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International studio — 25.1905

DOI issue:
Nr. 100 (June, 1905)
DOI article:
Current art events
DOI Page / Citation link: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.26959#0481

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law, Frederick Dielman, Howard Gardner Cush-
ing, Paul Dougherty, Alphonse Jongers, Frank
Vincent Dumond, and Harry Watrous.
A REPRESENTATIVE exhibition of works, by
artists of Boston, New York and Philadelphia, was
comprised in the recent seventy-second exhibition
of the Boston Art Club. The paintings shown
included landscapes, interiors, portraits, dog and
cattle pieces, and decorative panels. A. B. Wenzell,
the illustrator, sent three works calledMw OM 2T&,
TAe GfrJ fw and Pew's Pf^M. Birge Harri-
son was represented by Afeowrwe. Three Dutch
scenes were contributed by Melbourne H. Hard-
wick. James Henry Moser sent an interesting
study in colour, -SYcnM Passfwg Over PeAe Pfacfd,
and Jean N. Oliver, a study of the porch of Trinity
Church in summer.
JOHN C. JOHANSEN returns to Chicago this
month to execute several commissions, including
portraits of Miss Allport and her grandmother and
Professor Laughlin, of the University of Chicago.
Mr. Johansen expects to remain West for the sum-
mer season and will conduct his summer classes as
usual, in Michigan in July and August. He will
return to New York in the fall.
MESSRS. W. K. O'BRIEN & Co., of New York,
have recently had on view an exhibition of engraved
legal portraits extending from the seventeenth
century down to the present day.
THE PEABODY INSTITUTE, Baltimore, Md., calls
attention to The Rinehart Scholarship in Sculpture,
which is the result of the will of William H. Rine-
hart, of Maryland, the sculptor. He left the princi-
pal part of his estate to Messrs. W. T. Walters and
B. F. Newcomer, of Baltimore, as trustees, to be
devoted to the promotion of sculpture. This fund,
when it had reached the sum of $100,000, was
transferred to the permanent control of the Trustees
of the Peabody Institute. Part of the income is
appropriated to a school for the training of young
sculptors at the Maryland Institute, and anothe
part is devoted to the maintenance of European
scholarships. The Roman Scholarship, which is
available for a student in Rome for four years, is
now open again. Particulars may be had of Faris
C. Pitt, chairman of the Rinehart Fund.
MR. VAN PERRiNE has had on view at the New
Gallery, New York, for a fortnight recently some of
his paintings of the Palisades. The original quality

of Mr. Van Perrine's work is familiar to the readers
of THE STUDIO.
Miss HARRIET KEITH FoBES has recently held
an interesting exhibition in her studios in Carnegie
Hall, N. Y., of her work in artistic leathers, dyed
books, jewels and metal work.
THE ANNUAL EXHIBITION of the San Francisco
Art Association, held at the Mark Hopkins Insti-
tute of Art recently, included some two hundred
canvases, water colours, drawings, miniatures and
sculptures. Among the exhibitors were Will
Sparks, Arthur F. Mathews, Elmer Wachtel, H. W.
Hansen, Isabel Hunter, William Keith and others.
AT THE AMERICAN ART GALLERIES, N. Y., have
been seen a collection of antique Chinese porcelains,
enamels, jades, brasses and textiles, which were put
on sale by Messrs. Y.Fujita & Co.; a collection of
Chinese porcelains, Cloisonne enamels, Japanese
bronzes and other Oriental objects collected by the
late Hon. John Russell Young, Minister to China
from 18S1 to 1885; the finished pictures and
studies by the late Kruseman van Elten, N. A.;
the collection of early English, French and Dutch
paintings, belonging to Mr. T. J. Blakeslee, and the
collection of engravings, etchings, drawings and
paintings and numismatic treasures and bric-a-brac
belonging to the estate of the late Dr. Joseph
Wiener.
TnE PRESIDENT has lately been giving sittings to
George Burrough Torrey, of New York. The por-
trait is to be a three-quarter length and will go to a
Western gallery. A recent portrait of the President
by Bayard H. Tyler, painted after studies from life,
has been purchased by the City of Albany for its
municipal gallery.
THE REV. DR. FRANCIS GooDWiN has presented
to the Athenaeum, of Hartford, an interesting exam-
ple of an early Dutch painting, -Scewe.
The painter lived from 1603 to 1677. Two purchases
have been made through the Keney fund, one a
small Corot, purchased from the artist by C. F.
Daubigny, and bequeathed to his son; the other, a
small Troyon, CaMfe w a Poof <1% Mr.
George H. Story, curator of paintings at the
Metropolitan Museum, New York, is director of
the Athenaeum.
THE ART ASSOCIATION OF NEW ORLEANS has
recently shown an interesting exhibition of its work.

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