412 



AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS 



December, 1906 



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cultural development are thus passed rapidly 

 in review, and with such illustrations and 

 explanatory text as is needful to sufficiently 

 elucidate them. It is a book that appeals 

 deeply to those having a personal interest in 

 agriculture as well as to those who would be 

 familiar with the latest advances in the most 

 important of human industries. 



The picture of modern agriculture presented 

 in this book is one of absorbing interest. It 

 is a picture of change and progress; of the 

 creation of new plants ; of the bettering of old 

 varieties; of the application of new ideas to 

 old methods; and of the introduction of totally 

 fresh materials and conceptions in the oldest 

 of the arts. The author shows how the prog- 

 ress of agriculture is dependent on the prog- 

 ress of other arts and how each helps the other, 

 while the fact that agriculture bids fair to out- 

 strip other forms of human industry in in- 

 terest, in novelty and in progress is attested 

 on almost every page. Mr. Collins has a story 

 to tell of abounding interest, and he tells it 

 in a way that holds the reader's attention to 

 the close. Than this it would be difficult to 

 add more in way of praise. 



The Art Revival in Austria. Edited by 

 Charles Holme. The Studio Special 

 Summer Number, 1906. New York: 

 John Lane Co. Price, paper, $2.50; 

 cloth, $3.00. 



This sumptuous volume is a remarkable 

 record of a remarkable art-revival in Austria. 

 To many persons, particularly in America, the 

 form of this revival, its wide extent, and espe- 

 cially its remarkable results, will come with 

 all the quality of novelty. Fortunately it will 

 not be the less interesting nor the less valuable 

 because of this. It is an interesting fact that 

 the modern art movement in Austria had its 

 origin in architecture. This is the one field, 

 strangely enough, where the American stu- 

 dent of architecture will be likely to view it 

 with the smallest interest. Much of modern 

 European architecture is without interest to 

 Americans, and the Austrian, in its external 

 aspect, is no exception. But in the treatment 

 of detail, in the furnishing and decoration of 

 rooms, in the designing of furniture, and the 

 harmonizing of furnishings, the contemporary 

 art-revival in Austria — to limit the subject to 

 the present volume — has the widest possible 

 interest and value. 



This book, like others in its series, is illus- 

 trated in the most sumptuous and charming 

 manner. The illustrations are so numerous 

 as to seem almost countless, and they relate 

 to every phase of art including painting, sculp- 

 ture, architecture and the minor decorative 

 arts. As a review of the contemporary art 

 of one country this gathering of a multitude 

 of illustrations would have exceptional value, 

 but this is heightened by the fact that all the 

 art here illustrated, together with the very 

 adequate accompanying text, represents re- 

 lated phases of art, of an art that, as a whole, 

 is comparatively little known in America, and 

 which must be known as a whole to be ap- 

 preciated as it should be. No better guide 

 could be had than this beautiful book. 



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A collection of 33 plates of scale drawings with introductory text 



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