Studio- Talk
Goodman’s Grasmere, Mr.
W. L. Bruckman’s The
Dutch Garden—these pic-
tures were especially typical
of the essential qualities
of pastel, and Messrs.
Melton Fisher’s, A. S.
Hartrick’s, J. R. K. Duff’s,
A. L. Baldry’s, and Mrs.
Mabelle Unwin’s work
should also be mentioned.
The Camden Town
Group who have been ex-
hibiting at the Carfax
ALTAR TABLE IN STANMER CHURCH, SUSSEX
DESIGNED AND EXECUTED BY FRANK J. JONES
atmosphere the bright gaiety and vibration of Mr.
Spencer Gore’s art come as a merciful relief with
its evidence of the exhilaration of existence.
It would be impossible to imagine anything
more English in spirit than the late Sir F. Seymour
Haden’s art. It is always more easy to respond to
this native note than to say of what it consists.
It made Girtin and Turner our greatest landscape
CARVED PANEL. DESIGNED AND EXECUTED BY
FRANK J. JONES
Gallery take their name, we understand, from
a tale of sordid murder related in a modern
play, or from Mr. Walter Sickert’s illustrations
to that play shown in the exhibition. Having
regard to the genius of Mr. Sickert, we are quite
prepared to admit that it is a wonderful thing
to represent such a thing as sordidity instead of
merely outward surface in paint. But as a con-
tribution to the aims of life, this care over some-
thing malodorous and hostile to beauty seems to
us on the side of the dark angels. Into this fetid
STAINED GLASS PANEL
BY A. J. DAVIES
225
Goodman’s Grasmere, Mr.
W. L. Bruckman’s The
Dutch Garden—these pic-
tures were especially typical
of the essential qualities
of pastel, and Messrs.
Melton Fisher’s, A. S.
Hartrick’s, J. R. K. Duff’s,
A. L. Baldry’s, and Mrs.
Mabelle Unwin’s work
should also be mentioned.
The Camden Town
Group who have been ex-
hibiting at the Carfax
ALTAR TABLE IN STANMER CHURCH, SUSSEX
DESIGNED AND EXECUTED BY FRANK J. JONES
atmosphere the bright gaiety and vibration of Mr.
Spencer Gore’s art come as a merciful relief with
its evidence of the exhilaration of existence.
It would be impossible to imagine anything
more English in spirit than the late Sir F. Seymour
Haden’s art. It is always more easy to respond to
this native note than to say of what it consists.
It made Girtin and Turner our greatest landscape
CARVED PANEL. DESIGNED AND EXECUTED BY
FRANK J. JONES
Gallery take their name, we understand, from
a tale of sordid murder related in a modern
play, or from Mr. Walter Sickert’s illustrations
to that play shown in the exhibition. Having
regard to the genius of Mr. Sickert, we are quite
prepared to admit that it is a wonderful thing
to represent such a thing as sordidity instead of
merely outward surface in paint. But as a con-
tribution to the aims of life, this care over some-
thing malodorous and hostile to beauty seems to
us on the side of the dark angels. Into this fetid
STAINED GLASS PANEL
BY A. J. DAVIES
225