November, 1913 
27 
In "Young Fauns at Play,” a characteristic 
work by Edith Barretto Parsons, the 
water is designed to bubble up from be¬ 
neath the gravel in the bowl of the foun¬ 
tain. The figures of the laughing fauns 
which stand in a Japanese pottery bowl 
make a perfect flower holder with their 
extended arms and clasped hands 
Fun,” a delightful conception of a nude by 
a young American sculptress, Genevieve 
Lee Hay, was a prize winner at one of the 
New York art schools last spring. It is 
of golden bronze treated with green, 1 5 
inches high. A stieam of water spouts 
upwards from the heron upon the right 
shoulder of the woman 
Janet Scudder is represented by her familiar 
“Cupid and the Tortoise.” In this, as in 
all her work, the bronze is colored, giving 
it added interest. Poised 1 6 inches high, 
in a sage green Poillon pottery bowl, 
Cupid is splashed by the tortoise, which 
spurts up a stream of water like a minia¬ 
ture whale 
