Some Pictures at the New Gallery
A year's yachting trip in the Mediterranean filled English school is in the charmingly displayed
up the greater part of the time between his Italian exhibition at the New Gallery than in the Royal
visit and his pilgrimage to Japan. All these varied Academy itself. In any case, one is conscious
experiences aided to give him a wide grasp of ex- of a feeling of greater appreciation, due, no
tremely divergent artistic opinions and beyond doubt, in a measure to the presence in the New
doubt largely helped him in his assimilation of the of two masters side by side, whose works offer the
novel facts which were presented to him during the most interesting contrasts. Of the two—Mr. Watts
term of his professorship at Kanazawa. Had he and Sir E. Burne-Jones—the former appears to
not mastered so thoroughly the methods of the be, far more than the latter, the upholder of the
English and French schools, and seen so much of fine traditions of that English school of which
the different periods of Italian art he could hardly Turner was the last representative. Indeed, after
have obtained the insight into Japanese principles seeing and deeply admiring the masterpieces of
which was apparent in his pictures at the Clifford Turner in the National Gallery, it is in Mr. Watts
Gallery. one seems to find again something of the great
What will grow out of his more than usually landscapist's flexibility, something of his beauty of
complex study cannot as yet be prophesied. Any- tone, a suggestion at times of his misty atmos-
how the future performances of an artist whose phere, enveloping all in a soft and transparent
opportunities have been already so extensive, and chiaroscuro. Not that there is any kinship between
whose productions have given evidence of his pos- the two, either in their choice of subject or in their
session of a remarkable receptivity, will be well manner of seeing and admiring Nature. The
worth looking for. similarity consists rather in a certain way of looking
at things and painting them, common to both; a
r\i\nt~* THPTrmro at-t-ttt- m-put certain gift of amalgamation—a capacity for melt-
OME PICTURES AT THE NEW . to & , . ,
GALLERY. CRITICISED BY m& » * >one thinS int0 *nother'and5'et
retaining for each its own special degree of colour-
ing and its own value.
A FRENCH PAINTER.
It would seem as though one were Sir E. Burne-Jones, on the other hand, is more
able to get a better idea of what the modern archaic, and consequently harder, with less regard
THE MOAT, TOKIO FROM A PAINTING BY PERCY STURDEE
l65
A year's yachting trip in the Mediterranean filled English school is in the charmingly displayed
up the greater part of the time between his Italian exhibition at the New Gallery than in the Royal
visit and his pilgrimage to Japan. All these varied Academy itself. In any case, one is conscious
experiences aided to give him a wide grasp of ex- of a feeling of greater appreciation, due, no
tremely divergent artistic opinions and beyond doubt, in a measure to the presence in the New
doubt largely helped him in his assimilation of the of two masters side by side, whose works offer the
novel facts which were presented to him during the most interesting contrasts. Of the two—Mr. Watts
term of his professorship at Kanazawa. Had he and Sir E. Burne-Jones—the former appears to
not mastered so thoroughly the methods of the be, far more than the latter, the upholder of the
English and French schools, and seen so much of fine traditions of that English school of which
the different periods of Italian art he could hardly Turner was the last representative. Indeed, after
have obtained the insight into Japanese principles seeing and deeply admiring the masterpieces of
which was apparent in his pictures at the Clifford Turner in the National Gallery, it is in Mr. Watts
Gallery. one seems to find again something of the great
What will grow out of his more than usually landscapist's flexibility, something of his beauty of
complex study cannot as yet be prophesied. Any- tone, a suggestion at times of his misty atmos-
how the future performances of an artist whose phere, enveloping all in a soft and transparent
opportunities have been already so extensive, and chiaroscuro. Not that there is any kinship between
whose productions have given evidence of his pos- the two, either in their choice of subject or in their
session of a remarkable receptivity, will be well manner of seeing and admiring Nature. The
worth looking for. similarity consists rather in a certain way of looking
at things and painting them, common to both; a
r\i\nt~* THPTrmro at-t-ttt- m-put certain gift of amalgamation—a capacity for melt-
OME PICTURES AT THE NEW . to & , . ,
GALLERY. CRITICISED BY m& » * >one thinS int0 *nother'and5'et
retaining for each its own special degree of colour-
ing and its own value.
A FRENCH PAINTER.
It would seem as though one were Sir E. Burne-Jones, on the other hand, is more
able to get a better idea of what the modern archaic, and consequently harder, with less regard
THE MOAT, TOKIO FROM A PAINTING BY PERCY STURDEE
l65