Word: artistically
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...December, Malcolm II, Holmes '28, conductor, announced last night. The first recital will be Sunday, December 2, at the Wellesley College Chapel, where the Sodality and the Wellesley Orchestra will be conducted by Mr. Holmes. G. Wallace Woodworth '24, conductor of the Harvard Glee Club, will be the assisting artist...
...Sunday, December 2, in the Wellesley College Chapel, there will be a joint concert by the Wellesley College and Harvard University Orchestra both conducted by Malcolm H. Holmes '28. The assisting artist will be a Wallace Woodworth '24, conductor of the Harvard Glee Club, organist Mr. Woodworth will play numbers by Bach. Mosart, and Haudel, accompanied by the combined orchestra and concert, the third given by the Pierian Sodality this year, will be free and open to the public...
...ashes which, as a last theatrical gesture, he ordered sprinkled on the waves of the Pacific. Newspapers gave him gaudy obituaries,* told how at 15 he ran off with his father's mistress, how he specialized in love-making while he was successively a baker's assistant, a trapeze artist, a model for Auguste Rodin ("Eternal Springtime"), how he first arrived in the U. S. as Sarah Bernhardt's leading man. The final Hollywood picture was of a broken, hollow-eyed matinee idol who kept having his face lifted...
...Last week Manhattan's Whitney Museum of American Art opened a "regional" showing of Philadelphia artists. The exhibition seemed to prove that there is no such thing as a Philadelphia "school." A bleak hospital room with red door ajar was called The Gate of Heaven by Artist Wayne Martin. Henry Cooper had a stooped oldster wheeling a cart through a narrow Paris street. A gingerbread corner store with bright green shades by Grace Thorp Gomberling was typical of Philadelphia's outskirts. Leon Kelly's Interior of a Slaughter House showed two men dwarfed by a large gory...
...10ft. spite fence, is opened only to close friends or students with top-notch credentials. The late Paul Guillaume, French art dealer, picked out and bought most of the Barnes Impressionist and Surrealist pictures. Today if Dr. Barnes singles out for his collection one unknown painter, that artist's reputation is supposed to be made. Dealers, therefore, treat him with kid gloves. Less scared of him is able, black-haired Belle da Costa Greene, who once closed the doors of her J. P. Morgan Library in Dr. Barnes's face when he wanted to get inside...