Elizabeth Sawyer Norton (1887–1985) was an American artist, known for her bronze sculptures, paintings, and printmaking. The subject of her work often featured animals, landscapes and/or portraits. She lived in Palo Alto, California, from 1919 until her death in 1985.[1]
Early life and education
Elizabeth Sawyer Norton was born December 16, 1887, in Chicago, Illinois, to lawyer James Sanger Norton (1844–1896) and Frances Julia Rumsey (1850–1933).[2][3][4]
While still living in New York City, one of her students was sculptor, Katharine Underhill (born 1892).[5]
Career
Norton had a successful career and exhibited her art in many galleries in New York City.[1] She had made artistic contributions to exhibitions at the Smithsonian Institution throughout her career.[6][7]
She had an older sister named Frances Sanger Norton (married name, Brown) that had moved to Palo Alto, California because her husband Harry Brown was a professor in the Philosophy Department at Stanford University.[8] Norton traveled to California in 1915 to attend to Panama–Pacific International Exposition (PPIE) and to visit her sister.[1][8] She returned four years later in 1919 to move to Palo Alto, after struggling with bouts with the flu.[1][8] Her brother-in-law Harry Brown designed her home at 353 Lowell Avenue.[8][9]
When Norton moved to California she became interested in printmaking, prior to which she primarily worked in sculpture, pastels, and oil paint.[10] Norton was a founding member of the Palo Alto Art Club (now the Pacific Art League) in 1921.[11] Norton was a member of the California Society of Etchers; Palo Alto Art Club (now known as the Pacific Art League); American Federation of Arts; and San Francisco Women Painters.[1]
Death and legacy
In the last 20 years of Norton's life she lived at Channing House, a retirement community in Palo Alto.[8] Norton died on August 7, 1985, in Palo Alto, California, and is buried in Chicago at the Graceland Cemetery.
The Pacific Art League of Palo Alto has dedicated a solo-exhibition gallery in her name, the "Elizabeth Norton studio" and the "Elizabeth Norton Distinguished Service Award".[11]