KERAMIC STUDIO 
203 
MRS. HENRIETTA BARCLAY PA1ST 
2298 Commonwealth Ave., St. Paul, Minn. 
Page Editor 
MARMALADE JAR, GRAPE DESIGN 
(See also page 214) 
r I A HE shape is Ceramic Belleek, beautifully proportioned and 
A invites decoration. The working drawing shown will be 
found to fit exactly the requirements of the piece and be carried 
out successfully either flat or in enamels. 
Outline the leaves and fruit with Mineral Black, lay the 
abstract lines, edges and handle of cover in gold. After firing, 
lay the leaves with grey green color or enamel and the grapes 
of a rich mulberry purple. Two firings should be sufficient, 
but if the results are not entirely satisfactory a third firing is 
entirely practicable on Belleek. 
The Twin City Keramic Club, of Minneapolis and St. Paul, 
held the third of a series of luncheons on February the 7th at 
the Minneapolis Art Institute. 
The March Calendar of the Minneapolis Art Institute in- 
cludes the John W. Alexander Memorial Collection of about 
thirty representative canvasses. A collection of flower panels 
in pastel, the work of Mrs. Agnes Harrison Lincoln, and an ex- 
hibition of about forty pieces of wood carving by Charles Haag, 
a Scandinavian, residing in this country, whose very unusual 
sculptures have created favorable comment in Chicago and else- 
where. In the print room will be shown the collection of 
Frances Seymour Haden, one of^the foremost etchers of lands- 
scape and marine subjects of the XIX century. There are 
about forty prints. 
