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Studio: international art — 30.1904

DOI Heft:
No. 130 (January, 1904)
DOI Artikel:
Studio-talk
DOI Seite / Zitierlink: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.19880#0368

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Studio-Talk

"angel court, strand" from a drawing

by f. l. emanuel

(See London Studio- Talk)

35°

TUNSTALL.—The ninth annual ex-
hibition of the North Staffordshire
Arts Society and Sketching Club
was opened on Nov. 28th by Mr.
G. C. Haite, in the Victoria Institute
Museum, Tunstall. The exhibition was the
largest yet held by the society, but it is
a matter of regret that only about twenty
of the 280 exhibits were works of crafts-
manship. There is, however, a probability
of this defect being remedied, inasmuch as
there is a desire on the part of many artists
in the district for the amalgamation of this
association with the Hanley Arts and Crafts
Society, whose exhibitions include a much
larger proportion of examples of applied
art. Mr. Stanley Thorogood, A.R.C.A., the
head of the Burslem School of Art, was the
exhibitor, amongst other pictures, of a pastel
figure-drawing, Hollanders, a work decorative
in style and refined in treatment. Mr. H.
Foster Newey, headmaster of the Tunstall
School, exhibited some pieces of jewellery
which were original in design and of good
workmanship, but he excelled in his water-
colour, Mid Rock and Fell, noticeable for
the excellent drawing of the foreground rocks
and the fine realisation of The effect of sunlight
on the hillside. The painter of the water-
colour, The Return of the Crusaders, Mr. T.
J. Jones, second master at the Burslem
School, evinced a sense of quietude and
power in his poetic treatment of this subject.
A young artist, Mr. C. A. Solon, of Draycott-
le-Moors, exhibited a strong and forceful
study in dark greens and purples, an oil-
painting called The Lonely Wood. E. N. S.

LIVERPOOL.—The local artists ex-
hibiting at the Walker Art Gallery
this year made a very strong show
in portraiture. Many of the ex-
amples were of fine quality, displaying re-
finement and distinction in drawing, with
choice and delicate arrangements of colour.

R. E. Morrison's Miss Mary Trevitt and
Mrs. J. B. Atherton are excellent instances
of this high quality. G. Hall Neale's por-
traits of Rev. Canon Armour, D.D., and of
the Right Hon. the Lord Mayor of Liverpool,
W. Watson Rutherford, M.P., the latter
illustrated in the November number of The
 
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