WASHINGTON
Bronze Medal to Mr. Maurice B. Prender-
gast on his Landscape and Figures; and
the fourth with Corcoran Honourable
Mention awarded to Mr. John Noble’s
Provincetown in Winter. Many other
equally important canvases were seen not
m the competition for honours, 0 0
Among the outstanding figure paint-
ings were portraits by Mr. Leopold
Seyffert, Mr. Ralph Clarkson, Mrs.
Lillian Westcott Hale, Mr. Burtis Baker,
Miss Catherine Wharton Morris, Morris
Kolarsky, Mrs. Ellen Emmett Rand,
Albert Delmont Smith, Mr. Charles Hop-
kinson, Mr. Wayman Adams, Mr. A.
Sheldon Pennoyer, and Mr. John McLure
Hamilton. The Madonna of the Rappa-
hannock, by Mr. Gari Melchers was an
interesting religious subject in the costume
and accessories of to-day; Mr. Robert
Henri sent an Indian Girl in White Cere-
monial Blanket ; Miss Catherine Carter
Critcher exhibited a portrait of an Indian
u THE MATE.” BY CHARLES
W. HAWTHORNE
(Corcoran Gallery, Washington :
Second William A. Clarke Prize)
Chief Light Lightning in war paint and
feathers. Two academic canvases by
Mr. Eugene Francis Savage, very fine
in figure - drawing, were Recessional and
Expulsion, lent by the City Art Museum,
St. Louis. Masterly drawing and colour
made Mr. Cameron Burnside’s canvas La
Toilette, one of unusual interest. Landscape
paintings were present, such as Mr. Willard
Metcalf’s Indian Summer, Mr. David Gar-
ber’s Sycamores, Miss Felicie W. Howell's
Exchange Place, New York, Mr. Childe
Hassam’s Central Park, and Mr. F. J. Mul-
haupt's Icebound Harbor. The power of the
sea was well expressed in Mr. C. H. Wood-
bury’s Bow Wave. There was a fine bit of
animal painting in Mr. Carl Rungens’s
picture of Alaskan Moose. While the show
was mainly of works in oil there was
arranged on screens in the central gallery
of collection of charming small works in
pastel by Mr. T. W. Dewing. 0 0
Eugene Castello.
173
Bronze Medal to Mr. Maurice B. Prender-
gast on his Landscape and Figures; and
the fourth with Corcoran Honourable
Mention awarded to Mr. John Noble’s
Provincetown in Winter. Many other
equally important canvases were seen not
m the competition for honours, 0 0
Among the outstanding figure paint-
ings were portraits by Mr. Leopold
Seyffert, Mr. Ralph Clarkson, Mrs.
Lillian Westcott Hale, Mr. Burtis Baker,
Miss Catherine Wharton Morris, Morris
Kolarsky, Mrs. Ellen Emmett Rand,
Albert Delmont Smith, Mr. Charles Hop-
kinson, Mr. Wayman Adams, Mr. A.
Sheldon Pennoyer, and Mr. John McLure
Hamilton. The Madonna of the Rappa-
hannock, by Mr. Gari Melchers was an
interesting religious subject in the costume
and accessories of to-day; Mr. Robert
Henri sent an Indian Girl in White Cere-
monial Blanket ; Miss Catherine Carter
Critcher exhibited a portrait of an Indian
u THE MATE.” BY CHARLES
W. HAWTHORNE
(Corcoran Gallery, Washington :
Second William A. Clarke Prize)
Chief Light Lightning in war paint and
feathers. Two academic canvases by
Mr. Eugene Francis Savage, very fine
in figure - drawing, were Recessional and
Expulsion, lent by the City Art Museum,
St. Louis. Masterly drawing and colour
made Mr. Cameron Burnside’s canvas La
Toilette, one of unusual interest. Landscape
paintings were present, such as Mr. Willard
Metcalf’s Indian Summer, Mr. David Gar-
ber’s Sycamores, Miss Felicie W. Howell's
Exchange Place, New York, Mr. Childe
Hassam’s Central Park, and Mr. F. J. Mul-
haupt's Icebound Harbor. The power of the
sea was well expressed in Mr. C. H. Wood-
bury’s Bow Wave. There was a fine bit of
animal painting in Mr. Carl Rungens’s
picture of Alaskan Moose. While the show
was mainly of works in oil there was
arranged on screens in the central gallery
of collection of charming small works in
pastel by Mr. T. W. Dewing. 0 0
Eugene Castello.
173