IO
THE INTERNATIONAL STUDIO
March, 1912
NEW YORK CITY SCHOOLS
The New York School of Fine and Applied Art
SUCCESSOR TO CHASE SCHOOL REGENTS’ INCORPORATION
INDIVIDUAL, DAILY INSTRUCTION
PRINCIPLES RATHER THAN FACTS
DRAWING, PAINTING AND ILLUSTRATION
INTERIOR DECORATION, NORMAL TRAINING
Irving R. Wiles, Martha Walter, R. Sloan Bredin, Wm. M. Odom, Howard Giles, Zerelda Rains,
Henry T. Bailey, Grace Stoughton, Margaret Strudwick, Otey Farmer, Jane Martin
OPENS SEPTEMBER 5. We invite special attention to our catalogue
2237 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY
FRANK ALVAH PARSONS, Director SUSAN F. BISSELL, Executive Sec’y
She HENRI SCHOOL OF ART
Season 1911-12
Life Portrait and Composition Classes under
the instruction of Robert Henri and Homer
Boss.
Catalogue on Application
Studios: 1947 Broadway, New York.
NEW YORK SCHOOL OF
APPLIED DESIGN FOR WOMEN
Incorporated 1892
Silk, Wall-Paper and
Book - Cover Designing,
Antique, Composition,
Life and Costume Classes,
Fashion Drawing, His-
toric Ornament, Archi-
tecture, Conventionaliza-
tion. Headquarters for
Women Students, Society
Beaux-Arts Architects.
Free Reference Library
160-162 LEXINCTON AVENUE
NON RESIDENT COURSES
IN ART INSTRUCTION
Henry Turner Bailey, Director
These courses have been established by The Prang
Company in the New York School of Fine and
Applied Art (Mr. Frank A. Parsons, Director),
which gives full credit for work done. One year of
Non-Resident work, and one year of Resident work,
secures two-year Diploma. Strong courses under in-
spiring teachers and affiliation with large New York
Art School offer unusual opportunities.
For announcement of courses, address
MISS SUSAN F. BISSELL, Registrar
2237 Broadway, New York
CLARK-ELLIS
btudiob
I7W.45TH. ST. NEW YORK
GEORGE E. CLARK x: JOHN G. ELU5
Hand-Wrought Jewelry, Silverware and
Metal Work. A limited number of stu-
dents will be taken in Jewelry Work.
Saturday Class for Teachers
WRITE FOR PARTICULARS
ADELPHI COLLEGE
Lafayette Ave., Clifton and St. James Place, Brooklyn, N.Y.
ART DEPARTMENT
Antique, Still Life, Portrait and Figure Classes.
Work in all mediums. Six of the Best-Equipped
Class Rooms in Greater New York.
Course of 20 weeks, commencing at any time, with
individual instruction. All day or half-day sessions.
Prof. J. B. WHITTAKER. Director
PRATT INSTITUTE
ART SCHOOL
BROOKLYN, NEW YORK
Applied Design, Jewelry, Silversmithing, Life, Portrait,
Illustration, Composition, Oil and Water-Color Painting.
Architecture—Two and Three-Year Courses.
Normal Art and Manual Training—Two-Year Courses.
30 Studios; 35 Instructors; 25th Year
WALTER SCOTT PERRY. Director
ART SCHOOL
Awarded International Silver Medal at St. Louis, 1904
Term: OCTOBER 1—June 1
For {Beginners and .Advanced Students
DESIGN, MODELING, WOOD-CARVING
CAST and LIFE DRAWING
WATER COLOR
ART EMBROIDERY
EVENING CLASS in COSTUME DRAWING
Young Women’s Christian Association
7 EAST FIFTEENTH STREET, NEW YORK
Office Hours: 9 A M. to 5 P. M. and 7 to 9 P M.
TWENTY-SECOND YEAR
THOMAS SCHOOL of ART
142 West 23d Street, New York City
The Only School in New York Which Teaches
Practical Illustrating Work
Complete training in Newspaper Sketching,
Fashion Drawing, Magazine Illustrating, Com-
ics, Cartoons.
Positions positively assured to all students.
Day and evening sessions. New students en-
roll any day.
Short-term courses. Low tuition rates.
WRITE FOR CIRCULARS
ft THE MISSES MASON
(Design
Water-Color Painting
Decoration of Porcelain
126 East 24th Street. New York
AN ARTIST of ability with $5,000 is
offered a very successful (25 years)
art school in most desirable climate in
America. Address “Art”
MRS. LADD, 471 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
_FOREIGN_
FRENCH - SPANISH FRONTIER
PAINTING AND SKETCHING CLASS
From January to April. For particulars address
Edward Ertz, F.N.B.A., 33 Rue Evariste-Baignol
I St. Jean-de Luz, France.
SCHOOL NOTES
The Summer School of Metal Work
conducted by Mr. Edward Thatcher, of
Teachers College, New York City, at
Woodstock, Ulster County, N. Y., was
distinctly successful last year and will be
continued this summer. A spacious barn
was secured and fitted up as a workshop,
with a complete equipment of benches,
THATCHER SUMMER SCHOOL OF
METAL WORK
tools and appliances, forge and bellows,
blow torches, enamel furnace and dynamo,
with electro-plating outfit, rolling mill, etc.
Courses were and will again be given in
the making of practical and decorative
forms in wrought metal, jewelry, etching
and repousse work. Also, in connection
with these, a course in design applicable
to the regular work, as well as practice in
the coloring of metals. There is also op-
portunity for advance work. Plans are
under way for making some additions to
the shop before the season opens in July.
The Old Lyme Art Class, in the heart of
the famous art colony at Lyme, Conn.,
will again be under the direction of Mr.
Alon Bement, as it was last year. The
work of the class is directed particularly
toward composition, although the cus-
tomary criticism of drawing and painting
in the field is also a feature. The class will
follow as nearly as possible the ideas
taught by Professor Arthur Wesley Dow,
whose text book on composition is an
authority on the subject.
We announced last month that Alex-
ander Robinson would take a class to
Spain for the spring months. Word has
since been received that he will also remain
there throughout the summer and that a
class from America will sail in June.
Another class in Spain, which will make
a specialty of the study of native types,
will be conducted by Robert Henri. As
the membership in this class is limited in-
tendingstudents would do well to make their
arrangements early. Randall Davey is as-
sociated with Mr. Henri in the enterprise.
A spring class under the direction of
Henry B. Snell will sail in May for a
month’s painting in Italy, while the regu-
lar summer class sails in June for a course
of sketching in Rothenburg and Dresden
Congress.
The seventh European season of Wil-
liam M. Chase’s summer class occurs this
year and work will be undertaken in pic-
turesque old Bruges and vicinity. The
location is of special value on account of
its convenience to the famous old galleries
of Brussels and Antwerp, to which visits
will be made with Mr. Chase.
Mr. Arthur R. Freedlander will con-
tinue his Martha’s Vineyard School of
Art at picturesque Vineyard Haven again,
where he has been so successful for several
years past. This will be the eighth season
of the school. Definite announcement of
dates and staff will be made later.
THE INTERNATIONAL STUDIO
March, 1912
NEW YORK CITY SCHOOLS
The New York School of Fine and Applied Art
SUCCESSOR TO CHASE SCHOOL REGENTS’ INCORPORATION
INDIVIDUAL, DAILY INSTRUCTION
PRINCIPLES RATHER THAN FACTS
DRAWING, PAINTING AND ILLUSTRATION
INTERIOR DECORATION, NORMAL TRAINING
Irving R. Wiles, Martha Walter, R. Sloan Bredin, Wm. M. Odom, Howard Giles, Zerelda Rains,
Henry T. Bailey, Grace Stoughton, Margaret Strudwick, Otey Farmer, Jane Martin
OPENS SEPTEMBER 5. We invite special attention to our catalogue
2237 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY
FRANK ALVAH PARSONS, Director SUSAN F. BISSELL, Executive Sec’y
She HENRI SCHOOL OF ART
Season 1911-12
Life Portrait and Composition Classes under
the instruction of Robert Henri and Homer
Boss.
Catalogue on Application
Studios: 1947 Broadway, New York.
NEW YORK SCHOOL OF
APPLIED DESIGN FOR WOMEN
Incorporated 1892
Silk, Wall-Paper and
Book - Cover Designing,
Antique, Composition,
Life and Costume Classes,
Fashion Drawing, His-
toric Ornament, Archi-
tecture, Conventionaliza-
tion. Headquarters for
Women Students, Society
Beaux-Arts Architects.
Free Reference Library
160-162 LEXINCTON AVENUE
NON RESIDENT COURSES
IN ART INSTRUCTION
Henry Turner Bailey, Director
These courses have been established by The Prang
Company in the New York School of Fine and
Applied Art (Mr. Frank A. Parsons, Director),
which gives full credit for work done. One year of
Non-Resident work, and one year of Resident work,
secures two-year Diploma. Strong courses under in-
spiring teachers and affiliation with large New York
Art School offer unusual opportunities.
For announcement of courses, address
MISS SUSAN F. BISSELL, Registrar
2237 Broadway, New York
CLARK-ELLIS
btudiob
I7W.45TH. ST. NEW YORK
GEORGE E. CLARK x: JOHN G. ELU5
Hand-Wrought Jewelry, Silverware and
Metal Work. A limited number of stu-
dents will be taken in Jewelry Work.
Saturday Class for Teachers
WRITE FOR PARTICULARS
ADELPHI COLLEGE
Lafayette Ave., Clifton and St. James Place, Brooklyn, N.Y.
ART DEPARTMENT
Antique, Still Life, Portrait and Figure Classes.
Work in all mediums. Six of the Best-Equipped
Class Rooms in Greater New York.
Course of 20 weeks, commencing at any time, with
individual instruction. All day or half-day sessions.
Prof. J. B. WHITTAKER. Director
PRATT INSTITUTE
ART SCHOOL
BROOKLYN, NEW YORK
Applied Design, Jewelry, Silversmithing, Life, Portrait,
Illustration, Composition, Oil and Water-Color Painting.
Architecture—Two and Three-Year Courses.
Normal Art and Manual Training—Two-Year Courses.
30 Studios; 35 Instructors; 25th Year
WALTER SCOTT PERRY. Director
ART SCHOOL
Awarded International Silver Medal at St. Louis, 1904
Term: OCTOBER 1—June 1
For {Beginners and .Advanced Students
DESIGN, MODELING, WOOD-CARVING
CAST and LIFE DRAWING
WATER COLOR
ART EMBROIDERY
EVENING CLASS in COSTUME DRAWING
Young Women’s Christian Association
7 EAST FIFTEENTH STREET, NEW YORK
Office Hours: 9 A M. to 5 P. M. and 7 to 9 P M.
TWENTY-SECOND YEAR
THOMAS SCHOOL of ART
142 West 23d Street, New York City
The Only School in New York Which Teaches
Practical Illustrating Work
Complete training in Newspaper Sketching,
Fashion Drawing, Magazine Illustrating, Com-
ics, Cartoons.
Positions positively assured to all students.
Day and evening sessions. New students en-
roll any day.
Short-term courses. Low tuition rates.
WRITE FOR CIRCULARS
ft THE MISSES MASON
(Design
Water-Color Painting
Decoration of Porcelain
126 East 24th Street. New York
AN ARTIST of ability with $5,000 is
offered a very successful (25 years)
art school in most desirable climate in
America. Address “Art”
MRS. LADD, 471 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
_FOREIGN_
FRENCH - SPANISH FRONTIER
PAINTING AND SKETCHING CLASS
From January to April. For particulars address
Edward Ertz, F.N.B.A., 33 Rue Evariste-Baignol
I St. Jean-de Luz, France.
SCHOOL NOTES
The Summer School of Metal Work
conducted by Mr. Edward Thatcher, of
Teachers College, New York City, at
Woodstock, Ulster County, N. Y., was
distinctly successful last year and will be
continued this summer. A spacious barn
was secured and fitted up as a workshop,
with a complete equipment of benches,
THATCHER SUMMER SCHOOL OF
METAL WORK
tools and appliances, forge and bellows,
blow torches, enamel furnace and dynamo,
with electro-plating outfit, rolling mill, etc.
Courses were and will again be given in
the making of practical and decorative
forms in wrought metal, jewelry, etching
and repousse work. Also, in connection
with these, a course in design applicable
to the regular work, as well as practice in
the coloring of metals. There is also op-
portunity for advance work. Plans are
under way for making some additions to
the shop before the season opens in July.
The Old Lyme Art Class, in the heart of
the famous art colony at Lyme, Conn.,
will again be under the direction of Mr.
Alon Bement, as it was last year. The
work of the class is directed particularly
toward composition, although the cus-
tomary criticism of drawing and painting
in the field is also a feature. The class will
follow as nearly as possible the ideas
taught by Professor Arthur Wesley Dow,
whose text book on composition is an
authority on the subject.
We announced last month that Alex-
ander Robinson would take a class to
Spain for the spring months. Word has
since been received that he will also remain
there throughout the summer and that a
class from America will sail in June.
Another class in Spain, which will make
a specialty of the study of native types,
will be conducted by Robert Henri. As
the membership in this class is limited in-
tendingstudents would do well to make their
arrangements early. Randall Davey is as-
sociated with Mr. Henri in the enterprise.
A spring class under the direction of
Henry B. Snell will sail in May for a
month’s painting in Italy, while the regu-
lar summer class sails in June for a course
of sketching in Rothenburg and Dresden
Congress.
The seventh European season of Wil-
liam M. Chase’s summer class occurs this
year and work will be undertaken in pic-
turesque old Bruges and vicinity. The
location is of special value on account of
its convenience to the famous old galleries
of Brussels and Antwerp, to which visits
will be made with Mr. Chase.
Mr. Arthur R. Freedlander will con-
tinue his Martha’s Vineyard School of
Art at picturesque Vineyard Haven again,
where he has been so successful for several
years past. This will be the eighth season
of the school. Definite announcement of
dates and staff will be made later.