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Elizabeth Aline Colborne (1885-1948) was one of the most accomplished artists ever active in Washington State. An integral part of the regional Arts and Crafts Movement, she is known today for her extraordinary colour woodcuts produced during the 1920s and 1930s. These prints depict the Pacific Northwest landscape in a technique that was highly influenced by Japanese ukiyo-e prints. Colborne elected to design, carve, and print her own editions, using brilliant colours and innovative, multiple overlay techniques. Evergreen Muse is the first in-depth study of her art and presents all the known colour woodcuts that she created. In addition to colour woodcuts, Colborne made drawings in graphite and coloured pencil, as well as small, intimate and highly detailed gouache paintings. Born in South Dakota, the artist divided her time between Bellingham, Washington, and New York, where she studied with Rockwell Kent, Robert Henri, and Allen Lewis and became a leading children's book illustrator. David F. Martin is an independent art historian and curator in Seattle.