Phemia Molkenboer
Euphemia Hendrika Maria (Phemia) Molkenboer (Weesp, 10 September 1883 – Amsterdam, 10 May 1940) was a Dutch ceramist, furniture designer, draughtswoman and art teacher.[1] BiographyMolkenboer was born in Weesp in 1883, one of fourteen children of the sculptor and painter Willem Molkenboer and Maria Cecilia Petronella Johanna Derkinderen.[2] She was a sister of the painters Antoon Molkenboer and Theo Molkenboer[3] and of the literary scientist Bernard Molkenboer .[4] She attended the Rijksnormaalschool voor Teekenonderwijzers , an art school founded by her father, from 1900 to 1905, followed by a year at the Rijksakademie art school.[5] She became an art teacher and worked as one at least until 1930.[1] Between 1916 and 1920 she was involved with the magazine Jong Leven and she became a member and later secretary of the catholic art society Kunstkring de Violier in Amsterdam.[1][6] WorksIn 1907 Molkenboer produced drawings for a book by Johanna Naber, followed by some book covers, mostly in Art Nouveau style.[1] She worked with the toy factory Olanda, designing wooden toys and children's furniture.[1] In 1924, at the occasion of the 27th Eucharistic Congress, Molkenboer designed commemorative plates for De Koninklijke Porceleyne Fles in Delft.[5] She also did some occasion work for the earthenware factory De Sphinx in Maastricht.[7] Some of Molkenboer's work was distinguished at the Panama–California Exposition in San Diego.[1]
Sources
External linksMedia related to Phemia Molkenboer at Wikimedia Commons |