Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

Studio: international art — 52.1911

DOI Heft:
No. 216 (March, 1911)
DOI Artikel:
Some remarks upon a series of designs for a village hall
DOI Artikel:
The gardens of England in the northern counties
DOI Artikel:
Studio-talk
DOI Seite / Zitierlink:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.20972#0160

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Studio- Talk

design for a village hall (plan on preceding page) by "thatch"

Enseigne proposes to make use of an apsidal
end at the back of the stage when theatricals
are given is not clear. Simplicitas, who sends
a good, bold drawing, provides retiring rooms of
insufficient size.

THE GARDENS OF ENGLAND IN
THE NORTHERN COUNTIES.

The third volume of the series of Special
Numbers of The Studio devoted to the Gar-
dens of England is now in preparation, and
will be ready for publication next month. This
volume will complete the series, the Southern
and Western Counties having been dealt with
in the Winter Number 1907-8, and the Midland
and Eastern Counties in the Winter Number
1908-9. It will contain about 130 full-page
illustrations carefully selected from some hun-
dreds of photographs—especially taken for this
volume by Mr. W. J. Day, the well-known
garden photographer—of some of the most
beautiful and interesting gardens in Yorkshire,
Lancashire, Cumberland, Westmorland, Dur-
ham, and Northumberland. In addition there
will be several plates in colours after water-
colour drawings by Mr. G. S. Elgood, R.I.,
Mr. E. A. Chadwick, and others. Thus the
volume will be one which will appeal to all
lovers of the garden and garden craft.
138

STUDIO-TALK.
(From Our Own Correspondents.)

LONDON.—At a meeting of the Royal
Academy in the last week in January,
. Mr. Frank Short was elected a full
member, and Mr. Charles Shannon
and Mr. Mark Fisher were elected associates.
At a subsequent meeting, Mr. John Lavery,
painter, and Mr. Ernest Newton, architect,
were also elected associates, and Mr. D. Y.
Cameron, associate-engraver, in place of Mr.
Short. These elections have given general
satisfaction. A day or two after they took
place another vacancy in the ranks of the
members arose through the death of Mr. John
MacWhirter, who died on January 28, at his
residence in St. John's Wood, at the age of 71.
The deceased artist began to exhibit at the
Royal Academy in 1865, and was elected
associate in 1.878, full membership following
fifteen years later.

Mr. J. Lockwood Kipling, CLE., who died
at Tisbury in Wiltshire early last month, at
the age of 74, was for some years Principal
of the Mayo School of Industrial Art at Lahore,
having previously been architectural sculptor
in the Bombay School of Art, and during his
 
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