Word: art
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Lectures on "The Development of Chinese Art." V. "Literary Art and the White Colonists" (illustrated by lantern slides). Mr. Langdon Warner. Lecture Room, Fogg Art Museum...
...remaining eight lectures by Langdon Warner '03 on the "Development of Chinese Art" will be delivered in Fogg Museum lecture room at 4.30 instead of 4 o'clock as had been announced. The lectures to come will be given March 20, 22, 24, 27, 29, 31, and April...
...Timothy Cole, the veteran wood-engraver, will lecture at the Fogg Museum on the art which he has so long practiced with distinction on Tuesday. In these days of cheap, mechanical, and rapid-process work, for purposes of reproduction, there is little demand on the part of publishers of books and magazines for the kind of personal interpretation in black and white, which a generation and more ago called into being Kingsley, King, Church, Kruel, and a host of others whose names were then household words. To the rising generation the very names of those honorable artists and craftsmen...
...series of many years, and for that magazine he went abroad in 1883 and for ten years was occupied in engraving on wood great Italian masterpieces. Another four years were then spent in engraving Dutch and Flemish pictures, and in 1896 he started a similar work on English art which was followed in 1900 by work in Spain. In 1910 he finished his commission on a series of French paintings. After an absence of twenty-seven years he returned to America, and still in the employ of the "Century" he began at once a new series known as "Masterpieces...
...work being carried on at the Fogg Art Museum is set forth by Paul J. Sachs '00, assistant director of the museum. Recent enterprise in securing loans and permanent acquisitions has made the Fogg Museum doubly effective in its cultivation of the appreciation of true art. Mr. Sachs points out a field here which might well prove stimulative to more than the usual devotees of art. Too often exhibits are neglected by the students through pure inertia and ignorance...