Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

International studio — 55.1915

DOI Heft:
Nr. 217 (March, 1915)
DOI Artikel:
In the galleries
DOI Seite / Zitierlink:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.43458#0115

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In the Galleries

Courtesy Berlin Photographic Cdmpany
A DRAWING BY PASCIN


esses and countesses. There is an air of distinc-
tion about the work not derived from the sitters,
the likenesses are excellent, and great care and
individuality is bestowed upon the posing.
The Kraushaar Galleries have been showing a
collection of Tangier subjects by John Lavery,
whose name is sufficient guarantee for the excel-
lence of the canvases. One of the best is a skating
scene in Switzerland.
An exhibition of fifty water-colours by Dodge
MacKnight was held at Carnegie Institute, Pitts-
burgh, during February. It consisted of several
series of landscapes painted in the tropics, New-
foundland, New England, Arizona and Utah.
Dr. R. Tait McKenzie has just completed The
Boy Scout, which may be seen at the Pennsylvania
Academy. The artist limited the edition to ten
copies, all of which are disposed of. A reproduc-
tion of this model will appear in the next number.
The Arlington Galleries recently gave a two-
man exhibition, the work of E. Joseph Read and
Bolton Brown. The smaller tropical paintings
of Read’s, especially of Panama fishermen and
scenes about Nassau and Jamaica, are rich in
colour and decorative. In regarding his Culebra
Cut and other canal pictures, we cannot help
recalling how much better they have been done
by Jonas Lie. Some of the canvases by Bolton
Brown, especially Silent Night and Waning Winter,
are full of feeling and very delicately handled.

Group paintings in the same gallery, with one or
two exceptions, are amateurish records of ladies


Courtesy Berlin Photographic Company
BUST BY EDITH W. BURROUGHS

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