NORTH 
foe “IN PL 
For variety there is “Warriors on the Trail,” a pic- 
ture of two handsome Arabian horses, gaily caparisoned 
in Arab fashion, and mounted by sheiks, arching their 
necks and pawing the ground while their riders pause to 
chat where their paths cross. There is something of a 
Schreyer’s love for horses and ability to paint them in 
this work. ; 
Again one is reminded of Woodbury, the Boston 
marine painter, in the stirring pictures of vessels laboring 
in the trough of the sea in mid-ocean. here are two of 
these, powerful in execution, tragic, yet poignantly 
beautiful. 
What a colorist can do with the wharves of Chelsea 
is shown by Mr. Calusd in an interesting study, into 
which a good deal of the artist’s poetry was poured. 
Similarly there is an agreeable study of the Charles river 
basin, with the domes of the exposition building silhouet- 
EASANT WEATHER,” TRANQUIL STUDY OF THE S$ 
SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 9 
a. 
KA 
x 4 
BY CG. CALUSD 
ted against the blueness of the night, and the shore lamps 
dotting the dark waters with light. Two speedy launches 
rush along in the foreground. 
Then there is a handsome Gloucester wharf picture, 
aglow with vivid color. Small sketches give lively im- 
pression of Mediterranean bits. There are other subjects. 
Also noted by the visitor was an unfinished picture 
of the point on Major Higginson’s place in Manchester, 
showing water, rocks, trees and house alk working out 
into an agreeable essay in landscape poetizing. 
Mr. Calusd is enthusiastic over the pictorial qualities 
of the North Shore, and expects to do much sketching 
through the summer. He paints at sunrise perhaps a 
little more frequently than at sunset, for then his favorite 
accessories, the fishermen, are active-—Christian Science 
Monitor. 
