Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

International studio — 44.1911

DOI Page / Citation link: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.43447#0449

DWork-Logo
Overview
loading ...
Facsimile
0.5
1 cm
facsimile
Scroll
OCR fulltext
IO

THE INTERNATIONAL STUDIO

July, ign

NEW YORK STATE

TROY SCHOOL
of ARTS and CRAFTS
(.Incorporated, by the Regents
of the State of New York)
Broadway, TROY. NEW YORK
Instruction in the Arts and Crafts under Trained
Specialists.
Cast Drawing, Drawing and Painting from Cos-
tume Models, Illustrations, Compositions, Anat-
omy, Decorative Design, Oil, Water Color and
Pastel, China Painting.
Wood Carving, Leather Carving, Metal Work,
Weaving, Bookbinding, Modeling, Basket and
Lace Making, Stenciling, Embroidery.
Diplomas and Certificates. Send for Catalogue.
EMILIE C. ADAMS, Director

The SCHOOL of APPLIED
and FINE ARTS
of the Mechanics Institute Rochester, N. Y.
Thorough Practical Instruction in the Theory
and Practice of the Applied and Fine Arts
Well-equipped shops and studios offering every facility
for the study of Composition, Color, Illustration,
Portraiture, Sculpture, Architecture, Decorative
Design, Pottery [building, throwing, casting and press-
ing, mold making, glazing and firing), Metal Working
[copper and silversmithing, chasing, repoussd and jewel
setting], Wood Carving, Etc. Instruction by trained
experts. Diploma for Regular Three-Year Courses.
Free Scholarships. Cash Prizes.
For illustrated circular address
F. VON DER LANCKEN, Supt.

MISSOURI

Washington University


ST. LOUIS SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
THE 38th YEAR WILL OPEN SEPTEMBER 25, 1911
Fully Equipped to give instruction in
Drawing, Ceramic-Decoration, Pottery, Painting, Ap-
plied Arts, Composition, Modeling, Bookbinding, Crafts
For full information and free illustrated handbook,
apply to E. H. WUERPEL, Director
Beautilully located at Skinker Road and Lindell Boulevard,
ST. LOUIS, MO.

MASSACHUSETTS

Boston, Mass. 36th Year begins Oct. 2
SCHOOL OF THE
MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
Now installed in new building especially designed and equipped
for school uses. Instructors—E. C. Tarbell, F. W. Benson,
P. L. Hale, Wm. M. Paxton, Drawing and Painting; B. L.
Pratt, Modeling; P. L. Hale, Anatomy ; A. K. Cross, Perspective.
DepartmentofDesign, C. Howard Walker, Director. SCHOLAR-
SHIPS— Paige and Cummings Foreign Scholarships, Helen
Hamblen, Gardner, andTen Free Scholarships. Prizes in money
awarded in each department. Address Alice F. Brooks, Manager.
WORCESTER - MUSEUM
ART - SCHOOL
SALISBURY HOUSE WORCESTER, MASS.
DESIGN LIFE DRAWING
MODELING WATER COLOR
BOOKBINDING METAL WORK
H • STUART • MICHIE • PRINCIPAL

CORRESPONDENCE SCPIOOL

I*

<U'WHY NOT BE AN ARTIST?

Our graduates are filling High Salaried Positions.
EARN $25 to $100 PER WEEK
in easy, fascinating work. Practical,
Individual Home Instruction Superior equip
ment. Expert Instructors. Eleven years’ successful
teaching. Financial Returns Guaranteed.
PRPP ART|ST’S of tine Instruments and supplies
I DLL OUTFIT to each student.
Write for particulars
and HandKome Art Book.
School of Applied Art
A 23 Fine Arts Bldg.
—Battle Creek, Mich.—.


AN INNOVATION AT THE NEW
L\ YORK SCHOOL OF FINE AND
±*■ APPLIED ART
Following its policy of adjustment in
its methods and subjects to the trend of
other educational institutions and the
popular demand, the New York School of
Fine and Applied Art will inaugurate a
most radical innovation at the school open-
ing in September.
In place of the old method of two criti-
cisms weekly in the department of drawing,
painting and illustration, the following
plan will be followed: The regular instructor
will be present Monday morning at 9
o’clock to pose the model, give general
directions how to work for the week and to
give personal need where it is needed. He
will visit the class for individual criticism
every day, and at the week end give a gen-
eral criticism and teaching lesson from the
students’ weekly work hung upon the wall.
In this way, principles of drawing, compo-
sition and color will be taught and prac-
tised from the beginning.
This should do away with much of the
bad drawing, poor arrangement, impracti-
cal illustration, impossible color, and very
greatly reduce the time and expense to a
student who desires to express his ideas in
painting and illustration.
The teaching force includes such well-
known artists as Irving R. Wiles, Rae Sloan
Bredin, Iloward Giles, Martha Walters and
others.

TWO NEW PICTURES PUR-
CHASED BY THE BOSTON
MUSEUM
The Boston Museum of Fine Arts has
bought Thomas Gainsborough’s Landscape
with Blind Man Crossing a Bridge from the
Boston firm of R. C. & N. M. Vose. The
picture was formerly in the Sir George
Beaumont collection. This is Mr. Jean
Guiffrey’s first purchase for the Museum
since his appointment as curator of the de-
partment of paintings.
It is also announced that the Museum of
Fine Arts has bought, at the sale of the
Pierre de Courcelle collection in Paris, Paul
Delaroche’s portrait of the Marquis de Pas-
toret. This sale was attended by Mr.
Guiffrey as the representative of the Boston
Museum, and the price paid for the Dela-
roche was $6,000. The portrait of Pas-
toret is considered one of the finest works
of Delaroche. It is said to be one of the
best things in the De Courcelle collection.

THE LIBRARY’S NEW RUG
In the directors’ room of the re-

cently completed New York Public Library
will be placed a rug which in some respects
is the most interesting Oriental rug ever

woven.
Its design was first put on canvas in oils
in four colors. Its painting took more
than one month, and the design alone is
valued in the neighborhood of $1,000,
making it the most expensive design ever
followed in the weaving of an Oriental rug.
Its size will be 25 x 35 feet, and it will take
years for the nimble fingers of the Oriental
weavers to complete it, so that delivery
cannot be made for many months.
It is to be woven at Sivas, Turkey, under
the direction of the Vantine organization at
that place, the order for the rug having
been placed with Vantine’s Oriental Store,
New York.

OHIO

ART ACADEMY


OF CINCINNATI
With its large endowment fund offers
unsurpassed facilities for serious work
or training for professional careers at
moderate expense. Free access to
large collections of the Art Museum.
Drawing, Painting, Modeling, Anat-
omy, Wood Carving and Applied
Design.
Frank Dnveneck C. J. Barnhorn
L. H. Meakin Wm. H. Fry & others
43d Year, Sept. 25, 1911, to May 25, 1912
For catalog address
J. H. GEST, Dir., Eden Park, Cincinnati

CALIFORNIA

CALIFORNIA SCHOOL OF ARTS AND CRAFTS

Berkeley, California


An Efficient, Thorough and Practical Art
School
INDUSTRIAL. NORMAL AND
FINE ARTS CLASSES
Write for illustrated catalog
SUMMER SCHOOLJune26toAug,4
FREDERICK H. MEYER, Director

The College of Fine Arts
University of Southern California, is
the leading Art School of the West.
IDEAL IN EVERY PARTICULAR
Catalogue on request. Wm.L. Judson, Los Angeles, Cal.

LOS ANGELES SCHOOL OF
ART and DESIGN
Incorporated, Established 1887
The Oldest and Most Thorough Art School of South California
JULIAN ACADEMY (Paris)
FREE SCHOLARSHIPS
Illustrated Catalogrue. L. E. G. MACLEOD, Dir.

ILLINOIS

The Art Institute
ART SCHOOL
of Chicago
W. M. R. French, Director
N. H. Carpenter, Secretary
Study art under the most favorable conditions
in this country—in the Art Institute with its art
galleries, permanent collections, passing exhibi-
tions, lecture courses, libraries, and constant
association with accomplished artists and
teachers.
Drawing, Painting, Illustrating, Normal In-
struction, Sculpture, Decorative Design and
Architecture. Students may enter at any time.
No art student, East or West, ought to select
his school until he has seen the fine illustrated
catalogue of the Art Institute, mailed free on
application.
Be careful of the name, the Art Institute.
RALPH HOLMES, Registrar
Dept. P, Art Institute CHICAGO, ILL.

CHICAGO SCHOOL of
APPLIED and NORMAL ART
EMMA M. CHURCH, Director
Professional training in Illustration, Deco-
rative Design, Commercial Design and Illus-
tration, Normal Art and the Hand Crafts.
Two-year courses.
Limited membership, personal attention,
graduates in demand in all lines of art
activity. Special summer classes for teachers,
designers, illustrators and others busy during
the rest of the year. Write for particulars
to secretary,
312-237 MICHIGAN AVENUE
 
Annotationen