FINE ARTS IN 1901. 



239 



Gaul; Edward Gay; Edward W. Redfield; F. K. 

 M. Rehn; William M. J. Rice; Julius Rolshoven; 

 Edward F. Rook; Guy Rose; William Sartain; 



C. Schreyvogel; W. E. Schumacher; Amanda 



B. Sewell; R. M. Shurtleff; William T. Smed- 

 ley; Charles J. Theriat; S. Seymour Thomas; 

 William Thome; Jules Turcas; H. M. Wal- 

 cott; Edgar M. Ward; Harry W. Watrous; 

 William Wendt; Sarah W. Whitman; Carle- 

 ton Wiggins; Seymour J. Guy; Birge Harri- 

 son; E. L. Henry; Charles Hopkinson; William 

 H. Hyde; William Keith; Augustus Koopman; 

 F. W. Kost; Francis Lathrop; W. L. Lathrop; 

 Albert P. Lucas; Clara T. MacChesney; Mary F. 

 MacMonnies; C. M. Mcllhenney; Alfred H. 

 Maurer; Richard E. Miller; Hermann D. Murphy; 

 Rhoda H. Nicholls; J. C. Nicoll; Charles R. 

 Peters; Henry R. Poore; Edith M. Prellwitz; 

 Henry Prellwitz; F. B. Williams; Charles H. 

 Woodbury; M. B. Prendergast, water-colors; 

 Sarah C. Sears, water-colors ; Rosina E. Sherwood, 

 water-colors; F. H. Smith, water-colors; W. J. 

 Baer, miniatures; Theodora W. Thayer, minia- 

 tures; M. Cullen, Canada; W. Cruikshank, Can- 

 ada; E. Morris. Canada; A. D. Patterson, Can- 

 ada; J. St. Charles, Canada; A. V. Puelma, Chile; 

 A. 0. Luco, Chile; Onofro Jarpa, Chile; A. Meno- 

 cal, Cuba. Besides these, 74 artists in this group 

 received honorable mention. 



GROUP 2. Special award of a diploma and 

 medal of honor to Augustus Saint-Gaudens. 

 Gold Medals: Paul W. Bartlett; Frederick Mac- 

 Monnies; Charles Grafly; George G. Barnard; H. 

 A. MacNeil; Karl Bitter; C. H. Niehaus; Richard 

 E. Brooks; Virginio Arias, Chile. Silver Medals: 

 Lorado Taft; Louis Saint-Gaudens; Cyrus E. Dal- 

 lin; Frank E. Elwell; Solon H. Borglum; J. H. 

 Roudebush; John Flanagan; Bela L. Pratt; W. S. 

 Alward, Canada; Simon Gazales, Chile. Bronze 

 Medals: John J. Boyle; Andrew O'Connor; Victor 



D. Brenner; William Couper; Charles R. Harley; 

 J. Scott Hartley; Eli Harvey; Edward Berge; At- 

 tilio Piccirilli; Seiiorita Rebecca Matte, Chile; 

 Nicanor Plaza. Besides these, there were 11 hon- 

 orable mentions awarded. 



GROUP 3. Gold Medals: J. McNeill Whistler, 

 etchings; T. Cole, wood-engravings; H. Pyle, 

 drawings; W. J. Glackens, drawings. Silver 

 Medals: W. B. Classon, wood-engravings; F. S. 

 King, wood- and copper-engravings; F. Duveneck, 

 etchings; J. Pennell, etchings and drawings; D. 

 S. MacLaughlan, etchings; Gustav Kruell, wood- 

 engravings ; F. French, wood-engravings ; T. John- 

 son, wood-engravings; C. D. Gibson, drawings; 

 W. A. Clark, drawings; M. Parrish, drawings; F. 

 V. Du Mond, drawings ; W. T. Smedley, drawings ; 

 L. Loeb, drawings; A. B. Wenzel, drawings. 

 Bronze Medals: S. G. Putnam, wood-engravings; 

 W. M. Aikman, wood-engravings; J. Tinkey, 

 wood-engravings; F. H. Wellington, wood-engrav- 

 ings; Caroline A. Powell, wood-engravings; H. 

 Davidson, wood-engravings; J. P. Davis, wood- 

 engravings; V. Bernstrom, wood-engravings; H. 

 W. Peckwell, wood-engravings; P. Aitken, wood- 

 engravings; R. A. Muller, wood-engravings; E. 



C. Schladitz, wood-engravings; William Miller, 

 wood-engravings; A. B. Comstock, wood-engrav- 

 ings; C. W. Chadwick, wood-engravings; E. 

 Heinemann, wood-engravings; S. P. Davis, wood- 

 engravings; C. State, wood-engravings; J. W. 

 Evans, wood-engravings; R. C. Collins, wood- 

 engravings; H. C. Merrill, wood-engravings; C. 

 Y. Turner, drawings: Rosina E. Sherwood, draw- 

 ings; Maude A. Cowles, drawings; W. S. Kendall, 

 drawings; A. I. Keller, drawings; A. Sterner, 

 drawings; S. S. Stilwell, drawings. There were 

 also 13 honorable mentions in this group. 



iiibition. 

 !< de- 



Munich: International Art Exhibition. 

 The catalogue of the eighth ;mnu,i| 

 contains 2,689 numbers. Three KM 

 voted to the works of three lately dec 

 ers, a Bocklin room with 50 ex hi hi 

 room with 105, and a Leibl room \vii 

 Lenbach also had a room to himself, 

 his portraits. 



Philadelphia: Pennsylvania Academy of 

 Fine Arts. The seventieth annual exhil.it; M, 

 which opened on Jan. 12, was in respect to both 

 quantity and quality one of the best of late 

 years. More than 900 numbers were exhibited, of 

 which nearly 600 were oil-paintings, and the re- 

 mainder mostly water-colors and pastels. The 

 place of honor was given to John S. Sargent's 

 standing portrait of Gen. Ian Hamilton of the 

 British army in South Africa, which was exhibited 

 in London last year. 



Miss Cecilia Beaux was represented by a por- 

 trait of a seated lady, with bare arms and neck, 

 holding a straw hat in her lap. J. W. Alexander 

 exhibited 11 figure-pieces, and Henry W. Ranger 

 6 landscapes. The portrait of the French sculp- 

 tor Rodin and the group entitled The Mother won 

 for Mr. Alexander a gold medal at the Paris Ex- 

 position. Anders Zorn, the Scandinavian painter, 

 contributed a seated portrait of Halsey C. Ives, 

 of the Cincinnati Museum. James McNeill Whis- 

 tler was represented by a work entitled Battersea,. 

 a misty scene on the Thames with a big yellow 

 moon on the horizon and the lights of vessels on 

 the river. Alexander Harrison exhibited several 

 marines and a Misty Morning a French peasant 

 girl walking through a grove of birch-trees. Hum- 

 phreys Johnston showed his Mystery of the 

 Night, a partially nude female figure standing 

 against the sea, which took a silver medal, and 

 Henry van der Weyden his The Hillside, which 

 won a bronze medal at the Paris Exposition. 



Pittsburgh Carnegie Institute. The sixth 

 annual celebration of Founder's Day was held in 

 Carnegie Music Hall, Nov. 7. The annual address 

 was made by ex^President Cleveland, his theme 

 being The Obligations of National Copartnership. 

 Other addresses were made by Joseph Jefferson, 

 John W. Alexander, of New York, and Robert 

 W. Allan, of London. 



The awards of the International Art Jury of 

 the prizes for pictures in the art exhibition were 

 as follow : Alfred H. Maurer, New York, medal of 

 the first class (gold), with an award of $1,500, for 

 his picture entitled An Arrangement ; Ellen Weth- 

 erald Ahrens, Philadelphia, medal of the second 

 class (silver), with an award of $1,000, for pic 

 ture entitled Sewing A Portrait; Edmund C. 

 Tarbell, Boston, medal of the third class (bronze), 

 with an award of $500, for picture entitled The 

 Venetian Blind. Two others received honorable 

 mention Mary L. Macomber, of Waverley, Mass., 

 for a picture entitled The Hour-Glass, and Henri 

 Le Sidaner, of Paris, for a village street scene en- 

 titled Light. 



The exhibition, which contains 247 numbers se- 

 lected from 600 contributions, is one of the strong- 

 est shown at the institute. Thirty-five New York 

 artists are represented in it. Among noteworthy 

 pictures, besides the prize-winners, are a por- 

 trait of Rodin, the sculptor, by J. W. Alexander; 

 The Sculptor, by George De Forest Brush; The 

 Japanese Print, by William M. Chase; The Close 

 of Day, by Benjamin Foster; and The Breeze, by 

 Louis Loeb. 



Venice: International Art Exhibition. The 

 works of 160 artists were represented, out of a 

 total of 550 who sent in 2,200 pictures and sculp- 

 tures. The large central gallery was interna- 



