Case 15 - Eleanor Joachim

Arts and crafts essays: by members of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society. London: Longmans, Green, 1903.

Arts and crafts essays: by members of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society. London: Longmans, Green, 1903.

Mary Eleanor Joachim (1874-1957) was born in England but her family came to New Zealand in 1876 and settled in Mornington, Dunedin. Educated at home and at Otago Girls’ High School, Joachim’s family life was richly artistic, as her mother Susanna and two aunts were watercolour painters. Joachim travelled to London in 1903 to learn the art of fine leather bookbinding in the workshop of Sangorski & Sutcliffe.

Upon her return to Dunedin in 1904, Joachim set up a bindery in Crawford Street, until 1907 when she transferred it to the family home in Randall (later English) Avenue. Joachim exhibited with the Otago Art Society, the New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts in Wellington, the Auckland Arts and Crafts Club exhibition of 1912, and in Melbourne.

Joachim was a student at Otago Girls’ at the time of the granting of women’s suffrage in New Zealand. Independent and physically fit, she climbed extensively in the Southern Alps with friends, notably Dorothy Theomin (1888-1966).

Three small fine leather bindings by Joachim are housed in the Reed Collection.

Arts and crafts essays: by members of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society. London: Longmans, Green, 1903.

Arts and crafts essays: by members of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society. London: Longmans, Green, 1903.
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Stephen Phillips. Paolo & Francesca: a tragedy in four acts. London; New York: J. Lane the Bodley Head, 1903.

Stephen Phillips. Paolo & Francesca: a tragedy in four acts. London; New York: J. Lane the Bodley Head, 1903.

Mary Eleanor Joachim (1874-1957) was born in England but her family came to New Zealand in 1876 and settled in Mornington, Dunedin. Educated at home and at Otago Girls’ High School, Joachim’s family life was richly artistic, as her mother Susanna and two aunts were watercolour painters. Joachim travelled to London in 1903 to learn the art of fine leather bookbinding in the workshop of Sangorski & Sutcliffe.

Upon her return to Dunedin in 1904, Joachim set up a bindery in Crawford Street, until 1907 when she transferred it to the family home in Randall (later English) Avenue. Joachim exhibited with the Otago Art Society, the New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts in Wellington, the Auckland Arts and Crafts Club exhibition of 1912, and in Melbourne.

Joachim was a student at Otago Girls’ at the time of the granting of women’s suffrage in New Zealand. Independent and physically fit, she climbed extensively in the Southern Alps with friends, notably Dorothy Theomin (1888-1966).

Three small fine leather bindings by Joachim are housed in the Reed Collection.

Stephen Phillips. Paolo & Francesca: a tragedy in four acts. London; New York: J. Lane the Bodley Head, 1903.

Stephen Phillips. Paolo & Francesca: a tragedy in four acts. London; New York: J. Lane the Bodley Head, 1903.
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Autographs: collected by M.E. Joachim.

Autographs: collected by M.E. Joachim.

Mary Eleanor Joachim (1874-1957) was born in England but her family came to New Zealand in 1876 and settled in Mornington, Dunedin. Educated at home and at Otago Girls’ High School, Joachim’s family life was richly artistic, as her mother Susanna and two aunts were watercolour painters. Joachim travelled to London in 1903 to learn the art of fine leather bookbinding in the workshop of Sangorski & Sutcliffe.

Upon her return to Dunedin in 1904, Joachim set up a bindery in Crawford Street, until 1907 when she transferred it to the family home in Randall (later English) Avenue. Joachim exhibited with the Otago Art Society, the New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts in Wellington, the Auckland Arts and Crafts Club exhibition of 1912, and in Melbourne.

Joachim was a student at Otago Girls’ at the time of the granting of women’s suffrage in New Zealand. Independent and physically fit, she climbed extensively in the Southern Alps with friends, notably Dorothy Theomin (1888-1966).

Three small fine leather bindings by Joachim are housed in the Reed Collection.

Autographs: collected by M.E. Joachim.

Autographs: collected by M.E. Joachim.
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