Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

International studio — 60.1916/​1917

DOI Heft:
Nr. 239 (January, 1917)
DOI Artikel:
Studio-Talk
DOI Seite / Zitierlink: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.43463#0243

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pictures. In design and quality of workmanship
these toys leave nothing to be desired ; they are
attractive in appearance and constructed to stand
the usage to which they are likely to be subjected.
The charming “ calendar ” dolls shown in our
illustration are the work of ladies, and are, we
understand, also a feature of Messrs. Liberty
and Co.’s Christmas show in Regent Street.

Miss Gwynedd Hudson, whose water-colour The
Changeling we reproduce in colour, has since her
student days at the Municipal School of Art,
Brighton, when she gained distinction in the
National Competition, devoted herself very suc-
cessfully to book-illustration, and in particular
to illustration of the kind represented in this
drawing—namely fairy tales, fables, and so forth.
More than once we have noted her work in the
exhibitions of the Arts and Crafts Society, but
chiefly it is to be seen in those of the Sussex
Women’s Art Club at Brighton.

GLASGOW.-—That there is a witchery
about Art that still eludes the many
relatively decided definitions assigned
to it, is continually being evinced.
Surely there must be something in its call more
melodious than the brassy clash of the cymbals of
fame to cause men to leave a clear road to pros-
perity, and follow a misty way of echoes. Perhaps
it is the desire in man to create, and that amidst
the artist’s varied mediums he finds most freedom,
a single religion and universal brotherhood.
It is not W. H. Clarke alone and his work that
evoke these thoughts ; for there are not a few
painters who have, unsought, attained enviable
positions as artists, after having in early life thrown
over more easily predicted opportunities of com-
mercial success. It is only within the last few
years that Mr. Clarke renounced an exceptionally
lucrative profession, and having bid farewell to the
big city and its ways, found as a haven the quaint


“ THE BURNSIDE ”

BY W. H. CLARKE
T53
 
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