Lydia Mei

Lydia Mei
Self portrait
Born (1896-07-02)July 2, 1896
Hiiumaa, Estonia
Died September 14, 1965(1965-09-14) (aged 69)
Tallinn, Estonia
Nationality Estonian
Education Petrograd Women's Polytechnic Institute
Known for Painting
Movement New Objectivity
Spouse(s) Anton Starkopf

Lydia Mei (2 July 1896 - 14 September 1965)[1] was an Estonian artist who specialized in watercolors and still lifes.

Born on the Estonian island of Hiiumaa, Lydia Mei was the middle child of the three daughters of a ship's captain. All three sisters would become artists, with Lydia Mei and Natalie Mei achieving public prominence during the Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity) period of Estonian art of the 1920s and sister Kristine Mei becoming a sculptor.

Mei studied architecture at the Petrograd Women's Polytechnic Institute until 1918. But she became famous as a watercolorist in late 1920s. She later married sculptor Anton Starkopf and is occasionally credited with the name Lydia Mei-Starkopf. She died in 1965 in the capital city of Tallinn.

References

  • Pihlak, Elvi: "Lydia Mei - Natüürmortide ja lillemaalide meister" in: Kunst Vol. 1962,1 pgs 16-20. Tallinn.


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