Adelia Sarah Gates

Adelia Sarah Gates (October 24, 1825 - September 21, 1912) was an American illustrator of botanical specimens.[1][2] Her early work was as an elementary teacher and decorative watercolorist.[3][4] She was an amateur decorative watercolorist and painter long before she was able to advance further into scientific illustration methods and to travel widely on collecting and documentation expeditions later in her life.

Adelia Sarah Gates
Born(1825-10-24)October 24, 1825
Otego, New York
DiedSeptember 21, 1912(1912-09-21) (aged 86)
NationalityUnited States
EducationMadame Vouga’s school, Geneva, Switzerland
Known forBotanical illustrator

Early life

She was born in the Susquehanna Valley.[5] Gates worked as a governess, farmworker, teacher, and as a factory worker in the Lowell Mills before attending college.[6] In her thirties, she attended Antioch College, only to leave after two years due to health issues.[7]

Career

She started painting in her fifties, after taking lessons from Emilie Vouga in Geneva.[5][8] Later in her life in San Francisco, she sought out further education in identification and naming of specimens from noted botanists Sara Plummer Lemmon and John Gill Lemmon, for which she traded lessons in "flower painting" and sketching.[9]

During her lifetime, a colorful biography of her life and travels including expeditions to paint specimens was written by Adela Elizabeth Orpen. Titled The chronicles of the Sid, or, The life and travels of Adelia Gates, it was published in New York by Fleming H. Revell Company[10] and in London by the Religious Tract Society.[11] In the book, Orpen describes Gates, who was her governess for 14 years, by saying that "Though an artist, she is not a great genius; though a traveller in many lands, she has had no thrilling adventures. She never did any horrid deed, nor suffered any hideous privations."[7] Orpen refers to Gates as "the Sid," rather than Adelia, throughout the book explaining that "Sid means lady or mistress, and is the title by which she was known in the Sahara."[7]

Gates died in San Francisco on September 21, 1912.[12] After her death, over 600 of her works were exhibited and donated to the United States National Museum, which later became the Smithsonian Institution.[13]

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gollark: Quantum computers can apparently cause problems for all widely deployed asymmetric cryptography via Shor's algorithm.
gollark: It apparently makes brute force take O(sqrt n) time somehow.

References

  1. "Record Unit 7312". Adelia Gates Collection. Smithsonian Institution Archives.
  2. Adelia Sarah Gates, AskArt
  3. Lockshin, Nora. "Adelia Gates—Flower Painter or Botanical Illustrator?". Smithsonian Institution Archives.
  4. Adela Elizabeth Richards Orpen (1897). The chronicles of the Sid: or, The life and travels of Adelia Gates. Ayer Publishing. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-8369-9145-1. Retrieved March 30, 2012.
  5. "Adelia Gates Collection, 1879-1898 and undated". SIA RU007312. Smithsonian Institution Archives. Retrieved May 15, 2012.
  6. Orpen, Adela Elizabeth Richards (1897). The chronicles of the Sid: or, The life and travels of Adelia Gates. New York, Chicago: Fleming H. Revell Company.
  7. Orpen, Adela (1893). "The chronicles of the Sid, or, The life and travels of Adelia Gates". Fleming H. Revell Company. p. 8.
  8. "Vouga, Emilie". 2011. doi:10.1093/benz/9780199773787.article.B00192924. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. Brown, Wynn (March 8, 2018). "A Friendship Revealed – and Revived?". The Bigger Picture. Smithsonian Institution Archives. Retrieved March 13, 2018.
  10. Orpen, Adela E. (1893). The chronicles of the Sid, or, The life and travels of Adelia Gates. Life and travels of Adelia Gates. New York: Fleming H. Revell Company.
  11. Orpen, Adela Elizabeth Richards. (1893). The chronicles of the Sid: or, The life and travels of Adelia Gates. Life and travels of Adelia Gates. London: The Religious Tract Society.
  12. "Gates". The San Francisco Call. September 22, 1912. p. 20. Retrieved June 3, 2020 via Newspapers.com.
  13. "Learned to paint at 50". The Washington Post. April 27, 1914. p. 4. Retrieved June 3, 2020 via Newspapers.com.
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