Stephens, Alice Barber, 1858-1932
Stephens, Alice Barber 1858-
Alice Barber Stephens
Stephens, Alice Barber (American painter, illustrator, and printmaker, 1858-1932)
Stephens, Alice Barber, 1858-1932, ill
Stephens, Alice Barber
VIAF ID: 67872556 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/67872556
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a Alice Barber Stephens
- 100 1 _ ‡a Stephens, Alice Barber
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Stephens, Alice Barber ‡d 1858-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Stephens, Alice Barber ‡d 1858-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Stephens, Alice Barber ‡g American painter, illustrator, and printmaker, 1858-1932
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Stephens, Alice Barber, ‡d 1858-1932
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Stephens, Alice Barber, ‡d 1858-1932
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (26)
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
Alice Barber Stephens, c1984: | |
The apple of discord | |
[Cat, curled up] | |
[The chess players, after painting by Thomas Eakins] | |
The child murmured softly to his mute playmate | |
[Children in costume dancing] | |
[Children peering through curtained entrance at people entering a church, after drawing by Frederick Dielman] | |
[Children's profiles] | |
The commodore | |
[Crowd of people seated around table watching man read document] | |
[Dorothea busy in the old library] | |
[Father walking son from house on his first day of school, as mother and daughter watch from doorway] | |
Het gele huis | |
[Group of children in my garden at Rose Valley] | |
[Guinevere, from Tennyson's Idylls of the King] | |
[Hallway and staircase] | |
He listened as one may listen to a reprieve | |
["He sat up alone with him through the night" from Middlemarch by George Eliot] | |
[He was awful nice, said George slowly] | |
Hearts and creeds | |
His courtship | |
Homespun tales | |
[Hooded woman] | |
Imagination pictured the husband | |
[Initial letter "T" and fireplace with steaming kettle] | |
[It is a serious offense against regulations, said the Captain] | |
I jes only want my ma-- | |
John Dalziel, English wood engraver, my teacher, about 1876 | |
[The Knickerbockers prolong the glad time as much as possible] | |
The little old fashioned girl--a declimation | |
Little women or Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy | |
[Love feast of the Manheim Dunkers] | |
I love her | |
[Man in bed pointing key toward woman] | |
[Man sitting on ground under tree] | |
[Mausoleum, Charlottenburg] | |
[Men and women standing in interior of store or warehouse] | |
Mother Carey | |
Mothers and fathers | |
Nathalie's sister : the last of the McAlister records | |
Nobody's : a novel | |
[Old woman and children] | |
On the firing line : a romance of South Africa | |
Our Davie Pepper | |
Over-indulgence--a spoiled Thanksgiving | |
[People eating, possibly cafeteria] | |
Peter-- I am going to let you in on a secret | |
Phila[delphia] Alms House a busy corner in the shoemaker's room | |
The Philadelphians | |
The Pineboro Quartette | |
[Please wait a moment, said Miss Willmer hastily, making notes in a small book] | |
Portrait Sketch of Charlotte Harding | |
The red coat | |
I see a boy | |
Selecting miniatures, old store, Bailey, Banks, Biddle, Philadelphia | |
She bent down over the dead monk | |
[She curled the whip-lash sharply round his legs] | |
She slipped down by his chair and knelt beside him | |
[A shop below the pavement : child life in New York] | |
Sketches from cat life | |
[So sinds mister his Jacky over to fetch yous] | |
Some successful marriages | |
[Somebody has to raise everything you eat, do your share] | |
A son of the middle border | |
Study in character of the Pennsylvania Dutch | |
The supreme gift | |
Susanna and Sue | |
Telegraph boys at lunch | |
[Thedmore, are you mad, to see this go on?] | |
[Thedmore sank into the chair, his face was hidden in his hands] | |
[Then I kissed Mrs. Agnes Quine ...] | |
There, he exclaimed, do you see those scratches and marks? | |
There on the sofa lay Theodora | |
There was silence betwen them and she tortured the [...] | |
[Unable to withdraw her attention from the kneeling figure] | |
Under the Christmas stars | |
[I ventured to kiss his tousled hair] | |
[The vicar being visited by his family in prison] | |
The wayfarers | |
We Saw Poor Harriet Also Turn to Him, and We Judged That She, as Well as Her Mother, Was Begging Him to Go | |
[The well-remembered features] | |
Well, sir, compare Bunyan with some of our other modern writers--take Kipling for instance | |
What George asked the cat | |
When I first came I was as young as Miss Aiken - and not bad looking | |
When I first saw the children with their mother | |
Where's the towel | |
Wife of President Hayes | |
[Will you be my friend indeed?] | |
[Woman giving little boy piano lesson] | |
[Woman in checked dress, seated] | |
[Woman sitting on couch looking at picture] | |
[Woman standing by mantle, man seated in chair] | |
The Women Business | |
Women's Life Class | |
You haven't even let me tell you why I came with Joseph |