Helen Johnson (scientist)
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Helen Johnson (scientist)
Helen Johnson may refer to: * Helen Johnson (artist), Australian artist * Helen Kendrick Johnson, American writer, poet, and activist * Judith Wood, American film actress, born Helen Johnson * Helen Johnson-Leipold, née Johnson, American billionaire businesswoman * Helen Moore Johnson, American academic See also * Helene Johnson Helene Johnson (July 7, 1906 – July 7, 1995) was an African-American poet during the Harlem Renaissance. She was also a cousin of writer Dorothy West. Career Johnson's literary career began when she won first prize in a short story competit ...
, African-American poet {{hndis, Johnson, Helen ...
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Helen Johnson (artist)
Helen Johnson (born 1979) is an Australian artist producing large-scale paintings who also works as a lecturer, researcher and curator. Her artworks and practice reflect her views on colonialism, consumerism, the environment and personal accountability. She has held solo exhibitions in Sydney, Melbourne, London, New York, Los Angeles and Glasgow, been shown in group exhibitions in London and Melbourne, published her research on painting and contemporary art and curated several exhibitions. Education and career Johnson earned a PhD (Fine Art), at Monash University, Melbourne in 2014 and a Bachelor of Fine Arts, Painting (Hons), at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Melbourne in 2002. She painted from when she was a schoolgirl but became a professional artist and exhibited from about 2006. Her group exhibitions include ''A Year In Art: Australia 1992'', Tate, London, 2021; ''Painting. More Painting'' at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne, 2016; ''Tar ...
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Helen Kendrick Johnson
Helen Kendrick Johnson (January 4, 1844 – January 3, 1917) was an American writer, poet, and prominent activist opposing the women's suffrage movement. Early life Helen Kendrick Johnson was born in Hamilton, New York to her father, Asahel Clark Kendrick a professor in Greek at University of Rochester and mother Anne Elizabeth Kendrick (born Hopkins) who died in 1851 after the birth of Helen's third sister. After the death of her mother, Helen aged 7 spent much of her childhood living with her aunt in Clinton, New York until 1860 when she spent time in Savannah, Georgia with her father's brothers leaving in 1861 due to the outbreak of the American civil war. In 1863 she enrolled as a student in the Oread Institute, in Worcester, Massachusetts and studied there until June, 1864. After the end of the civil war she briefly returned to Savannah and spent the rest of her childhood between there, an aunt's house in Utica, New York and her father's house in Rochester, New York where ...
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Judith Wood
Judith Wood (born Helen Johnson, August 1, 1906 – April 6, 2002) was an American film actress. Early years The daughter of cartoonist Merle Johnson, she was born in New York City. Wood moved to Hollywood, California to pursue an acting career in the late 1920s. She studied art at Skidmore College for a year, then traveled with her mother to Paris, where she continued to study art for two years. Besides learning art, she became fluent in French during her stay in Paris. After returning to New York, she was a model for illustrations in magazines and for advertisements in addition to designing for theatrical productions. She changed her name to Judith Wood and was first credited with this name in '' The Vice Squad'' (1931). Career Wood's first role was in the 1929 film ''Gold Diggers of Broadway''. In this first film, as well as in the four in which she would star during 1930, Wood was credited under her birth name. Her first film of 1931 was '' It Pays to Advertise'', whi ...
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Helen Johnson-Leipold
Helen Johnson-Leipold is an American billionaire businesswoman. Biography She is the daughter of Samuel Curtis Johnson Jr., who died in 2004, and Imogene Powers Johnson and the great great granddaughter of S. C. Johnson & Son founder Samuel Curtis Johnson Sr. She was elected Chairman and CEO of Johnson Outdoors in March 1999, and she was elected Chairman of Johnson Financial Group in July 2004. She began her career at Foote, Cone & Belding in Chicago in 1979 and joined S. C. Johnson & Son in September 1985. She is tied with her three siblings and mother at #182 on the Forbes 400 list of Richest Americans. Johnson-Leipold was born in Racine, Wisconsin. Helen and her husband, Minnesota Wild owner Craig Leipold maintain residences in Racine, Wisconsin, and Saint Paul, Minnesota Saint Paul (abbreviated St. Paul) is the capital of the U.S. state of Minnesota and the county seat of Ramsey County. Situated on high bluffs overlooking a bend in the Mississippi River, Sa ...
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Helen Moore Johnson
Helen Moore Johnson (1889  – 1967) was a Guggenheim Fellow (1927) appointed for research in Jainism. Her work includes the English translation of the hagiographical work Trishashti Shalaka Purusha in six volumes. She published several articles in Journal of the American Oriental Society, American Journal of Philology. Career history Source: * Studies at University of Missouri (A.B. 1907, M.A. 1908) * University of Wisconsin, Ph.D., 1912 * Professor, 1913–16, Oklahoma College for Women * Professor of Latin and Greek, 1919–20, Oxford College for Women * Alice Freeman Palmer Memorial Fellow, in India, 1920–21 * Johnston Scholar, The Johns Hopkins University Johns Hopkins University (Johns Hopkins, Hopkins, or JHU) is a private research university in Baltimore, Maryland. Founded in 1876, Johns Hopkins is the oldest research university in the United States and in the western hemisphere. It consiste ..., 1924–26 References {{DEFAULTSORT:Johnson, Helen Moo ...
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