54 ANNUAL REPOET SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1923 



Sir Joshua Reynolds, P. R. A. (1723-1792). 



Frances, Countess of Clermont. (From collection of the Earl of Car- 

 lisle). 

 Salomon Ruysdael (1600-1670). 



The Windmill. 

 Richard Wilson, R. A. (1714-1782). 



Study of Ruins. 



Study of Ruins. 



Landscape. 

 Artist unknown. 



Landscape with Cottage. 

 Attributed to Van Dyck, 



Madonna and Child. (From the Duchess of Montrose Collection, Eng.). 

 Jan Victoors (1620-1672). 



Portrait of a Dutch Girl. (Collection of the Princess Mathilde.) 



Three oil paintings by E. Hodgson Smart (1873- ): "The 

 Portrait of my Mother," 1915 ; " The Madonna of the Blue Veil," 

 1918 ; and portrait of James A. Stearman, 1917. Lent by the artist ; 

 withdrawn before close of the fiscal year. 



"The Sphinx" (oil painting), by Colonel George Raum, C. S. A., 

 as it appeared when excavated by him in 1896. Lent by the artist, 

 Berkeley, Calif. 



Three oil paintings: "The Fortune Teller," by Antonio Allegri 

 da Correggio (1494-1534); "The Queen," by Jacobo Robusti (II 

 Tintoretto) (1512-8 to 1594) ; "Death of Lucretia," by Guido Reni 

 (called Guido) (1575-1642). Acquired by the late Hon. Hannis 

 Taylor in 1887, during his sojourn in Spain as United States min- 

 ister, and lent by Mrs. Hannis Taylor, Washington, D. C. 



"Spectres of the North (Icebergs)," and "Shoshone Falls of 

 Snake River, Idaho," by Thomas Moran (1837- ). Lent by the 

 artist, Santa Barbara, Calif. 



Self portrait by the artist, James DeVeaux, of Charleston, S. C. 

 (1812-1844), painted in Paris, 1836. Lent by Mr. Porter F. Cope, 

 Philadelphia, Pa. 



Main entrance to the Benjamin H. Warder residence designed 

 by H. H. Richardson, from the Benjamin H. Warder residence, 

 1515 K Street NW., removed to make room for a modern office 

 building. The stone is of Numidian marble and the wood white 

 holly. Carving of the holly is by skilled workmen, assisted by 

 students from Richardson's Boston office. Erected in 1885, and 

 among the last houses designed by Richardson. Other houses by 

 this master architect are the John Hay, the Henry Adams, and the 

 N. L. Anderson residences in Washington. Richardson was born 

 in New Orleans, the son of a southern planter ; educated at Harvard 

 and the Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris ; died 1886, aged 47 years. Le*t 

 by the Architects' Advisory Council, Horace W. Peasley, chairman. 



