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International studio — 41.1910

DOI issue:
Nr. 162 (August, 1910)
DOI article:
Studio-talk
DOI article:
Art School notes
DOI Page / Citation link: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.19867#0217

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A rt School Notes

need not detain us. In another of the rooms exhibition was so well received that the Society
are gathered together a number of impressions of was emboldened to attempt a higher flight, and its
England and the Roman Campagna by Onorato second show was held last month in the immediate
Carlandi, whose work is familiar to most readers neighbourhood of Bond Street, at the gallery of the
of The Studio, and there are also special exhibits Alpine Club. The enterprise of the Calderon Art
of the works of Scattola, Miti-Zanetti, and Sartorelli, Society in taking a West-end gallery was justified by
which should not pass without mention, but as the a capital exhibition of paintings and drawings, in
space at my disposal is exhausted, I must refrain which the proportion of inferior work was very
from saying more about them on this occasion. small indeed. The show was strengthened by con-

L. Br. tributions from Mr. W. Frank Calderon, President
ART SCHOOL NOTES °^ Society, and from Sir Ernest Waterlow, R.A.

and Mr. Vereker Hamilton, both of whom have

LONDON.—Last summer, in a small gallery worked in the open-air classes of the School of
in Baker Street, was held the first exhi- Animal Painting. Mr. Calderon, who on the
bition organized by the then newly- opening day of the exhibition received the wel-
founded Calderon Art Society, composed come news that his picture at the Salon had been
of past and present members of the School of awarded a gold medal, showed among other things
Animal Painting in Baker Street. The first a painting of exceptional quality of a white horse

in a meadow Study in
Sunlight. Sir Ernest
Waterlow sent a group of
delicate and sympathetic
water-colour landscapes,
and Mr. Vereker Hamilton
Hoses after Rain, and one
or two other oil sketches
of interest.

Miss Florence Walker's
water-colour The Barn,
an interior rich and deep
in tone, was one of the
most accomplished works
in the exhibition. Other
good studies in the same
medium, hanging close
by it, were the Santa
Maria delta Salute, and
The Downs, by Miss
Mary S. Hagarty, and the
pastoral The Day's Work
Done, by Miss Jessie
Hall. The Blue Jersey,
by Miss E. G. Wolfe,
showed originality and
promise. It was a paint-
ing in oil of a girl in a
blue bodice and white
skirt stopping on her way
through a field of green
corn to gather flowers and
grasses, treated in a
curiously individual

portrait of a lady by arturo noci fashion and with a fine

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