Studio-Talk
"hich have been organised. Reproductions of two
°f these are here given. The drawing by Pasternak
°f a wounded soldier shows his accustomed facility
°f draughtsmanship, while the other, by Sergi
Vinogradoff, possesses a more definitely Russian
character, the scene being typical of what has been
taking place in many a village of the Empire.
Another which should be mentioned has been
composed by Konstantin Korovin, and has a
distinctly Old Russian flavour, the subject being
a presentment of the national hero and Saint
Dmitri Donskoi, who, in the ornamental lettering
aPpropriate to his day, appeals to benevolent
Russians now living to make a sacrifice for those
who have sacrificed themselves in this great conflict.
EW YORK.—Mr. Henry Reuterdahl’s
painting, Commerce and Sea Power,
reproduced on
page 64, is a
Panel executed as a decora-
tion for the schooner-
yacht of Mr. Harold Van-
derbilt, and the presence
of the “sky-scrapers”
leaves one in no doubt as
to the location of the scene
which is here so effectively
handled. Themes such as
this are Mr. Reuterdahl’s
speciality, and there are
few important exhibitions
In America which are with-
out some evidence of his
predilection for shipping
subjects. This is, perhaps,
accounted for to some ex-
tent by his Scandinavian
origin, for he is a native of
Malmo, the busy Swedish
Port on the Baltic. He is
a member of the Water-
Colour Society here and
Vice-President of the
Society of Illustrators, to
whose exhibitions he is a
regular contributor.
Winter, St. Ives, which is generally regarded as a
capital performance. Mr. Lever is an Australian
and on migrating to England worked for some years
at St. Ives in Cornwall. R. N.
Philadelphia.—Well executed por-
traits of Judges Edward D. White and
the late Horace T. Luxton, of the
Supreme Court of the United States, of
Edward M. Paxson and William W. Wiltbank, of
the Pennsylvania Courts, were the principal can-
vases of interest in an exhibition of thirty-seven
works in oil by Mr. Albert Rosenthal, held a few
weeks ago in a new and beautifully appointed
studio and residential chambers in the fashionable
Rettenhouse Square locality. Other men well
known in professional circles, such as Mr. Edward
Biddle, art connoisseur and litterateur, Mr. Faris
In connection with the
winter exhibition of the
National Academy the
Carnegie medal has been
awarded to Mr. Hayley
Lever for his painting,
STUDY IN PINK : MERCEDES WALTON ”
BY ALBERT ROSENTHAL
6S
"hich have been organised. Reproductions of two
°f these are here given. The drawing by Pasternak
°f a wounded soldier shows his accustomed facility
°f draughtsmanship, while the other, by Sergi
Vinogradoff, possesses a more definitely Russian
character, the scene being typical of what has been
taking place in many a village of the Empire.
Another which should be mentioned has been
composed by Konstantin Korovin, and has a
distinctly Old Russian flavour, the subject being
a presentment of the national hero and Saint
Dmitri Donskoi, who, in the ornamental lettering
aPpropriate to his day, appeals to benevolent
Russians now living to make a sacrifice for those
who have sacrificed themselves in this great conflict.
EW YORK.—Mr. Henry Reuterdahl’s
painting, Commerce and Sea Power,
reproduced on
page 64, is a
Panel executed as a decora-
tion for the schooner-
yacht of Mr. Harold Van-
derbilt, and the presence
of the “sky-scrapers”
leaves one in no doubt as
to the location of the scene
which is here so effectively
handled. Themes such as
this are Mr. Reuterdahl’s
speciality, and there are
few important exhibitions
In America which are with-
out some evidence of his
predilection for shipping
subjects. This is, perhaps,
accounted for to some ex-
tent by his Scandinavian
origin, for he is a native of
Malmo, the busy Swedish
Port on the Baltic. He is
a member of the Water-
Colour Society here and
Vice-President of the
Society of Illustrators, to
whose exhibitions he is a
regular contributor.
Winter, St. Ives, which is generally regarded as a
capital performance. Mr. Lever is an Australian
and on migrating to England worked for some years
at St. Ives in Cornwall. R. N.
Philadelphia.—Well executed por-
traits of Judges Edward D. White and
the late Horace T. Luxton, of the
Supreme Court of the United States, of
Edward M. Paxson and William W. Wiltbank, of
the Pennsylvania Courts, were the principal can-
vases of interest in an exhibition of thirty-seven
works in oil by Mr. Albert Rosenthal, held a few
weeks ago in a new and beautifully appointed
studio and residential chambers in the fashionable
Rettenhouse Square locality. Other men well
known in professional circles, such as Mr. Edward
Biddle, art connoisseur and litterateur, Mr. Faris
In connection with the
winter exhibition of the
National Academy the
Carnegie medal has been
awarded to Mr. Hayley
Lever for his painting,
STUDY IN PINK : MERCEDES WALTON ”
BY ALBERT ROSENTHAL
6S