Studio- Talk
Cutts's Atlantic Rollers was the marine picture of Among other pictures of excellence were Mrs. W. M.
the year, the play of opal-tinted sunshine upon the Cutts's A Dartmoor Farm, Mr. C. M. Manly's The
iridescent spray, and the duller spume of the Very Heart of It—another Dartmoor study—Mrs.
churning deep, being excellently rendered. Across G. A. Reid's decorative panel, Autumn Fires, Mr.
the Boom was a very attractive canvas by Mr. F. McG. Knowles' An Autumn Evening, Mr.
Thomas W. Mitchell, and Mr. Tom Thompson's F. M. Bell-Smith's The Silvery Tide—(he Thames
two exhibits were both striking in treatment. A very at Waterloo Bridge—Mr. Thomas A. Fripp's Where
brilliant canvas was Mr. A. Suzor Cote's The River Snows and Suns and Mad Winds Meet (Mt.
Magog, Shcrbrooke. His well-known skill in snow- Sheol in the Rockies), and Mr. R. S. Gagen's
effects was further evidenced by the blaze of red- Sunlit Rocks, an Atlantic coast study. J. E. S.
gold sunset upon the cold stream, its banks and
buildings. Mr. Owen Staples gave quite a Turner- "1 "XARIS. -As mediums of expression, etching
esque effect to his October Mist, a subtle colour Iv^^ and wood-engraving have lately been en-
blend of river mist, factory smoke and sunshine. joying a vigorous popularity in Paris.
- Within the last few months new and
Prominent among the figure pictures was Miss varied societies have grown up and launched their
Florence Carlyle's Son anl Heir, and among the exhibitions, all of which have contained work of a
portraits Mr. E. W. Grier's Portrait of Himself for desirable charm. Amongst the larger displays that
the National Gallery, Ottawa. Mr. H. Britton's of the Premier Salon Internationale de la Gravure
Fisherman's Wife was noteworthy—an old woman Originale, held in the Marcel Bernheim Galleries,
mending a fishing-net in a squalid sun-lit hut. was selectively interesting. As in all international
"IE PARDON DE SAINT-GUENOI.E" FROM AN ETCHING BY (',. GOBO
'47
Cutts's Atlantic Rollers was the marine picture of Among other pictures of excellence were Mrs. W. M.
the year, the play of opal-tinted sunshine upon the Cutts's A Dartmoor Farm, Mr. C. M. Manly's The
iridescent spray, and the duller spume of the Very Heart of It—another Dartmoor study—Mrs.
churning deep, being excellently rendered. Across G. A. Reid's decorative panel, Autumn Fires, Mr.
the Boom was a very attractive canvas by Mr. F. McG. Knowles' An Autumn Evening, Mr.
Thomas W. Mitchell, and Mr. Tom Thompson's F. M. Bell-Smith's The Silvery Tide—(he Thames
two exhibits were both striking in treatment. A very at Waterloo Bridge—Mr. Thomas A. Fripp's Where
brilliant canvas was Mr. A. Suzor Cote's The River Snows and Suns and Mad Winds Meet (Mt.
Magog, Shcrbrooke. His well-known skill in snow- Sheol in the Rockies), and Mr. R. S. Gagen's
effects was further evidenced by the blaze of red- Sunlit Rocks, an Atlantic coast study. J. E. S.
gold sunset upon the cold stream, its banks and
buildings. Mr. Owen Staples gave quite a Turner- "1 "XARIS. -As mediums of expression, etching
esque effect to his October Mist, a subtle colour Iv^^ and wood-engraving have lately been en-
blend of river mist, factory smoke and sunshine. joying a vigorous popularity in Paris.
- Within the last few months new and
Prominent among the figure pictures was Miss varied societies have grown up and launched their
Florence Carlyle's Son anl Heir, and among the exhibitions, all of which have contained work of a
portraits Mr. E. W. Grier's Portrait of Himself for desirable charm. Amongst the larger displays that
the National Gallery, Ottawa. Mr. H. Britton's of the Premier Salon Internationale de la Gravure
Fisherman's Wife was noteworthy—an old woman Originale, held in the Marcel Bernheim Galleries,
mending a fishing-net in a squalid sun-lit hut. was selectively interesting. As in all international
"IE PARDON DE SAINT-GUENOI.E" FROM AN ETCHING BY (',. GOBO
'47