Reviews of Recent Publications
Arts Academy, whose first director was the archi- are the following: Almeida Junior, Decio Villares,
tect Grandjean de Montigny, and which counted Henrique Bernardelli, Pedro Peres, Belmiro de
among its professors the celebrated painter Nicolas Almeida, Zeferino da Costa, Daniel Berard,
Taunay. From its foundation to the present date Teixeira da Rocha, Rodolpho Amoedo, Aurelio
it has trained many painters, in addition to a few de Figueredo, Oscar Pereira da Silva, and Pedro
sculptors and architects, who have, of course, only Weingartner. It is in landscape that our artists
achieved a local reputation; but some of them, have most distinguished themselves, and nearly all
principally in the last thirty years, deserved to be of them have devoted much of their time to this
known outside their own country,for they have shown branch of art—a natural consequence of being sur-
true artistic talent, and in several instances have rounded by the most magnificent and most varied
executed works bearing comparison with those of scenery to be found in any country. I will,
the best European artists. Of course, the majority therefore, only add now he names of those who
of the successful ones have, after completing their have devoted themselves exclusively to landscape-
curriculum at our Academy, passed five or more painting. First of all I must mention Antonio
years in Europe, working under some good French Parreiras, who is an ardent lover of our forests, and
or Italian master. _ is the one who best understands Brazilian tropical
nature. Francisco Ribeiro is a painter of lovely
Among the prominent living artists I must give nooks and dells, while D. Garcia y Vasquez, Tusley
precedence to the elder ones—Pedro Americo de Pacheco, Joao Baptista da Costa, and Benno
Figueredo and Victor Meirelles de Lima. Both of Treidler, all deserve special mention. Among
them were pupils of the Rio Academy, and both seascapists only three are remarkable, namely—
studied in Europe as pensioners of the Govern- J. B. Castagnetto, Antonio Valle de Souza Pinto,
ment. Pedro Americo de Figueredo has distin- and Carlos de Sacerda.
guished himself as a painter of large canvases C. A. dos S.
representing some of the principal battles that were
fought in the war with Paraguay, in which he REVIEWS OF RECENT
shows a great disposition for arrangement, full of
life and movement, together with a warm and high-
toned colouring. It is, however, as a painter of Art and Life and the Building and Decoration
sacred subjects that he has attained to the very of Cities. (London : Rivington, Percival and Co.)
high level of true art, and in the painting of bibli- 6s. These five lectures, delivered during the last
cal themes his brush has always found the appro- Exhibition of the Arts and Crafts Society, are
priate form and the real and sympathetic colours. issued in a very beautiful book. The first by Mr.
Pedro Americo has his portrait in the Uffizi Gal- Cobden Sanderson, seems rather ornate and over-
lery, and resides at present in Florence. full of praise for the golden past—the past as a
- poet imagines it, but as it probably did not appear
PUBLICATIONS.
Victor Meirelles is a quiet and modest artist; to its contemporaries. Mr. Lethaby also, in his
but, had he worked in a larger and more appre- exordium of Beautiful Cities evidently holds the
ciative art centre than Rio de Janeiro, he might same idea, that only in old times did beauty really
by this time have been classed among the great dwell in towns. Mr. Walter Crane, discoursing of
modern masters of design. He studied under The Decoration of Public Buildings, is less given to
Consoni in Rome, and Paul Delaroche in Paris. deplore the past than to suggest new possibilities
He is a sober colourist and a worshipper of form for the present; and his most thoughtful and well
and of purity of line. All his works are distin- studied advice should be taken to heart by all in
guished by harmonious arrangement, by a careful authority. Mr. Reginald Blomfield is eloquent in
and slow development of his subjects, and a minute praise of lovely gardens, and Mr. Halsey Ricardo
study of every detail and accessory. His first pleads for colour in the architecture of cities. It
work—The First Mass in Brazil—is still, perhaps, is with a sigh that one closes the volume, and faces
his greatest effort, although he has also painted the grimy fact in place of the roseate dream,
large canvases of military subjects, and lately has But it was a dream worth dreaming, and there is
devoted his time to the painting of large pano- much that not only may, but possibly will, come
ramas of the city of Rio de Janeiro. true in time. No one interested in the arts should
--■ leave this book unread.
Of the younger generation the most promising Modern Opera Houses and Theatres. By Edwin
204
Arts Academy, whose first director was the archi- are the following: Almeida Junior, Decio Villares,
tect Grandjean de Montigny, and which counted Henrique Bernardelli, Pedro Peres, Belmiro de
among its professors the celebrated painter Nicolas Almeida, Zeferino da Costa, Daniel Berard,
Taunay. From its foundation to the present date Teixeira da Rocha, Rodolpho Amoedo, Aurelio
it has trained many painters, in addition to a few de Figueredo, Oscar Pereira da Silva, and Pedro
sculptors and architects, who have, of course, only Weingartner. It is in landscape that our artists
achieved a local reputation; but some of them, have most distinguished themselves, and nearly all
principally in the last thirty years, deserved to be of them have devoted much of their time to this
known outside their own country,for they have shown branch of art—a natural consequence of being sur-
true artistic talent, and in several instances have rounded by the most magnificent and most varied
executed works bearing comparison with those of scenery to be found in any country. I will,
the best European artists. Of course, the majority therefore, only add now he names of those who
of the successful ones have, after completing their have devoted themselves exclusively to landscape-
curriculum at our Academy, passed five or more painting. First of all I must mention Antonio
years in Europe, working under some good French Parreiras, who is an ardent lover of our forests, and
or Italian master. _ is the one who best understands Brazilian tropical
nature. Francisco Ribeiro is a painter of lovely
Among the prominent living artists I must give nooks and dells, while D. Garcia y Vasquez, Tusley
precedence to the elder ones—Pedro Americo de Pacheco, Joao Baptista da Costa, and Benno
Figueredo and Victor Meirelles de Lima. Both of Treidler, all deserve special mention. Among
them were pupils of the Rio Academy, and both seascapists only three are remarkable, namely—
studied in Europe as pensioners of the Govern- J. B. Castagnetto, Antonio Valle de Souza Pinto,
ment. Pedro Americo de Figueredo has distin- and Carlos de Sacerda.
guished himself as a painter of large canvases C. A. dos S.
representing some of the principal battles that were
fought in the war with Paraguay, in which he REVIEWS OF RECENT
shows a great disposition for arrangement, full of
life and movement, together with a warm and high-
toned colouring. It is, however, as a painter of Art and Life and the Building and Decoration
sacred subjects that he has attained to the very of Cities. (London : Rivington, Percival and Co.)
high level of true art, and in the painting of bibli- 6s. These five lectures, delivered during the last
cal themes his brush has always found the appro- Exhibition of the Arts and Crafts Society, are
priate form and the real and sympathetic colours. issued in a very beautiful book. The first by Mr.
Pedro Americo has his portrait in the Uffizi Gal- Cobden Sanderson, seems rather ornate and over-
lery, and resides at present in Florence. full of praise for the golden past—the past as a
- poet imagines it, but as it probably did not appear
PUBLICATIONS.
Victor Meirelles is a quiet and modest artist; to its contemporaries. Mr. Lethaby also, in his
but, had he worked in a larger and more appre- exordium of Beautiful Cities evidently holds the
ciative art centre than Rio de Janeiro, he might same idea, that only in old times did beauty really
by this time have been classed among the great dwell in towns. Mr. Walter Crane, discoursing of
modern masters of design. He studied under The Decoration of Public Buildings, is less given to
Consoni in Rome, and Paul Delaroche in Paris. deplore the past than to suggest new possibilities
He is a sober colourist and a worshipper of form for the present; and his most thoughtful and well
and of purity of line. All his works are distin- studied advice should be taken to heart by all in
guished by harmonious arrangement, by a careful authority. Mr. Reginald Blomfield is eloquent in
and slow development of his subjects, and a minute praise of lovely gardens, and Mr. Halsey Ricardo
study of every detail and accessory. His first pleads for colour in the architecture of cities. It
work—The First Mass in Brazil—is still, perhaps, is with a sigh that one closes the volume, and faces
his greatest effort, although he has also painted the grimy fact in place of the roseate dream,
large canvases of military subjects, and lately has But it was a dream worth dreaming, and there is
devoted his time to the painting of large pano- much that not only may, but possibly will, come
ramas of the city of Rio de Janeiro. true in time. No one interested in the arts should
--■ leave this book unread.
Of the younger generation the most promising Modern Opera Houses and Theatres. By Edwin
204