A Picture Collector s Experiment
Redlield has habitually used die short stroke with logue but an introduction ; to indicate in a measure
crisp, broken colour, until the past season, when, the breadth of the field, and to suggest the trend
for the nonce, he adopted the tonalists' style, of endeavour. It is not claimed that American
concealing his craft in a broad finished surface. landscape painters have yet reached their apogee,
He and Mr. Schofield and Mr. Young are pre- that they exclusively have discovered and mani-
eminently painters of winter scenes—of snow, and fested great truths, but rather that they have
sunshine and frosty crystalline air, for the tran- looked out upon the world with seeing eyes and
scription of which, up to the present, no formulas have keenly felt its loveliness —that they have had
have existed. new thoughts, emotions, and aspirations, to which,
And besides these there are the painters who can- with the freshness of youth, sincerity, and joy,
not be even thus broadly classified, such as R. M. they have given expression. L. M.
Shurtleff, the veracious interpreter of midsummer
wood interiors; Charles Warren Eaton and Ben A PICTURE COLLECTOR'S
Foster, painters of nocturnes, poetic, virile and /\ EXPERIMENT. BY T. MARTIN
true; George Melville Dewey, Charles A. Coffin, /..—A \yQOD
Arthur Parton, strong men all; Albert doll, who * *■
has found picturesque motives in the desert of It is to be feared that it is only too true that
Arizona, and, better than any other, has rendered much of the "collecting" done nowadays is purely
significant its spacious breadth ; and Arthur Hoeber, speculative, and betrays a mercenariness in its
both writer and painter, who sees in nature a poetic ulterior motive that defeats the only spirit in
loveliness and transcribes it with acute artistic, which a collector can come into right relations
feeling, framing for the onlooker gentle lyrics with, and nurse the genius in the art of his
neither too insistent nor yet too refined. own time. The term " collection " makes one think
It would be easy to enlarge this list, but the of a famous collector, not long since deceased, who
intention is not to furnish the reader with a cata- it is said was wont to mount to a big room and
" an old mill
14
by c 1". daubiqny
Redlield has habitually used die short stroke with logue but an introduction ; to indicate in a measure
crisp, broken colour, until the past season, when, the breadth of the field, and to suggest the trend
for the nonce, he adopted the tonalists' style, of endeavour. It is not claimed that American
concealing his craft in a broad finished surface. landscape painters have yet reached their apogee,
He and Mr. Schofield and Mr. Young are pre- that they exclusively have discovered and mani-
eminently painters of winter scenes—of snow, and fested great truths, but rather that they have
sunshine and frosty crystalline air, for the tran- looked out upon the world with seeing eyes and
scription of which, up to the present, no formulas have keenly felt its loveliness —that they have had
have existed. new thoughts, emotions, and aspirations, to which,
And besides these there are the painters who can- with the freshness of youth, sincerity, and joy,
not be even thus broadly classified, such as R. M. they have given expression. L. M.
Shurtleff, the veracious interpreter of midsummer
wood interiors; Charles Warren Eaton and Ben A PICTURE COLLECTOR'S
Foster, painters of nocturnes, poetic, virile and /\ EXPERIMENT. BY T. MARTIN
true; George Melville Dewey, Charles A. Coffin, /..—A \yQOD
Arthur Parton, strong men all; Albert doll, who * *■
has found picturesque motives in the desert of It is to be feared that it is only too true that
Arizona, and, better than any other, has rendered much of the "collecting" done nowadays is purely
significant its spacious breadth ; and Arthur Hoeber, speculative, and betrays a mercenariness in its
both writer and painter, who sees in nature a poetic ulterior motive that defeats the only spirit in
loveliness and transcribes it with acute artistic, which a collector can come into right relations
feeling, framing for the onlooker gentle lyrics with, and nurse the genius in the art of his
neither too insistent nor yet too refined. own time. The term " collection " makes one think
It would be easy to enlarge this list, but the of a famous collector, not long since deceased, who
intention is not to furnish the reader with a cata- it is said was wont to mount to a big room and
" an old mill
14
by c 1". daubiqny