Anne MacRae MacLeod
Anne MacRae MacLeod began studying art at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston at nine years of age.
At fifteen she won a four year scholarship to the Cambridge School of Art to study Cezanne's Color Theory with George Hamilton of Cambridge and the Cochoran Gallery of Art in Washington D.C.
After marrying and having three children she resumed study at the Museum of Fine Arts and the DeCordova Museum in Lincoln Massachusetts.
She has taught at Quincy Y.M.C.A, Cohasset Art Center, Lexington Art Association, Bedford Arts and Craft Society and DeCordova Museum.
Anne and her husband have returned from living in Scotland and have bought a home in Southeastern Massachusetts.
Her work has been described as lyrical, evocative, and timeless and is in many collections in the Western Hemisphere and Europe.
Anne was one of the main contributors to the development of the new printmaking technique known as collagraph intaglio. This new method of printing brought print making much closer to painting; in rich texture and subtle coloring.
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