cincinnati (1887-1889).
  • 987PC52X_125.jpg

    Enid Bland Yandell poses with model and sculpture of Indian Chief Ninigret. This was Enid's last major public commission which depicted the Niantic chief know for his peaceful relations with European settlers in his territory of Rhode Island. The model for the figure was a member of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, performing in Paris at the time. The finished work presently rests on a rock beside the bay in Watch Hill, Rhode Island. A version of Chief Ninigret was one of two works which Yandell exhibited in the 1913 Armory Show. The other work featured was the Five Sense Fountain.
  • 987PC52X_086.jpg

    Enid Bland Yandell poses in her studio in front of the plaster cast of the Carrie Brown Memorial Fountain. She is holding some of the tools used to sculpt the piece.
  • 987PC52X_233.jpg

    Bust of Emma Willard. The notation reads Public Library, Albany, New York.
  • yandell, enid_appui aux artistes menu_A_Y21b_64.jpg

    Appui Aux Artistes (Aid for Artists) pamphlet. Established by Enid Bland Yandell and four other women in August 1914. Appui Aux Artistes provided affordable meals for those involved in the arts and their families. Appui used American contacts to raise money for the organization.
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