LONDON
their subtle suggestion of colour and
atmosphere. Another show well worthy of
attention is Professor H. B. Wieland's
gathering of soundly observed and vigor-
ously recorded Alpine subject at the
Gieves Gallery—he deals skilfully with
difficult material—and yet another ex-
hibition of more than average importance
presents a series of landscapes and figure
subjects by Mr. F. Morse-Rummel at the
Alpine Club Gallery. He is a painter
with a personal outlook and much origi-
nality of method, and he has an agreeable
feeling for fresh and luminous colour and
a well-trained sense of decorative arrange-
ment. 0 0 0 0 0 0
In the galleries of the Fine Art Society the
Royal British-Colonial Society has arranged
an exhibition of cabinet pictures which has
many attractive features. Contributions
of great interest come from Mr. J. S.
Sargent, Mr. Terrick Williams, Mr. Stan-
hope Forbes, Mr. Arthur Wardle, Mr.
Spencer Watson, Mr. James Clark, Mr.
R. W. Allan, Mr. A. J. Black, Mr. St.
George Hare, Mr. Brangwyn, Mr. Fred
Roe, Mr. H. A. Olivier, Mr. T. C. Gotch,
and other prominent artists, and the
general level of the collection is excellently
maintained. In the same galleries Mr.
H. A. Payne is showing some water-
colour landscapes which can be com-
mended for their studious sincerity and
their scholarly reticence of manner and
method, and particularly for their delicate
sensitiveness of draughtsmanship and
handling. For another show which makes
a real appeal by the strength of the work
in it Mr. A. T. Nowell is responsible ;
he has collected in the gallery of Messrs.
Bromhead, Cutts & Co. a number of his
water-colours of mountain subjects, ably
handled records of the scenery in the
Dolomites and the Engadine. They are
consistently sound in technical quality,
and there is in them all a real under-
standing of nature's facts. 000
The Old Dudley Art Society, which has
migrated to Messrs. Elliott & Fry’s
gallery in Baker Street, has made a change
278
“LE LAC DES CYGNES.” LACQUER AND
PAINTED CASKET BY JESSIE BAYES
their subtle suggestion of colour and
atmosphere. Another show well worthy of
attention is Professor H. B. Wieland's
gathering of soundly observed and vigor-
ously recorded Alpine subject at the
Gieves Gallery—he deals skilfully with
difficult material—and yet another ex-
hibition of more than average importance
presents a series of landscapes and figure
subjects by Mr. F. Morse-Rummel at the
Alpine Club Gallery. He is a painter
with a personal outlook and much origi-
nality of method, and he has an agreeable
feeling for fresh and luminous colour and
a well-trained sense of decorative arrange-
ment. 0 0 0 0 0 0
In the galleries of the Fine Art Society the
Royal British-Colonial Society has arranged
an exhibition of cabinet pictures which has
many attractive features. Contributions
of great interest come from Mr. J. S.
Sargent, Mr. Terrick Williams, Mr. Stan-
hope Forbes, Mr. Arthur Wardle, Mr.
Spencer Watson, Mr. James Clark, Mr.
R. W. Allan, Mr. A. J. Black, Mr. St.
George Hare, Mr. Brangwyn, Mr. Fred
Roe, Mr. H. A. Olivier, Mr. T. C. Gotch,
and other prominent artists, and the
general level of the collection is excellently
maintained. In the same galleries Mr.
H. A. Payne is showing some water-
colour landscapes which can be com-
mended for their studious sincerity and
their scholarly reticence of manner and
method, and particularly for their delicate
sensitiveness of draughtsmanship and
handling. For another show which makes
a real appeal by the strength of the work
in it Mr. A. T. Nowell is responsible ;
he has collected in the gallery of Messrs.
Bromhead, Cutts & Co. a number of his
water-colours of mountain subjects, ably
handled records of the scenery in the
Dolomites and the Engadine. They are
consistently sound in technical quality,
and there is in them all a real under-
standing of nature's facts. 000
The Old Dudley Art Society, which has
migrated to Messrs. Elliott & Fry’s
gallery in Baker Street, has made a change
278
“LE LAC DES CYGNES.” LACQUER AND
PAINTED CASKET BY JESSIE BAYES