STAGE POLITICS
... living at this honut; .England hath need of thee.' Tf politisi nre to come on to tho stage, we bog that historical truth may be preserved, aiid the mighty deald may n ot be vilified. ...
... living at this honut; .England hath need of thee.' Tf politisi nre to come on to tho stage, we bog that historical truth may be preserved, aiid the mighty deald may n ot be vilified. ...
... STAGE MORALITY. Another great outcry against stage v indecency has been raised in London within t] the last few days. Mr. Boucicault, who rl has created for the play-going public so c many sensations has now produced one 0 for the critics. le has ventured ...
... favourite actor, murdered the monarch. A con- jurer accidentally shot a maron on a Dublin stage in 1814, and six years later a Madame Liasky was killed through: a stage soldier forge'tting to t take the cartridge out of his musket.' At Milan a.n actor in ...
... to ?? art, and, it may be.hoped, have put things air in train for a well-selected exh~ition be of pictures annually. Let Mr. Picton and th, o his: committee thus popularise art, and, in (w r a few years, their cherished project for bu ay an art gallery ...
... THE WALm ART GALERSY. LANCASIE ARTST&S The collection of pictures at the c- eent Autumrn Exhibition aidly Mlustrates the course- of British art at the present time.- Many of the leading pictures from Burlington House, the Grosvenor, and i the watercolour ...
... could be Rol Ad obtained, being confident there was sufficient spirit and love of effe the arts in Liverpool and the noichbourhooad to keep a good boa local Art-Un'on, if properly and judiciouisly managed. tha .ee Accordingly, letters wore sent' to nearly ...
... his or fees being paid by the Science and Art Depart- inment. thbe number of works sent. up to South IS* Kensington, from the schools of art for exasoina- tion this ycar was 214,153 from 182 sehools of art and branch classes. Of these, 1313 -were e, ...
... fellows :-Applsed Art: Rev H D ERawneley, on Country Industrial Art Schools: Their Aims, Claims, and Neieds; ' Mr W E Willink, A. ?? on The Home Arts Move- mnent. Museums: ,MrW M-1 Conway, on R epro- ductions of Ancient Works of Art for Municipal Museums; ...
... professional career of some art aspirants, and a broader sympathy with nature and art in their manifold and diverse forms has been established. The results have been istrikingly apparent in the improvement of many I works of art supplied by local artists; ...
... solitude ts which is slowly widening round every true artist . But however tbat may be, I maintain that it is the I- bounden duty of artists to keep a watchful eye over g )f public art interests-particalarly when they are a -b administered by amateurs-snad to ...
... dramatic art. si s therefore, he objects to licenses beint ?? for the performance of stage plays ?? halls, which he regards ierev S B taverns with the advaintae I music and dancing-lhall e aa a-A to them. We quite agree ?? Ir. Ing that th-e actor`s art be ...
... -to e make a selection between one of 'two th evils, and they chose the lesser. - ART NOTES. To-y the d ngforthe pesof the Art Union - m connection with It Ladies Art p Society will tomin es at two pzn. P - The artists' exhibition of inet wrs and ...