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Studio: international art — 79.1920

DOI issue:
No. 325 (April 1920)
DOI article:
Studio-talk
DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.21360#0082
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STUDIO-TALK

Walter MacEwen, the painter, by himself;
of little Mary Shippen Schenck, by Miss
Adelaide Cole Chase; of a boy, Sport, by
Miss Camelia Whitehurst; of a Boy in Blue,
by Miss Alice Kent Stoddard; of Captain
Dan Stevens, Lighthouse Keeper, by Mr.
Randall Davey; a Portrait Study, of fine
character, by Mr. S. G. Phillips; and a
portrait of a local artist, Mr. Howard,
by Mr. Fred Wagner. Mr. Childe Hassam
exhibited a delightfully illuminated figure
subject entitled New York Winter Window ;
Mr. Robert Vonnoh a good colour scheme
inf his Fantasy—Blue and Yellow; Mr.
Juliet White Gross sent a well-drawn nude,
Morning; and Mr. Phillip L. Hale a work,
including a nude figure, entitled Day and
her Sister, Night, having a considerable
feeling of the Pre-Raphaelite art. Mr.

George De Forest Brush illustrated the
unity of the arts in exhibiting both painting
and sculpture—the former represented by
A Family Group painted on a circular
canvas, and the latter by a statuette of a
Mother and Child. a a a a

Mr. Paul King's Lime Quarry; Mr.
Charles Morris Young's Enchanted Island ;
Mr. Gardner Symons' Village and Hills in
Mantle of Snow ; Mr. Elmer Schofield's
November Frost; Mr. Charles Rosen's
Sunny Morning; and Mr. Edward W.
Redfield's Day before Christmas were good
examples of American landscape. The
Murder of Edith Cavell, by Mr. George
Bellows, was an interesting echo of the
Great War. Life in the Far West was
depicted in Mr. Carl Rungius's On the
Trail. Mr. Hayley Lever was at his best

76

“ NEW YORK WINTER WIN-
DOW.” BY CHILDE HASSAM

(Pennsylvania Academy!
 
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