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Daily News (London)

FINE ARTS

... FINB ARTS. THE ADORATION OF THE MAGI, Br 5'Ao-o VEROXOcES. (Recently purchased fur the Natiosal Gallery.) There are Lubjects unworthy of having any words bestowed uporn them which reverthelese cannot be dii- 3 missed in silence: this is one of thrge awkward ...

FINE ARTS

... enough to keep him alive, where these may be obtained far cheaper than the staff of life with us. Though science has done so much, art, high art, which requires a cultivation and refinement of its own, has done little for our manufactures. ...

Fine Arts

... figures, habited in skins and garments, which may or may t not be like those worn by the nomads of those legendai, I days, but are unmistakably suggestive of the get up of c i the spectacles of the stage, and this without the recom- mendation of artistic ...

FINE ARTS

... de. prmsn young poet, r is one of the saddest 91 ofj episodes of thet French Revolution. He sits ab- M :of trceyjuton as hie may have sat to write f~j il.those moat tuhing lines (which were actually cut rehe urnshort by the summons to the acaffold)-the ...

Fine Arts

... colour artists particularly given to this indolent and easy going style of art, and it is with the greatest satisfaction we observe that the institute have shown that they are alive to this, by electing as honorary member one of the greatest living painters ...

FINE ARTS

... I ARTS. ?? THE MARTYRDOM OF HIUSS, BY LSSING. A very large gallery picture of this subject is now exhibited at the Egyptian -hall, which, beyond its import' arce as the work of one of the greatest painters of the Ger man school, should be seen by the ...

FINE ARTS

... unprofessional person iu viewing the morbid develop- ment of the worst stages of those hideous cutaneous com- plaints by which humanity is so often afflicted. The two exhibitions, however, may be viewred separately, as they are in different although adjoining ...

ART AND LETTERS

... ART AND LEMIRS. Dr. Narinou's now book, ' Farthest North, will be out in about a fortnight, and in two volumes, with colotred pates, photogravures, and( iliu'trationt4 of sorth-szomc two hundred in all. And about ?? s4mtn time the wiventurous author ...

MINOR ART EXHIBITIONS

... MINOR ART EXHIBITIONS. Hr. E. Pry, •xhibition of wbooo water-colour drawing* and pictarew was yesterday opened the Carfax Gallery, is well known a* member the New English Art Club, a student pre-eminently Italian art—a few weeks ago we alluded in theee ...

Published: Tuesday 21 April 1903
Newspaper: Daily News (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 854 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

ART AND LETTERS

... ART AND LETTERS. Awdy NewLwdigate-Newdegate's now book, The Oaleverels of Cheverel Manor, whkih Si Messrc.. Longasans publish this week, is inter- esting for this among other reasons, that it pla gives tbo real hifeory of the principal actors in Bis ...

Published: Tuesday 03 May 1898
Newspaper: Daily News (London)
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1875 | Page: 6 | Tags: News 

FINE ARTS

... truth of art, that the highest beauty resides in the human form, but becomes terribly dangerous in the hands of any but master painters and sculptors. They may tell us it is antique, and therefore good; they may go to Poussin, it they please; they may even ...

Fine Arts

... Taming of the Shrew (3), by Mr. Dickspe, we may a pass by with a familiar nod of approval to the well- e known Catherino and Potruchio, but his charmingi girl in areverie (73) is a picture over which one may linger to fancy all sorts of delightful romances ...