Background
Lillian Cotton was born and raised in Boston, Massachusetts. Her father was Nathaniel Hugh Cotton, a West Indies shipping merchant born in Barbados, and her mother was Harriet Emma Clapp.
Lillian Cotton was born and raised in Boston, Massachusetts. Her father was Nathaniel Hugh Cotton, a West Indies shipping merchant born in Barbados, and her mother was Harriet Emma Clapp.
Cotton developed an interest in art as a young child—drawing detailed portraits in sketchbooks as early as age ten—and attended the Boston Museum School. Between 1915 and 1917, Cotton studied at the Art Students League of New York under Robert Henri and George Bellows. In 1924, Cotton moved to Paris and studied at the André Lhote Academy.
The couple lived between Paris and New New York Cotton was most famous for her portraits, with subjects including Greta Garbo, Lauren Bacall, Veronica Lake, June Walker, Marcel Marceau, Stephen James Joyce, Alfred Lunt, and Wheeler Williams. Cotton’s paintings are characterized by realistic forms, clear colors, and bold brushwork.
Although she primarily painted human figures, she also occasionally painted landscapes and still-lifes.
Between 1918 and 1959, Cotton exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Salon d"Automne, among other institutions. Lillian Cotton pieces are represented in the permanent collections of the Corcoran Gallery of Art and of Florida State College and Seton Hall University.
She is listed in Who Was Who in American Art (Falk, 1999) and the Dictionary of Women Artists (Petteys, 1985). Lillian Cotton died in New York City in 1962.
She was also a member of the New York Society of Women Artists and the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, maintaining a lifelong connection to both her American and French artistic “roots.”.