. International studio. Courtesy Milch Galleries INDIAN GIRL IN A BLUE WRAP BY ROBERT HENRI with, at times, highly effective colour achieve-ment, especially in the Mary Garden portraitand a capital impression of Mrs. Haggin in aGarde Napoleon hat which lends itself admirablyto artistic treatment. Indigenous sculpture at Mrs. Whitneysstudio led to excellent results. A three-dayslimit was enforced so that ideas rather than execu- tion prevailed. J. B. Frasers Storm-driven Horses,Paul Manships War Waif and the Death onHorseback by Hunt Diedrich were especiallynoticeable. Pieter van Ween has shown


. International studio. Courtesy Milch Galleries INDIAN GIRL IN A BLUE WRAP BY ROBERT HENRI with, at times, highly effective colour achieve-ment, especially in the Mary Garden portraitand a capital impression of Mrs. Haggin in aGarde Napoleon hat which lends itself admirablyto artistic treatment. Indigenous sculpture at Mrs. Whitneysstudio led to excellent results. A three-dayslimit was enforced so that ideas rather than execu- tion prevailed. J. B. Frasers Storm-driven Horses,Paul Manships War Waif and the Death onHorseback by Hunt Diedrich were especiallynoticeable. Pieter van Ween has shown a large assemblyof landscapes in the Majestic Hotel ballroom,attracting considerable attention for their poeticcharm and skilful CourtesyDemoUeGalleries A ROYAL GOBELIN WOVEN FOR LOUIS XV. It is a curious coincidence that the head-dresses of the aborigines are woven in red, white and blue, thus quaintlyanticipating the American colours. Flowers and tropical fruits characterise the shores of Columbia, where the dis-coverers effected their landing. INTERNATIONALSTUDIO VOL. LXIV. No. 255 Copyright, 1918. by John Lane Company A PAINTERS PAINTER: LOUIS critics who write regarding artists and their work. BETTS Whereupon in negative support of his axiom he BY W. H. de B. NELSON devotes in the April issue of the American Maga-zine of Art several pages in honour of the great Mr. John E. D. Trask utters or Bostonian artist, E. C. Tarbell. There is nothing repeats the dictum that the artists message is so fascinating as the living up to ones principles, written in paint and deprecates the custom of It would appear, however, that art, whether it


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Keywords: ., bookcentury180, booksubjectart, booksubjectdecorationandornament