Studio-Talk
bered. The Old Roman Well, by Mr. Robert W. The Royal Society of British Artists have been
Allan; Li?icolnshire Marshland, by Mr. H. Mar- holding a very successful exhibition. Canvases
shall; The Princesses, by Mr. Edmund J. Sullivan ; which call for particular mention are A Summer
Old Hastings, by Mr. R. Thorne-Waite; Rowing to Night, by Mr. F. F. Foottet; Early Morning, by
Windward, by Mr. Napier Hemy, A.R.A. ; The Old Mr. D. Murray Smith; Ibis on an Australian
Bridge of Gearn, by Mr. Robert Little; Where River, by Mr. E. W. Christmas; Mrs. Wemyss
Seamaids Ride, by Mr. J. R. Weguelin ; The Flying Muir, by Mr. Edward Patry; The Japanese Cabinet,
Buttresses of Beauvais, by Mr. J. H. Lorimer; by Mr. Denys Wells ; On the River Seine, by Mr.
and A Rambler Rose, by Mr. A. Parsons, A.R.A., John Muirhead ; Sekoa, by Mr. R. Grenville Eves;
were all among the most important of the exhibits. The Path to the Mill, by Mr. Harry Spence;
Mr. D. Y. Cameron's Tweedside Morning is another Folding Time, by Mr. Alfred Hartley ; Fresh
work in which he seeks for strong effects in a Braze, by Mr. Hayley Lever; Dianas Pool, by
single key of colour; and Mr. James Paterson's Mr. L. Grier; A Gleam in a Dull Afternoon, by
extreme facility has not betrayed him in his ren- Mr. A. M. Foweraker ; Water Meadows, by the
dering of rare atmospheric conditions in his Countess Helena Gleichen; The Little Chicks, by
separate works. Seldom does anyone paint the Miss Dorothea Sharp; Roses, by Mr. H. Davis
movement of a peacock, though many succeed Richter, and The Mirror, by Mr. Joseph Simpson,
with its colour. Mr. Edwin Alexander is one The President has never been more interesting
whom the subtleties of action of the wonderful than in his Wi?iter's Morning, Cornwall.
bird do not evade, and one of his finest works this -
year is certainly the Peacock. Mr. Walter W. Russell's show at the Goupil
"WINTER MORNING, CORNWALL '
308
BY ALFRED EAST, A.R.A., P.R.B.A.
bered. The Old Roman Well, by Mr. Robert W. The Royal Society of British Artists have been
Allan; Li?icolnshire Marshland, by Mr. H. Mar- holding a very successful exhibition. Canvases
shall; The Princesses, by Mr. Edmund J. Sullivan ; which call for particular mention are A Summer
Old Hastings, by Mr. R. Thorne-Waite; Rowing to Night, by Mr. F. F. Foottet; Early Morning, by
Windward, by Mr. Napier Hemy, A.R.A. ; The Old Mr. D. Murray Smith; Ibis on an Australian
Bridge of Gearn, by Mr. Robert Little; Where River, by Mr. E. W. Christmas; Mrs. Wemyss
Seamaids Ride, by Mr. J. R. Weguelin ; The Flying Muir, by Mr. Edward Patry; The Japanese Cabinet,
Buttresses of Beauvais, by Mr. J. H. Lorimer; by Mr. Denys Wells ; On the River Seine, by Mr.
and A Rambler Rose, by Mr. A. Parsons, A.R.A., John Muirhead ; Sekoa, by Mr. R. Grenville Eves;
were all among the most important of the exhibits. The Path to the Mill, by Mr. Harry Spence;
Mr. D. Y. Cameron's Tweedside Morning is another Folding Time, by Mr. Alfred Hartley ; Fresh
work in which he seeks for strong effects in a Braze, by Mr. Hayley Lever; Dianas Pool, by
single key of colour; and Mr. James Paterson's Mr. L. Grier; A Gleam in a Dull Afternoon, by
extreme facility has not betrayed him in his ren- Mr. A. M. Foweraker ; Water Meadows, by the
dering of rare atmospheric conditions in his Countess Helena Gleichen; The Little Chicks, by
separate works. Seldom does anyone paint the Miss Dorothea Sharp; Roses, by Mr. H. Davis
movement of a peacock, though many succeed Richter, and The Mirror, by Mr. Joseph Simpson,
with its colour. Mr. Edwin Alexander is one The President has never been more interesting
whom the subtleties of action of the wonderful than in his Wi?iter's Morning, Cornwall.
bird do not evade, and one of his finest works this -
year is certainly the Peacock. Mr. Walter W. Russell's show at the Goupil
"WINTER MORNING, CORNWALL '
308
BY ALFRED EAST, A.R.A., P.R.B.A.