We are currently adding to the bibliographical research of Newcomb artisans. Check back in as we add to this page.
May Hollinshead Asbury
May Hollinshead Asbury enrolled at Newcomb College in 1919 and received her Bachelor of Design in 1923, specializing in ceramics and metalwork. After graduation, she traveled to Europe and, upon her return, started work as a fashion illustrator for Bonwit Teller in New York. During these years, she attended classes at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, Penland School of Crafts in Spruce Pine, North Carolina, and Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts in Gatlinburg, Tennessee.
In 1938 Asbury moved to Georgia and began teaching private art lessons for children, as well as art classes at Wesleyan College and the Women’s College of Georgia. Arthritis, however, curtailed her personal studio pursuits.
She married in 1940 and had one son. She died in Baldwin County, Georgia on September 21, 1986.
Alix Bettison
Alix Bettison was born March 29, 1890 in Brenham, Texas. Bettison was a lifelong member of the church of Christian Scientists and published on the subject.
Bettison enrolled in the Newcomb Art School in 1908 and appears in the 1910 College bulletin under the School of Household Economy, but she was awarded a Diploma in Art in 1911. She is listed as a Graduate Art student in the 1911–1912 Tulane catalogue. Her areas of specialization were jewelry-making and embroidery, though some pottery has been found with her signature on it as well. The 1920 census listed Bettison as an “Artist; Craftsman in Jewelry.”
Alix Bettison Colby died on February 20, 1983 in Winter Park, Florida.
Ruth Bultmann
Ruth Bultmann was born in New Orleans September 24, 1894 to German parents. She received a Diploma in Art from Newcomb College in 1917. She continued her education and was awarded a Bachelor of Design in 1919. Her area of concentration was calligraphy. The 1919–20 and 1920–21 University catalogues list her as a Graduate Art student. After leaving Newcomb, she applied her talents to designing bookplates and greeting cards, as well as advertising signs, stationery, and funeral cards for her family’s funeral home business. Bultmann returned to Newcomb in the years 1931–33 as an Art Craftsman for the Pottery enterprise. She died on October 10, 1975 in Metairie, Louisiana.
Browning Coleman
Browning Coleman was born in New Orleans on October 3, 1883. Coleman entered Newcomb College in 1900. The University catalogues of 1901–02 and 1902–03 list her as a Normal Art student, where she developed skills in pottery decoration. Many of her designs feature dragonflies, which is often seen in other American Arts and Crafts designs. Coleman was also an athlete- playing on the College’s basketball team. She was prominently featured in the society pages of the New Orleans newspapers between 1904 and 1912. After marrying, she traveled often, visiting places like Sweden and Guatemala, but no record shows that she continued making art. Browning Coleman Moore died on July 30, 1958.
Helen Pauline DeGrange
Helen Pauline DeGrange was born in New Orleans on May 11, 1872. Helen DeGrange appears as a Special Art student in the University catalogue from 1888–1903. She is listed in the 1891–92 catalogue as a postgraduate student in mathematics. The 1901 College bulletin lists her as a Graduate Art student (Plate 48). Mrs. McLellan served as president of the Newcomb Alumnae Association for a number of years and was chairman of the Newcomb Loan Fund, an Association endeavor that advanced money at a nominal rate to Newcomb students whose families could not pay their tuition. Helen “Weenie” DeGrange McLellan died on May 19, 1962.
Carmen Freret Favrot
Carmen Freret Favrot was born in New Orleans on November 29, 1892. She enrolled as a freshman at Newcomb College in 1910, receiving her Diploma in Art in 1913, and continuing as a Graduate student in the 1914–15, and 1917–18 academic sessions. After completed her graduate education, Favrot became a jeweler at Newcomb. She worked at the college as a craftsman until 1929.
Favrot was an accomplished jeweler and silversmith. She often exhibited her work, including at a show at the Junior League in New York.
Favrot died in 1979.
Cecile Mathilde Heller
Cecile Mathilde Heller was born in New Orleans on June 14, 1890. Her father, and immigrant from Bohemia, was the rabbi at New Orleans’ Temple Sinai, and was an avid advocate for social justice reform and for the end of segregation.
Cecile Heller pursued her interest in art and graphic design, and enrolled in the Newcomb Art School in 1907. Heller worked primarily in graphic arts, specifically watercolor and bookplates. In her junior year at Newcomb, she received the Fanny Estelle Holley medal for her watercolor paintings.
Heller married chess champion Edward Lasker not long after completing her degree at Newcomb, but tragically died after only six months of marriage on November 11, 1920. She was 30 years old.
Paul Ernest Cox
Paul Cox is known as the first professionally trained ceramist employed by Newcomb College. He perfected the matte glaze used after 1910 and altered the techniques, designed and built kilns and “modernized the plant.” In 1918 when the new Art School building was erected, he designed the kilns and equipment. After he left Newcomb in 1918, he traveled and worked at various businesses, including Pittsburgh and later accepting a teaching position at Iowa State College where he was in charge of the Department of Ceramic Engineering. He worked there for over two decades, returning to New Orleans in 1939 and setting up a pottery business in Harahan, but it was short lived. He later retired to Baton Rouge, and died in 1968.