. International Studio an Illustrated Magazine of Fine and Applied Art. eing and seizing Nature in her pleasantest mo-ments, and never is vulgarity mixed up with realit).Of English origin, M. Belleroche maintains thetraditions of the English school of portraiture in happy conjunction with a subtlety andwhich are quite French. variety Of the thousand or more canvases gatheredtogether at the Grand Palais by the Comite deIEcole Franc^aise, few were of any note. Here andthere, however, we lighted upon an artist of rare per-sonal gifts, such as M. Minartz, whose Music Hallscenes remind one of Const
. International Studio an Illustrated Magazine of Fine and Applied Art. eing and seizing Nature in her pleasantest mo-ments, and never is vulgarity mixed up with realit).Of English origin, M. Belleroche maintains thetraditions of the English school of portraiture in happy conjunction with a subtlety andwhich are quite French. variety Of the thousand or more canvases gatheredtogether at the Grand Palais by the Comite deIEcole Franc^aise, few were of any note. Here andthere, however, we lighted upon an artist of rare per-sonal gifts, such as M. Minartz, whose Music Hallscenes remind one of Constantin Guys ; M. Picabia,whose Pont de Villeneuve sur Yonne is very pleasingin execution ; the brothers Delahogue, whose pictur-esque Tunisian scenes are so rich in colour ; LouiseDesbordes, whose Roses Tretni^res, in its imagina-tive strength, at once recalled Gustave Moreau andMonticelli; and M. J. G. Besson, who is ever thepassionate painter of humble life. The great attrac-tion of this exhibition was the group of some fiftycanvases byE. Boudin, lent by STRKET IN ROUEN (COLOUREn KTCHING) BY G. MARCHETTl ( By permission of M. Piei-jefort)148 M. Marchetti, a young but highlygifted engraver, recently exhibited atM. Pierreforts a collection of hiscoloured etchings commissioned bythat publisher. Two cities, amongthe most quaint and beautiful in theworld, have furnished him with histhemes. Bruges has provided himwith many delightful subjects, whichhe has treated with breadth andvigour; and of Rouen, with its oldstreets and decrepit timbered houseson the point of disappearing, he hasgiven us some extremely picturesqueglimpses, such as the famous Rue and the cloisters bearingthe same name. I like also his Rouenchurches, not only the cathedral, sodear to Ruskin, but aVso St. Ouenand St. Maclou, both jewels ofNorman Gothic. H. F. BERLIN. —The drawings ofProfessor Richard Miiller,of Dresden, the celebratedetcher, lithographer andpamter, lately on view in the bla
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