Edna Bel Beachboard was born on October 13, 1872 in
Hudson, Michigan to Cotilda C. Sawyer and David J. Beachboard, vice president of Boies State Bank. Her sole sibling was Earl James, who died in 1887 at the age of 16 from
diphtheria. On March 2, 1892, at 19 years of age, she married 27 year-old banker John Henry Boies. Like the Bearchboards, he was a prominent member of the community. Boies accepted a position in the banking industry in
Chicago and the couple moved there. He contracted tuberculosis and Edna and John moved to
Colorado to recuperate in the drier climate. He died in
Denver on December 10, 1894. Edna Boies maintained a close relationship with her sister-in-law, Bessie Boies. After John Boies died, she enrolled in the
Art Academy of Cincinnati in 1895. Edna studied illustration, life drawing, wood carving, and sculpture until 1899. While there, she met fellow student James Roy Hopkins of
Mechanicsburg, Ohio. She shared an interest in woodblock printing with fellow students,
Maud Hunt Squire and
Ethel Mars, who became members of the
Provincetown Printers on
Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Boies then moved to New York and beginning in April 1899, she studied with Evelyn Fenner Shaurman and Arthur Wesley Dow at
Pratt Institute in
Brooklyn. She studied commercial art, composition, and watercolor until March 1900. Dow introduced her to ukiyo-e, Japanese woodblock printing, and a formula of three main elements:
notan, a balance of light and dark, line and color.
Circa 1900, Boies carved
Enchanted Lilies, one of her first woodblock prints. ==Career==