BOOK ILLUSTRATION
The National Competition of Schools of Art, igro
Manor; the heraldic studies on
leather by John G. Chappie, of
Camberwell; an embroidered
cushion cover by Eveline
Quainton, of Battersea; the
designs for illuminated pages
by Henry William Barber, of
Newcastle-on-Tyne, and Mary
Shaw, of Manchester; stencilled
hangings by Enid Cartwright, of
Willesden, and Nao Onuma, a
Japanese student at the Man-
chester School of Art; and the
designs for tapestry by Frank
Middleton, of Regent Street
Polytechnic; for book illustration
and decoration by William R. E.
Goodrich of Sheffield, Harold
Williamson of Leeds, and Mabel
A. Goodwin of Bournemouth; and for a damask
table-cloth by William Lilley, a student of the
Municipal Technical Institute, Belfast (page 297).
W. T. Whitley.
BY HAROLD WILLIAMSON (LEEDS)
to be the best. A gold medal has been given to
Lucy Pierce, of Hackney Institute School of Art,
for her designs for colour prints (p. 301) illustrating
Biblical subjects and poems by Keats.
Other works in various classes that call for
mention in this survey of the recent exhibition
are the excellent design for a wall-paper by
Herbert M. Smith, of Bradford; the enamelled
jewel-box by Margaret G. Harper, of Aston
f ScFRANCISf
#OF*ASG!S!^
JRANCIS, m
iBORN-IN-SS* 1
TIE-CITY
ofAtwisi ■ t •
val/dofS^Ut^poaus
at- firsf-t lamed- Jahrv-pyTus ++
mother. GGierv-coHeixawhis-
I father, In- tohooc-absence- lie- '
had- been- bom, rctcumcd-from f
'FVctrvde;, he tacts- affeixdards
ruxmed^Francts. After-hc-t'-L
toas- groom-op, and KacL-bo
coma-of-a-sub Ac- toft, hxr- did
practise- the-arfc-pf-'his-fadxen
that-is, trade, but- in-far • other- .
taioe,for-lie_-was a-maTia’+
1 man* than-Kis fatd\a\ancl-ino»\r I
[ gciietxJtiSigwci t-utito-jestsvji-p
DESIGN FOR WOOL AND SILK TAPESTRY HANGING
BY FRANK MIDDLETON (REGENT STREET POLYTECHNIC)
ILLUMINATED PAGE. BY HENRY WILLIAM BARBER
(ARMSTRONG COLLEGE, NEWCAS1LE-ON-TYNE)
3°4
(A few illustrations of designs and work referred
to in the foregoing article are held over until our
next issue.—The Editor.)
The National Competition of Schools of Art, igro
Manor; the heraldic studies on
leather by John G. Chappie, of
Camberwell; an embroidered
cushion cover by Eveline
Quainton, of Battersea; the
designs for illuminated pages
by Henry William Barber, of
Newcastle-on-Tyne, and Mary
Shaw, of Manchester; stencilled
hangings by Enid Cartwright, of
Willesden, and Nao Onuma, a
Japanese student at the Man-
chester School of Art; and the
designs for tapestry by Frank
Middleton, of Regent Street
Polytechnic; for book illustration
and decoration by William R. E.
Goodrich of Sheffield, Harold
Williamson of Leeds, and Mabel
A. Goodwin of Bournemouth; and for a damask
table-cloth by William Lilley, a student of the
Municipal Technical Institute, Belfast (page 297).
W. T. Whitley.
BY HAROLD WILLIAMSON (LEEDS)
to be the best. A gold medal has been given to
Lucy Pierce, of Hackney Institute School of Art,
for her designs for colour prints (p. 301) illustrating
Biblical subjects and poems by Keats.
Other works in various classes that call for
mention in this survey of the recent exhibition
are the excellent design for a wall-paper by
Herbert M. Smith, of Bradford; the enamelled
jewel-box by Margaret G. Harper, of Aston
f ScFRANCISf
#OF*ASG!S!^
JRANCIS, m
iBORN-IN-SS* 1
TIE-CITY
ofAtwisi ■ t •
val/dofS^Ut^poaus
at- firsf-t lamed- Jahrv-pyTus ++
mother. GGierv-coHeixawhis-
I father, In- tohooc-absence- lie- '
had- been- bom, rctcumcd-from f
'FVctrvde;, he tacts- affeixdards
ruxmed^Francts. After-hc-t'-L
toas- groom-op, and KacL-bo
coma-of-a-sub Ac- toft, hxr- did
practise- the-arfc-pf-'his-fadxen
that-is, trade, but- in-far • other- .
taioe,for-lie_-was a-maTia’+
1 man* than-Kis fatd\a\ancl-ino»\r I
[ gciietxJtiSigwci t-utito-jestsvji-p
DESIGN FOR WOOL AND SILK TAPESTRY HANGING
BY FRANK MIDDLETON (REGENT STREET POLYTECHNIC)
ILLUMINATED PAGE. BY HENRY WILLIAM BARBER
(ARMSTRONG COLLEGE, NEWCAS1LE-ON-TYNE)
3°4
(A few illustrations of designs and work referred
to in the foregoing article are held over until our
next issue.—The Editor.)