November, 1911
THE INTERNATIONAL STUDIO
47
JUST ISSUED
PEASANT ART IN
AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY
Special Autumn Number of “The Studio,’’ 1911
THE reception accorded to the Special Number
of “The Studio” dealing with the Peasant Art
of Sweden, Lapland and Iceland proved beyond doubt that the
subject is one of absorbing interest to many.
The second volume of the series will deal with a region in
which Peasant Art is still a vital force, although here, too, the
products of the factory are steadily gaining ground. It is a region
of unique interest on account of the diversity of races inhabiting
it. Besides the two great races forming the bulk of the popula-
tion—the Germans in Austria and Transylvania and the
Magyars in Hungary—there are several branches of the great
Slav race—the Czechs of Bohemia and their near kindred and
neighbors, the Slovacks; the Croatians and Slovenes (the former
constituting the bulk of the population of the provinces of Croatia,
Bosnia, Herzegovina, Dalmatia, Istria, etc.), and the Ruthenians
of Galicia—and finally the Roumanians in the south of Hungary.
THE EDITION IS STRICTLY LIMITED
Profusely Illustrated with Color and Half-Tone Reproductions. Quarto. Cloth,
$3.00 net; postage, 35 cents. Paper, $2.50 net; postage, 25 cents
Previously Published—PEASANT ART IN SWEDEN, ICE-
LAND and LAPLAND. Cloth, $3.00 net; postage, 35 cents
JOHN LANE COMPANY :: NEW YORK
THE INTERNATIONAL STUDIO
47
JUST ISSUED
PEASANT ART IN
AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY
Special Autumn Number of “The Studio,’’ 1911
THE reception accorded to the Special Number
of “The Studio” dealing with the Peasant Art
of Sweden, Lapland and Iceland proved beyond doubt that the
subject is one of absorbing interest to many.
The second volume of the series will deal with a region in
which Peasant Art is still a vital force, although here, too, the
products of the factory are steadily gaining ground. It is a region
of unique interest on account of the diversity of races inhabiting
it. Besides the two great races forming the bulk of the popula-
tion—the Germans in Austria and Transylvania and the
Magyars in Hungary—there are several branches of the great
Slav race—the Czechs of Bohemia and their near kindred and
neighbors, the Slovacks; the Croatians and Slovenes (the former
constituting the bulk of the population of the provinces of Croatia,
Bosnia, Herzegovina, Dalmatia, Istria, etc.), and the Ruthenians
of Galicia—and finally the Roumanians in the south of Hungary.
THE EDITION IS STRICTLY LIMITED
Profusely Illustrated with Color and Half-Tone Reproductions. Quarto. Cloth,
$3.00 net; postage, 35 cents. Paper, $2.50 net; postage, 25 cents
Previously Published—PEASANT ART IN SWEDEN, ICE-
LAND and LAPLAND. Cloth, $3.00 net; postage, 35 cents
JOHN LANE COMPANY :: NEW YORK