44 ANNUAL REPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1951 



colleges, and other educational institutions for the development of 

 public appreciation of art in this country. 



An oil painting, Old Woman and Child, by Hendrik Maarten 

 Krabbe, was given by Mrs. Edith Newlands Johnston and Mrs. Wil- 

 liam B. Johnston for use as a loan to museums, libraries, and colleges. 



ALICE PIKE BARNEY MEMORIAL FUND 



A generous fund has also been given to the Smithsonian Institution 

 by Natalie Clifford Barney and Laura Dreyfus-Barney for the use of 

 the National Collection of Fine Arts in maintaining the Alice Pike 

 Barney Loan Collection and in organizing and circulating traveling 

 exhibitions for the development of art appreciation in the United 

 States. 



TRANSFERS ACCEPTED 



A full-length plaster cast of the statue of George Washington, ex- 

 ecuted by William J. Hubbard from the original statue in marble by 

 Jean Antoine Houdon, was transferred from the United States Capitol 

 on July 21, 1950. 



Seventeen oil paintings, ten oil sketches, and ten crayon studies of 

 Arctic and Antarctic scenes, by Frank W. Stokes, were transferred 

 from the United States National Museum on August 1, 1950. 



An oil portrait, Alexandre Dumas, by William H. Powell, A. N. A., 

 was transferred from the Public Library of the District of Columbia 

 on August 17, 1950. 



An oil. Your Forests, Your Fault, Your Loss, by James Montgom- 

 ery Flagg, was transferred from the United States Forest Service on 

 October 13, 1950. 



TRANSFERS TO OTHER DEPARTMENTS 



Twelve medals awarded to Echnund C. Tarbell, N. A. (1862-1938), 

 given by the heirs of Edmund C. and Emeline Tarbell, were accepted 

 for the Smithsonian Institution and transferred to the division of 

 numismatics, Department of History, United States National Museum, 

 June 29, 1951. 



LOANS ACCEPTED 



Three pieces of Bohemian glass were lent by Mrs. John E. Lodge, 

 Washington, D. C, on July 17, 1950. 



A silver sugar bowl and a silver cream pitcher, made by William 

 Thompson, were lent by William E. Huntington, Washington, D. C, 

 on October 20, 1950. 



