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Word: exhibition (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...characteristic examples, and serve to show what were the artistic ideals, and the technical methods, which prevailed in the English School of the early part of the century now closing. While more or less conventional in both conception and treatment, these works are generally well composed and exhibit the skill in the use of pure water-color wash for which this school was remarkable and exemplary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Original Drawings at the Fogg Museum. | 12/9/1899 | See Source »

...Camera Club exhibit this year consists of a series of photographic studies by Mr. H. P. Robinson, of England, illustrating the progress of the artistic side of photography. The photographs are notable for the excellent choice and arrangement of subjects and for the skill with which they are executed. Of the eighteen prints, the best two are interior pictures entitled "Dawn and sunset" and "When the Day's Work is Done." The latter is the more effective of these two pictures of peasant life on account of the simplicity of the subject and the valuations of the lights and shadows...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Camera Club Exhibit | 12/7/1899 | See Source »

...committee in charge of the arrangements for Princeton's exhibit at the Paris Exposition has secured two units of installation, each consisting of a case containing a number of book shelves at the bottom. Above the shelves is a flat, glass covered case, and above this a wing-frame capable of holding thirty-three pictures or charts. The book shelves will be filled with university publications, and special objects of interest will occupy the glass cases. In the wing-frame will be charts illustrating the history and educational organization of the university with views of the buildings and campus...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Princeton News. | 11/21/1899 | See Source »

Under the supervision of Mr. E. C. Pickering the exhibit of the Observatory and its branches has been selected and set up as it is to appear at the Paris Exposition. One hundred and four square feet of wall space have been reserved in the United States section for the exhibit, which will consist of sixteen transparencies from original plates taken at Cambridge and Arequipa, three wing frames holding about two hundred pictures of star clusters and planets, and twenty wall pictures of work done at observatories. The exhibits are arranged in order to a height of thirteen feet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Observatory Notes. | 11/7/1899 | See Source »

There will be photographs from the various museums and buildings, but the extent of this part of the exhibit is as yet indefinite...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard at the Paris Exposition. | 10/19/1899 | See Source »

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