Studio- Talk
of his little canvases con-
stitute La Touche the
Fragonard of our day.
H. F.
BERLIN. — The
exhibition of
antique and
modern fans,
held last autumn at
the Salon of Friedmann
and Weber, served perhaps
to remind Berliners how
seldom enterprises of this
kind are undertaken. The
fan designed by frau margarets erler . .
great majority of such
shows held here during
faithful to their own perception of things, working the last few years have unfortunately originated
steadily and conscientiously in their interpretation of in connection with commercial interests. The
them. Thus, interest in
M. Lucien ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this sort of
Simon gave ^^^^T^^^^^^^ thing does
us once j^^^T" '^^^B not seem to
more a mea- be very
sure of his ' 0^ great, and
talent in a f ^8 we must
vigorous , therefore
portrait of a ^F-'- '* I content our-
man; M. f WM/S"~- %•'•» m ' ' ■-^BJ selves with
Jacques Wf \\ 1 I I ff ' -Sb^^B *ne know-
Blanche K, ~'".1 ledge that
had, besides BHIfeXvifc.- ^O^'' ^1 the Fan Ex-
:i portrait of faa^^^^ ■ '<;:>fci ^-^-V ' -^^«^"" "' „^^^^^^^J hibition was
Rodin, a H BfeMlB a Sruat suc"
delightful cess. Pass-
figure Of a fan designed by h. van de velde ing OVer the
lady in the large and
midst of flowers instinct with life; M. Cottet, in interesting collection of antique fans, which
his views of the Dauphin^, has returned to those filled one large room and another smaller one
scenes which inspired his
early works. The land-
scapes of M. Dauchez have
that intense expressiveness
and sadness by which his
work is always character-
ised. Walter Gay's inte-
riors deserve all the praise
bestowed on them, for few
are more in tune with the
poetry of things than he. f
La Touche was this time
exceptionally well repre-
sented. The luxurious
note, the subtle refinement fan designed by frau margarete erler
354
of his little canvases con-
stitute La Touche the
Fragonard of our day.
H. F.
BERLIN. — The
exhibition of
antique and
modern fans,
held last autumn at
the Salon of Friedmann
and Weber, served perhaps
to remind Berliners how
seldom enterprises of this
kind are undertaken. The
fan designed by frau margarets erler . .
great majority of such
shows held here during
faithful to their own perception of things, working the last few years have unfortunately originated
steadily and conscientiously in their interpretation of in connection with commercial interests. The
them. Thus, interest in
M. Lucien ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this sort of
Simon gave ^^^^T^^^^^^^ thing does
us once j^^^T" '^^^B not seem to
more a mea- be very
sure of his ' 0^ great, and
talent in a f ^8 we must
vigorous , therefore
portrait of a ^F-'- '* I content our-
man; M. f WM/S"~- %•'•» m ' ' ■-^BJ selves with
Jacques Wf \\ 1 I I ff ' -Sb^^B *ne know-
Blanche K, ~'".1 ledge that
had, besides BHIfeXvifc.- ^O^'' ^1 the Fan Ex-
:i portrait of faa^^^^ ■ '<;:>fci ^-^-V ' -^^«^"" "' „^^^^^^^J hibition was
Rodin, a H BfeMlB a Sruat suc"
delightful cess. Pass-
figure Of a fan designed by h. van de velde ing OVer the
lady in the large and
midst of flowers instinct with life; M. Cottet, in interesting collection of antique fans, which
his views of the Dauphin^, has returned to those filled one large room and another smaller one
scenes which inspired his
early works. The land-
scapes of M. Dauchez have
that intense expressiveness
and sadness by which his
work is always character-
ised. Walter Gay's inte-
riors deserve all the praise
bestowed on them, for few
are more in tune with the
poetry of things than he. f
La Touche was this time
exceptionally well repre-
sented. The luxurious
note, the subtle refinement fan designed by frau margarete erler
354