Word: art
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Adverse criticism of the Musical Review has been voiced recently by such men as the musical critic of the New York Tribune and by Mr. Francis Rogers '91, chorister of the Harvard Club of New York City. Both express the opinion that as an authority on art the Musical Review has little value. The majority of articles are contributed by undergraduates, and the views supported are the product of minds inexperienced and without breadth. A student cannot have developed any real power of discernment in music; hence his opinion can have but little weight. Music is, according to the point...
...someone should inquire in what way a college education was most helpful to those who intend to devote the whole or part of their life to music, I should answer that it was in learning to look upon their art from the viewpoint of the amateur. And in this connection "amateur" signifies all that is best and most healthy in the unprofessional idea of things. About us on all sides are evidences of a professionalism made all too necessary in a country where commercial development has not yet left much room for deliberate, peaceful thought, nor the pursuance of artistic...
...Langdon Warner '03 will give the fourth of a series of ten illustrated lectures on "The Development of Chinese Art" in the large lecture room of the Fogg Art Museum this afternoon at 4.30 o'clock. His subject will be "Recent Discoveries in Chinese Colonial Art." This lecture will be open to the public...
...Lecture by Mr. Langdon Warner on "Recent Discoveries in Chinese Colonial Art" in Fogg lecture room...
...Lecture. "The Analogy Between Engraving and Painting." Mr. Timothy Cole, Lecture Room, Fogg Art Museum...