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International studio — 50.1913

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.43453#0430

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THE INTERNATIONAL STUDIO

July, 1913

NEW YORK CITY

THE
Art Students’ League
OF NEW YORK


Announces the Opening of the Eleventh Year
-OF ITS-
SUMMER SCHOOL OF
LANDSCAPE PAINTING
From June 2 to November 1 Mr. John F. Carlson will
conduct out-of-door classes in Landscape Painting at
Woodstock, Ulster County, N. Y.
The City Summer School will consist of classes in Draw-
ing, Painting, Illustration, Composition, Etching and
lectures on Construction and Anatomy under Mr. George
B. Bridgman and Mr. Voitech Preissig, in the American
Fine Arts Building, from June 2 to September 20.
Catalogues on application
Art Students’ League of New York, 215 W. 57th St.


THE MISSES MASON
(Design
Water-Color Painting
Decoration of Porcelain
218 West 59th Street, 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.

160-162 LEXINGTON AVENUE

TAPE’QTDirC. THEIR origin, history
i Al ED 1 IvlED. and renaissance
By GEORGE LELAND HUNTER
Four full page plates in color and 147 half tone
engravings
Cloth, $5.00 net. Postpaid, $5.25
JOHN LANE COMPANY - - NEW YORK
CLARENCE H. WHITE
THIRD SEASON CLASS IN
ART IN PHOTOGRAPHY
At SEGUINLAND, MAINE (P. 0. Five Islands)
JULY 7 to AUGUST 2
For further information address
CLARENCEH. WHITE, 5 West31stSt.. N.Y.City
Summer Sketch Class
LITCHFIELD, CONN.
CONDUCTED BY
A. T. VAN LAER, N.A.
For Circular address
A. T. VAN LAER, Litchfield, Conn.

SCHOOL OF ART IN CONNEC-
TION WITH THE PENNSYL-
VANIA ACADEMY
Upon the occasion of the closing exer-
cises of the school of art connected with
the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in
Philadelphia, on May 29, there were
awarded to students who seemed in the
judgment of the faculty of the schools
sufficiently trained to appreciate the ad-
vantages to be gained by a visit to the
galleries and museums abroad, twenty-four
traveling scholarships, made possible by
the condition of the Emlen and Priscilla
Eresson Endowment. The sum of five
hundred dollars is granted on each scholar-
ship, to meet the traveling expenses of the
holder during a period of four months,
while in Europe. Upon his return, except-
ing in cases where the scholarship has been
granted for the second time, the student is
required to resume his studies at the
Academy, and those who do avail them-
selves of it for the second year are recom-
mended to continue in the schools.
This liberality in the matter of the edu-
cation of artists is probably unequaled
anywhere and reflects great credit upon
the founders of the endowment and the
discrimination of the management of the
Academy in regarding it not as the finish-
ing touch to the work of the student, but
as a stimulating incentive to further efforts
in acquiring a knowledge of his craft. It
also recognizes the fact that every intelli-
gent artist regards himself a student to
the end of his career.
The Charles Toppan prizes, amounting
in all to seven hundred dollars, and divided
into three classes, were awarded to the
successful students. The Edward Stew-
ardson Prize for sculpture, the William K.
Ramborger Prize for drawing in black-and-
white, the Henry J. Thouron Prizes for
composition, and the John H. Packard
Zoological Prizes, complete the list of
awards which were announced by John
Frederick Lewis, Esq., the president of the
Academy, and which were made by Dr.
Herbert M. Howe, the chairman of the
committee on instruction. A short but
very interesting address by Miss Violet
Oakley, of the Faculty of the Academy,
preceded the awards of prizes. The work
of the students is displayed on the walls of
the galleries and in the rotunda, and im-
presses one as distinctly progressive, and
at the same time as thoroughly grounded
in the essentials of eclectic training.
PEN AIR PAINTING CLASS
The Dewing Woodward Summer
School, Bearsville in the Catskills, an-
nounces a series of lectures during the sea-
son by such distinguished men as Poultney
Bigelow, Prof. Leigh Hunt, of the Art De-
partment of the College of the City of
New York, Birge Harrison and Emerson
Collins. The dates and subjects have not
yet been determined. The specialty of
Miss Woodward’s school is painting the
figure in the open air.


RIENDS OF AMERICAN ART
The Society of the Friends of Ameri-
can Art was formed for the purpose of
obtaining a fund sufficient gradually to
form in the Art Institute of Chicago a
permanent collection of American art.
 
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