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Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { ?s ?p Florence Ada Fuller (1867 – 17 July 1946) was a South African-born Australian artist. Originally from Port Elizabeth, Fuller migrated as a child to Melbourne with her family. There she trained with her uncle Robert Hawker Dowling and teacher Jane Sutherland and took classes at the National Gallery of Victoria Art School, becoming a professional artist in the late 1880s. In 1892 she left Australia, travelling first to South Africa, where she met and painted for Cecil Rhodes, and then on to Europe. She lived and studied there for the subsequent decade, apart from a return to South Africa in 1899 to paint Rhodes' portrait. Between 1895 and 1904 her works were exhibited at the Paris Salon and London's Royal Academy.In 1904, Fuller returned to Australia, living in Perth. She became active in the Theosophical Society and painted some of her best-known works, including A Golden Hour, described by the National Gallery of Australia as a "masterpiece" when it acquired the work in 2013. Beginning in 1908, Fuller travelled extensively, living in India and England before ultimately settling in Sydney. There, she was the inaugural teacher of life drawing at the School of Fine and Applied Arts established in 1920 by the New South Wales Society of Women Painters. She died in 1946.Highly regarded in her lifetime as a portrait and landscape painter, by 1914 Fuller was represented in four public galleries—three in Australia and one in South Africa—a record for an Australian female painter at that time. She subsequently sank into obscurity and is frequently omitted from reference works on Australian artists. Her paintings are held in public art collections including the Art Gallery of South Australia, the Art Gallery of Western Australia, the National Gallery of Australia, the National Gallery of Victoria and Australia's National Portrait Gallery.. }

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