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International studio — 33.1907/​1908(1908)

DOI Heft:
The International Studio (January, 1908)
DOI Artikel:
January art calendar
DOI Seite / Zitierlink: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.28253#0462

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January Art Calendar

J

ANUARY ART CALENDAR
NEW YORK—M. Knoedler & Co.,
355 Fifth Avenue, will show, from the 2d to
the nth, inclusive, portraits by A. Benziger,
including a portrait of President Roosevelt; from the
13th to the 2 2d portraits by A. Muller Ury, including
a portrait of the Pope painted by the artist in Rome
last spring; from the 23d to February 1 there will
be an exhibition of portraits by William Funk. It
is hoped also to display a group of the works of
E. Irving Couse, the Indian painter, at the time of
the Urv exhibition.

The Ehrich Galleries, 463 Fifth Avenue, which
make a specialty of early Italian and Spanish art,
will have on view the painting Tobias and the
Angel, reproduced on an earlier page. This paint-
ing, the work of Jacopo Palma (II Giovine) 1544-
1628, one of the most brilliant of the Venetian
school, measures 52J inches high by 71 inches long.
The galleries also contain collections of early Dutch,
Flemish, French and English art.

William Macbeth, 450 Fifth Avenue, on Janu-
ary 6 will put on view paintings by Jerome Myers,
who has won high praise for his vivid transcripts of
life in crowded cities. One of these characteristic
canvases is reproduced in this issue. The exhibition
will remain open to January 18.

At the Montross Gallery, 372 Fifth Avenue,
paintings by Childe Hassam will remain on view to
December 28. From January 2 to 18 will be shown
paintings by Willard L. Metcalf, and from January
21 to February 1 paintings by J. Alden Weir.
Examples of work by American artists, includ-
ing Carleton Wiggins, J. Francis Murphy, Bruce
Crane, A. H. Wyant and others will be seen during
the month at the Louis Katz Galleries, 308 Colum-
bus Avenue.
One of the most important exhibitions at the
galleries of Frederick Keppel & Co., 4 East Thirty-
ninth Street, will be held in January, comprising
examples of engravings by early Italian masters,
Martegna, Campagnola, Marcantoni, Raimondi,
Jean Duret,“ the master of the Unicorn,’’and others.
Scott & Fowles Co., 295 Fifth Avenue, will
exhibit a Gainsborough portrait, Chief Justice
Skynner, George Morland’s celebrated painting,
The Skating Lesson, which has been engraved, and
examples of modern Dutch and Barbizon schools.

Yamanaka & Co., 254 Fifth Avenue, will show
screens by masters of the Tosa and Kano schools
from the fifteenth to the seventeenth century.

The winter exhibition of the National Academy
of Design will continue at the Fifty-seventh Street
Galleries to January 11.
The National Society of Craftsmen holds
its permanent exhibition daily in its studios, 119
East Nineteenth Street.
Paintings of the French schools are on view at
the Durand-Roel Galleries, 5 West Thirty-sixth
Street.
The exhibition of the Architectural League, 215
West Fifty-seventh Street, will open February 1.
Exhibits are received January 16 and 19.
BALTIMORE.—The National Sculpture
Society, in collaboration with the Municipal Art
Society of Baltimore, will hold an exhibition of
original works of sculpture in the Fifth Regiment
Armory in April. Exhibitors must send entry
blanks to the secretary of the National Sculpture
Society, 215 West Fifty-seventh Street, New York,
by January 1.
BOSTON.—The Boston Art Club will open
its seventy-seventh exhibition of oil paintings and
sculpture on January 3. The exhibition will close
February 1.
The Society of Arts and Crafts, 9 Park
Street, announces two exhibitions—January 6 to 18,
Carved Wood Mirrors and Picture Frames; Janu-
ary 27 to February 8, Lace and Fans.
R. C. and N. M. Vose, 320 Boylston Street,
have on view a number of examples of early English,
modern Dutch, Barbizon and American w'ork.
CHICAGO.—Moulton and Ricketts, 14 and
16 East Van Buren Street, wall show two exhibitions
in the course of the month: Axel Arnold, Moods of
Nature, and Alson Clark, The Chateaux Country,
France.
ST. LOUIS.—A group of about thirty oil paint-
ings by Miss Elizabeth W. Roberts will be shown
at the Museum January 10. The exhibition will be
seen in several other cities later, passing on to the
Albright Gallery, Buffalo; Cincinnati Museum,
Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis; Art Institute,
Chicago, and Grand Rapids Library.
WASHINGTON, D. C.—The Washington
Water Color Club will continue its exhibition
in the Hemicycle of the Corcoran Gallery to
February 12.
ART SCHOOL EXFIIBITIONS.—Schools of
art and handicrafts are requested to send announce-
ments of exhibitions, as well as other special an-
nouncements, to the editor of The International
Studio, as, in many instances, such information
will receive notice in these columns.

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