The International Studio, Band 62Charles Holme, Guy Eglington, Peyton Boswell, William Bernard McCormick, Henry James Whigham Offices of the International Studio, 1917 |
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... success . For it cannot be too urgently insisted on , or too persistently remembered by the craftsman , that it is only through a frank acceptance and prudent utiliza- tion of such limitations that the finer artistic results can ever be ...
... success . For it cannot be too urgently insisted on , or too persistently remembered by the craftsman , that it is only through a frank acceptance and prudent utiliza- tion of such limitations that the finer artistic results can ever be ...
Seite 31
... successful in getting together for the lottery a large number of works of art by a great many of the foremost ... success has been associated with Mr. Pennell's leadership ; but I alone , who as honorary secretary have worked with ...
... successful in getting together for the lottery a large number of works of art by a great many of the foremost ... success has been associated with Mr. Pennell's leadership ; but I alone , who as honorary secretary have worked with ...
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... success and increasing interest . It is a cheerful fact to record that in spite of war conditions and the absence of many of the younger artists at the front , the exhibitions of Canadian art came up to standard , and from the Ontario ...
... success and increasing interest . It is a cheerful fact to record that in spite of war conditions and the absence of many of the younger artists at the front , the exhibitions of Canadian art came up to standard , and from the Ontario ...
Seite 44
... success as an artist is due to his architectural training may be answered by comparing his careful and masterly ... successful grouping of so many figures on the panel , with the weakness displayed in all these matters not only by modern ...
... success as an artist is due to his architectural training may be answered by comparing his careful and masterly ... successful grouping of so many figures on the panel , with the weakness displayed in all these matters not only by modern ...
Seite 48
... success- ful employment of large masses of pure colour as contrasting forces is noticeable . The white of her robe heightens the flesh tints of the face . Notice the powerful rendering of the eyes , observable , too , in the delightful ...
... success- ful employment of large masses of pure colour as contrasting forces is noticeable . The white of her robe heightens the flesh tints of the face . Notice the powerful rendering of the eyes , observable , too , in the delightful ...
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admirably æsthetic American aquatint architect architecture ARNESBY ARNESBY BROWN Autumn beauty building canvas century Cézanne CHAMPLEVÉ character Charles charm Chinese Club collection colour composition craft Critic Dawson decorative drawings effect enamel English Art Club etchings examples exhibition expression eyes fact feeling figures France French fresco Gallery of Canada George Gothic hand harmony hôtel Biron Hunt ideal illustrations impression impressionism inspiration interest INTERNATIONAL STUDIO J. W. WATERHOUSE Japan Japanese JOSEPH JOSEPH E Joseph Southall LADY landscape living Mary Sidney medium memorial ment miniature modern MORLEY HORDER Musée Rodin Museum NATHANIEL HONE National Gallery nature NELSON DAWSON OIL PAINTING painters panel Paris period pictorial picture portrait present President prints produced Renaissance represented reproduced Rodin Royal Academy scene School of Art sculpture soul SOUTHALL spirit stalls Stanhope Forbes style suggest TEMPERA PAINTING things tion to-day ture water-colour William
Beliebte Passagen
Seite lxxvi - December 28th, 1924, a meeting for the purpose of organizing a linguistic society was held in the American Museum of Natural History, 77th Street and Central Park West, New York City...
Seite lxiv - It is simply the power they have of seeing more than we see and of enabling us, by their expressions, to penetrate further into reality ourselves.
Seite 82 - The Practical Book of Early American Arts and Crafts By HAROLD DONALDSON EBERLEIN and ABBOT McCLURE. Profusely illustrated. Colored frontispiece.
Seite lxiv - It seems as if a great movement were in progress, sweeping us along in its course. To exist is to be alive, to be borne along in the living stream, as it were on the breast of a wave. The actual present now in which all existence is gathered up is this movement accomplishing itself. The past is gathered into it, exists in it, is carried along in it, as it presses forward into the future, which is continually and without intermission becoming actual.
Seite 41 - Its intention is to present good standards in styles applicable to many fields of work, together with brief instructions regarding the drawing of letters.
Seite 167 - The destruction caused by war, the wide areas of devastation, the vast mechanical agencies essential in war, both for transport and the offensive, the masses of supplies required, and the wonderful cheerfulness and indomitable courage of the soldiers under varying climatic conditions, are worthy subjects for the artist who aims at recording for all time the spirit of the age in which he has lived.
Seite xxviii - Dynasty, who quoted the dictum of the ancient sages "that a poem is a painting without visible shape and a painting is poetry put into form.
Seite lxiv - What is it that we call genius in great painters and poets and musicians ? It is the power they have of seeing more than we see, and of enabling us by their expression to penetrate further into reality. What they see is there to be seen, but only they see it because they are gifted with a higher power than we. What is the more that is revealed to them ? It is not scientific truth, nor is it technical skill, for this is a consequence, not a cause of genius. It is the power to enter by sympathy into...
Seite 155 - ... described In extravagant detail : The Government are offering prizes, amounting in all to not less than £500 (in proportions to be subsequently decided) for a limited number of the most successful models for a small memorial plaque in bronze to be given to the next of kin of those members of His Majesty's naval and military forces who have fallen in the war. The plaque must have an area of as near as possible 1 8 square inches. 1 1 may be a circle of 4 J inches in diameter, or a square of 44...