Studio-Talk
"SUMMER EVENING BY EDWARD DUFNER
galleries. This artist, who is above all a colourist, cases quite equal to the use of oil pigment on
seeks always for decorative effect. His large panel, canvas, as, for instance, in the works of Mr. Alex-
Des Coquelicots, is consummately composed and ander Robinson, who exhibited a group of eight
■of very sumptuous colouring. F. K. excellently painted studies of Holland and Italy,
masterful in every touch, glowing with warm, sub-
HILADELPHIA.—A high standard in the dued colour and low in tone. The picturesque
quality of the work shown in the Seventh boats of the Zuyder Zee furnished motifs for some of
Annual Exhibition of the Philadelphia the most successful of them.
Water-colour Club, held in the galleries -
P
•of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Pine Arts, gave Very interesting in a different way were the works
the visitor interested in that form of pictorial art a in water-colours of Mr. Alfred East, so well known
•most agreeable impression. Not that all the pic- to the readers of The Studio. An exhibition of
tures there to be seen were water-colours in the his works in oil has recently been held at the
-sense generally accepted as such a few years back, Academy, but he had not .before shown aquarelles
for many of them were really paintings in gouache at Philadelphia. Admirable in drawing, careful
•or distemper on tinted papers, brown or grey, and painstaking in detail, these drawings delighted
assisted sometimes by the use of pastel chalk or the connoisseur of English landscape painting,
■crayon, in fact any medium except oil-colour His views of A Suffolk Village and Xnaresbro'
found suitable for the purpose of arriving at the Castle deserve special mention as characteristic
-desired result. The effects obtained were in many examples of his craft. Mr. D. Y. Cameron was
33i
"SUMMER EVENING BY EDWARD DUFNER
galleries. This artist, who is above all a colourist, cases quite equal to the use of oil pigment on
seeks always for decorative effect. His large panel, canvas, as, for instance, in the works of Mr. Alex-
Des Coquelicots, is consummately composed and ander Robinson, who exhibited a group of eight
■of very sumptuous colouring. F. K. excellently painted studies of Holland and Italy,
masterful in every touch, glowing with warm, sub-
HILADELPHIA.—A high standard in the dued colour and low in tone. The picturesque
quality of the work shown in the Seventh boats of the Zuyder Zee furnished motifs for some of
Annual Exhibition of the Philadelphia the most successful of them.
Water-colour Club, held in the galleries -
P
•of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Pine Arts, gave Very interesting in a different way were the works
the visitor interested in that form of pictorial art a in water-colours of Mr. Alfred East, so well known
•most agreeable impression. Not that all the pic- to the readers of The Studio. An exhibition of
tures there to be seen were water-colours in the his works in oil has recently been held at the
-sense generally accepted as such a few years back, Academy, but he had not .before shown aquarelles
for many of them were really paintings in gouache at Philadelphia. Admirable in drawing, careful
•or distemper on tinted papers, brown or grey, and painstaking in detail, these drawings delighted
assisted sometimes by the use of pastel chalk or the connoisseur of English landscape painting,
■crayon, in fact any medium except oil-colour His views of A Suffolk Village and Xnaresbro'
found suitable for the purpose of arriving at the Castle deserve special mention as characteristic
-desired result. The effects obtained were in many examples of his craft. Mr. D. Y. Cameron was
33i