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- Anna Milo Upjohn (1868–1951) was an American artist, illustrator, author, and relief worker who, late in her long career, became known for paintings, drawings, and illustrations she made for the American Red Cross. After graduating from high school, she studied art briefly in New York but obtained most of her training in Paris from Claudio Castelucho and Lucien Simon. In the early years of the twentieth century, she became known both for her portraits and paintings of children and for her book and magazine illustrations. Finding herself in France at the outset of the First World War, she devoted herself to relief work first among the refugees in Paris and later among the devastated villages in France and Belgium. Having spent the first half of her adult life as an independent professional, she served as a staff artist for the American Red Cross between 1921 and 1931. She traveled extensively during her adult life and lived mostly in New York City; Ithaca, New York; and Washington, D.C. (en)
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- Anna Milo Upjohn, Refugee from Hazebrouck, illustration from Helping France by Ruth Gaines , frontispiece (en)
- Anna Milo Upjohn, The Devotion of Elisabetta, illustration from Count Falcon of the Eyrie by Clinton Scollard (en)
- Anna Milo Upjohn in 1921 (en)
- Anna Milo Upjohn, Christmas Fairy, illustration fromSnuggy Bedtime Stories , p. 109 (en)
- Anna Milo Upjohn, Cheyenne Girls from School, illustration on cover of Junior Red Cross News v. 7, n. 9, May 1926 (en)
- Anna Milo Upjohn, Enrolling for Service, poster created for the Junior Red Cross, 1919 (en)
- Anna Milo Upjohn, A Little Visit to Brittany with Anna Milo Upjohn, from Junior Red Cross News, v. 1, n. 8, pp. 8-9 (en)
- Anna Milo Upjohn, "Chasing Little Speck-O'-Dirt", illustration from The Youth's Companion, v. 83, n. 13, p. 161 (en)
- Anna Milo Upjohn, Blue Clouds from My Cigarette, illustration from "Chiffonette", Ainslee's Magazine, v. 4, n. 6, Jan. 1900 (en)
- Anna Milo Upjohn, Jack and Jill Writing Invitations to the Race, illustration from Some Adventures of Jack and Jill by Barbara Yechton p. 21 (en)
- Anna Milo Upjohn, The Book, illustration from Fresh Posies by Abbie Farwell Brown , p. 153 (en)
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rdfs:comment
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- Anna Milo Upjohn (1868–1951) was an American artist, illustrator, author, and relief worker who, late in her long career, became known for paintings, drawings, and illustrations she made for the American Red Cross. After graduating from high school, she studied art briefly in New York but obtained most of her training in Paris from Claudio Castelucho and Lucien Simon. In the early years of the twentieth century, she became known both for her portraits and paintings of children and for her book and magazine illustrations. Finding herself in France at the outset of the First World War, she devoted herself to relief work first among the refugees in Paris and later among the devastated villages in France and Belgium. Having spent the first half of her adult life as an independent professional, (en)
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