. International studio. and the mostdelightful sort of associations. He returned to New York late in 1891, penni- of the cliff jcss ,(nc[ ]lappv an(l [las made it his CARLSEN ; home ever since, except when inEurope. A great deal of his time he has given toteaching—in the National Academy of Design, orthe Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts. The latterknew his influence and delightful companionshipuntil late in 1918. Carlsen himself had only oneinstructor, aside from his fellow students, J. AldenWeir, an artist without knowing it, KenyonCox, Henry Golden Dearth, and John teacher wa


. International studio. and the mostdelightful sort of associations. He returned to New York late in 1891, penni- of the cliff jcss ,(nc[ ]lappv an(l [las made it his CARLSEN ; home ever since, except when inEurope. A great deal of his time he has given toteaching—in the National Academy of Design, orthe Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts. The latterknew his influence and delightful companionshipuntil late in 1918. Carlsen himself had only oneinstructor, aside from his fellow students, J. AldenWeir, an artist without knowing it, KenyonCox, Henry Golden Dearth, and John teacher was his cousin, a painter, and agood one in Denmark. He is president of theAcademy there now. Carlsens mother paintedand was a highly gifted woman, a tinj littlewoman, who, according to her son, neverweighed a hundred pounds in her life. IIFrom time immemorial there has been a cus-tom, a pleasant, productive custom, perpetuatingthe genus art. One, by dint of greater energy and JULY 1922 three hundred Jive inceRnAcionAL. taste, took to him those younger and less gifted to learn, and the one was the master and the others worked and listened and followed him about. Even now, when we are MOONLIGHT AND SEABY EMIL CARLSEN surprised you by its simplicity. The almost nameless colors ofCarlsens wood interiors mean to some a curiousharmony of an indefinite solitude. The dim blessed with great libraries and gifted orators, and light that filters through his woodland corridors, a sure reward for ability, we depend on the per-sonal leadership of the living masters of art. Sowhen we see Carlsen, wandering like a troubadourover the land, teaching in California, Chicago,Philadelphia, New York, we must pay tribute which are so like cathedral spaces, makes youfeel a presence there and brings you to acquain-tance with a forest folk whom you have nevermet, nor had time to know. If that old LatinLaborare est orare, is true, then Carlsen here to his inborn leadership. No one a better chemist has pra


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Keywords: ., bookcentury180, booksubjectart, booksubjectdecorationandornament