Studio- Talk
" SASSO, FROM TIIK NORTH-EAST " BY WILLIAM SCOTT
(From oicr own Correspondents.)
STUDIO-TALK. Appleyard's spirited composition, Spring chasing
away Winter, won the prize of ^40. This time
the successful competitor was a lady, Miss Florence
LONDON.—There was no room last month E. Chaplin, who, like every woman-artist of rea
to speak of all the interesting work that talent, has a quick intuitive gift for simulating the
the students of the Royal Academy styles of men. In her painting of a head from
Schools exhibited at Burlington House the life, to which a second prize was justly given,
in December. The President, Sir Edward Poynter, her method of work had the free and square
in his speech at the prize-giving, noticed a great characteristics that French students like; whereas
improvement in the drawings from the antique, her design for a decoration showed a very curious
He may have been right, yet there is still an urgent intermingling of the influences of Mr. Ricketts and
need of squareness in the manner in which the Sir Edward Burne-Jones. Such transformations
students construct their drawings from the antique of style have dangers of their own ; we cannot
and mass in their shadows. The antique school expect them to be favourable to the growth of
has yet to be taught that rounded forms have a individuality ; but, for all that, Miss Chaplin's
tendency to look weak, and that it should be Protean workmanship is attractive, as it is graced
a student's first aim to draw with a rhythmic with abundant fancy and with a fine sense of
strength of character. As to the designs for colour, sometimes delicate and tender, and
the decoration of a portion of a public building, sometimes powerful and rich. Mr. Pittman's
they represented a Procession of the Seasons, and, design was nearly as good as Miss Chaplin's. In
considered as a whole, they were quite as interesting decorative treatment it is the more restful of the
as those which were seen in 1899, when Mr. two, but the figures are less fanciful in conception,
PROCESSION OF THE SEASONS" : DESIGN FOR A DECORATION
Il8
BY FLORENCE E. CHAPLIN
" SASSO, FROM TIIK NORTH-EAST " BY WILLIAM SCOTT
(From oicr own Correspondents.)
STUDIO-TALK. Appleyard's spirited composition, Spring chasing
away Winter, won the prize of ^40. This time
the successful competitor was a lady, Miss Florence
LONDON.—There was no room last month E. Chaplin, who, like every woman-artist of rea
to speak of all the interesting work that talent, has a quick intuitive gift for simulating the
the students of the Royal Academy styles of men. In her painting of a head from
Schools exhibited at Burlington House the life, to which a second prize was justly given,
in December. The President, Sir Edward Poynter, her method of work had the free and square
in his speech at the prize-giving, noticed a great characteristics that French students like; whereas
improvement in the drawings from the antique, her design for a decoration showed a very curious
He may have been right, yet there is still an urgent intermingling of the influences of Mr. Ricketts and
need of squareness in the manner in which the Sir Edward Burne-Jones. Such transformations
students construct their drawings from the antique of style have dangers of their own ; we cannot
and mass in their shadows. The antique school expect them to be favourable to the growth of
has yet to be taught that rounded forms have a individuality ; but, for all that, Miss Chaplin's
tendency to look weak, and that it should be Protean workmanship is attractive, as it is graced
a student's first aim to draw with a rhythmic with abundant fancy and with a fine sense of
strength of character. As to the designs for colour, sometimes delicate and tender, and
the decoration of a portion of a public building, sometimes powerful and rich. Mr. Pittman's
they represented a Procession of the Seasons, and, design was nearly as good as Miss Chaplin's. In
considered as a whole, they were quite as interesting decorative treatment it is the more restful of the
as those which were seen in 1899, when Mr. two, but the figures are less fanciful in conception,
PROCESSION OF THE SEASONS" : DESIGN FOR A DECORATION
Il8
BY FLORENCE E. CHAPLIN