Edith Gladys Wynne (27 June 1876 – 24 March 1968) was an Irish watercolour artist who spent most of her life in Glendalough, County Wicklow.
[1] Evidence of her travels can be seen in a number of her painted scenes of Italy and a book she wrote on architectural history for children which was first published by Thomas Nelson in about 1913.
[7] Her brother, George Robert Llewellyn Wynne (known as Llewy), became a Church of Ireland rector like his father.
[11] After her father's death in 1912, Wynne continued to live in Glendalough for the rest of her life and she died there at the age of 91.
[12] Writing just after her death, Tom Nisbet, a fellow watercolour artist, described her as a ‘marvellous woman, selfless in her devotion to those who needed her; blest with a radiant friendliness, a rare talent for refined, atmospheric water colour painting and a lively wit that was innocent of malice’.