Page:Women in the Fine Arts From the Seventh Century B.C. to the Twentiet.djvu/118

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WOMEN IN THE FINE ARTS
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judged superior to those of Rosalba Camera and Angelica KaufFmann. Her sacred pictures, strong and good in color, are full of a mystical and spiritual beauty. Her drawing is admirable and her treatment of detail highly finished

Borzino, Leopoldina. Milanese water-color painter. Has shown excellent genre pictures at various exhibitions. "The Holiday" and the "Return from Mass" were both exhibited and sold at Rome in 1883; "The Way to Calvary" was seen at Venice in 1887. "The Rosary," "Anguish," and "Going to the Fountain" are all distin- guished by good color as well as by grace and originality of composition

Bouguereau, Mme. Elizabeth Jane. See Gardner.

Boulanger, Mme. Marie Elizabeth. Medals at the Paris Salon in 1836 and 1839. Born in Paris, 1810, Her family name was Blavot, and after the death of M. Boulanger she married M. Cavé director of the Academy of the Beaux-Arts. Her picture of "The Virgin in Tears" is in the Museum of Rouen; and "The Children's Tournament," a triptych, was purchased by the Government.

Bourrillon-Tournay, Mme. Jeanne. Medal of the sec- ond class at Exposition Universelle at Lyons; silver medal at Versailles; honorable mention at Paris Salon, 1896; the two prizes of the Union des Femmes Peintres et Sculpteurs—les Palmes Acaddmique, 1895; the Rosette of an Officer of the Public Instruction in 1902. Member of the Société des Artistes Français, of the Union des Femmes Peintres et Sculpteurs, and of the Association