Studio- Talk
"LAMBETH PALACE" (ETCHING) BY SUSAN F. CRAWFORD
laid on, and each, when absolutely dry, is ground Miss Crawford was able to bring away many
with pumice and polished with tripoli. Some interesting sketches. J. T.
of Mrs. Trotter's boxes have been two years in
the process and have as many as twenty layers I aARIS.—The Tete d'Homme, by Honore
of varnish. Mrs. Trotter is an old Slade student I J Daumier, which we reproduce opposite,
and pupil of Professor Legros. She began to is from an extremely beautiful work
experiment in this work some fifteen years ago. belonging to the eminent man of letters
and art critic Theodore Duret. M. Duret, who
GLASGOW.—The two plates here re- was born in 1838, has been the close friend not
produced belong to a long series of only of the whole phalanx of the Imfiressionistes,
Metropolitan studies representing but more particularly of Manet, to the study and
some of the latest work of Miss appreciation of whose talents he has devoted
Crawford. The one suggests well the reposeful numerous articles and some excellent books. He
dignity of the old archiepiscopal residence as has at all times been a collector of works by
seen from the river; the other recalls the story of masters whose art pleased him, and his purchases
Harrison Ainsworth, with all its grim incidents, are invariably guided by a rare happiness of selec-
The Tower of London is rich in suggestion to tion; hence it is that his collection is one of the
the artist, and by the courtesy of the Governor finest and choicest in Paris. H. F.
152
"LAMBETH PALACE" (ETCHING) BY SUSAN F. CRAWFORD
laid on, and each, when absolutely dry, is ground Miss Crawford was able to bring away many
with pumice and polished with tripoli. Some interesting sketches. J. T.
of Mrs. Trotter's boxes have been two years in
the process and have as many as twenty layers I aARIS.—The Tete d'Homme, by Honore
of varnish. Mrs. Trotter is an old Slade student I J Daumier, which we reproduce opposite,
and pupil of Professor Legros. She began to is from an extremely beautiful work
experiment in this work some fifteen years ago. belonging to the eminent man of letters
and art critic Theodore Duret. M. Duret, who
GLASGOW.—The two plates here re- was born in 1838, has been the close friend not
produced belong to a long series of only of the whole phalanx of the Imfiressionistes,
Metropolitan studies representing but more particularly of Manet, to the study and
some of the latest work of Miss appreciation of whose talents he has devoted
Crawford. The one suggests well the reposeful numerous articles and some excellent books. He
dignity of the old archiepiscopal residence as has at all times been a collector of works by
seen from the river; the other recalls the story of masters whose art pleased him, and his purchases
Harrison Ainsworth, with all its grim incidents, are invariably guided by a rare happiness of selec-
The Tower of London is rich in suggestion to tion; hence it is that his collection is one of the
the artist, and by the courtesy of the Governor finest and choicest in Paris. H. F.
152