pe che aa mien RIN fae he ay oe,
So RL
Pree.
eden ee ee
a sad
Sern BE, ds
Ane res A co,
Rte meee eae reo
OP cep son
? A PH wey Danesh
Fh Ann mnie wighngih. me ng Soe.
ae a ween
ee
nt ewe
Pa ery,
RN tit oe Are pa OR a
Bebe a eRe sb hee: Petr NENA UOT AM phe Meth en oe
ee REECE MEM Lone men 2 tipah ee, Hneimaine
SO Letom.
Ly ie baet diel
Seem SL eae
on Sey aa Spee 5
BABS a een ere ae ae eS ET YD
vie
Cea At emcee cua nod ee = pabaeca eens eee depednanena tore Pena sri:
Spates aR eee een WR wasn See,
ee eye ene. faghoieens eee SOR RHR et eins ack ne,
yc teen Ree enon PA en Sud
Aa pe
Lae
athe
Rita ees
Tamaya en, Ne teeter Be gsc sa, 7 Pa A er eN eT | ee EOS HAE
deat eee pins a
PR A eee
prea ESA
smear
TR VRCAS NS.
[SAAT RY,
use St pa Se
a Sa ee ee —’ mere 4 Fo png meer tne ar rm — ER TTI 8 AE NTT AIR TOT TATE ROOT LN Qe eee ore : - * fel : BO cee ee wae, <r ¥ —
SUOLPO|[OD L991] OY} WIJ SU9IIDG [BJUELIO ‘(]T WOO) AJOT[ey) ule]
EXHIBITION
OF
Oriental and American Art
Under the Joint Auspices of the
Alumni Memorial Committee and the
Ann Arbor Art Association
On the Occasion of the Opening of the Alumni Memorial Hall University of Michigan
May 11 to 30, 1910
Officers of the Ann Arbor Art Association 1909-10
President; Emit LorcH
1st Vice-President: Miss AticE HuNT 2nd Vice-President: FATHER E. D. KELLY Secretary: W.B. SHAW
Treasurer: R.W. HEMPHILL, JR.
DIRECTORS THEODORE W. Kocu HucGo P. THIEME GEORGE W. MILLEN FRED N. Scott Mrs. W. S. PERRY Mrs. G. W. PATTERSON Miss MARIE ROMINGER Mrs. H. H. SEELEY JAMES FOSTER H. M. SLAusoNn
S. McC. STANTON Junius E. BEAL
Pre a ar
Editorial Note
The exhibition herewith shown to the public, although of a some- what composite nature, is divisible into two main sections, Oriental and American Art. While at a first glance these may seem almost antipodal in nature, a closer study will disclose striking bonds of sympathy. In the recent development of American Art, especially on its decorative side, there is much kinship with the art of the Orient. The wood engravings of Mr. Wolf also suggest a study in comparisons and contrasts with their early prototype, Japanese block printing.
The officers of the Ann Arbor Art Association, upon whom has devolved the work of preparing the catalog and looking after the details of the exhibition, wish to thank Mr. Charles L. Freer, of Detroit, Mr. N. E. Montross, of New York, and Director A. H. Griffith of the Detroit Museum of Art, for their assistance in collecting the material shown and in furnishing descriptive copy. Special thanks are due the Detroit Publishing Company for their courtesy in granting us authority to reproduce pictures of which they hold the copyright, and to the Detroit Museum for the loan of half-tone cuts. Messrs. Cousin and Hall of Ann Arbor, have very generously furnished many of the floral decorations.
The design on the cover of this catalog is taken from the poster which Mr. W. C. Titcomb of the Architectural Department of the University, very kindly drew for this exhibition.
We wish to express publicly our cordial appreciation of the favors shown us by the owners of the paintings and other objets d’art exhibited. Our only fear is that we may not be able in the future to keep up to the high standard of this, our second annual exhibit. .
THEODORE W. KOCH, Acting Secretary Ann Arbor Art Association
First Edition (May 11th) 1500 Copies Second Edition (May 20th) 1000 Copies
|
SRE ERA LE ARC AREER RCO
deh el ve ant -sunr encom Rtn HAN
(Oo hos
By Motonobu
No. 3.
ORIENTAL ART
Loaned by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C.
Freer Collection ROOM I
YAMATO AND TOSA SCHOOLS.
“Its foundation is attributed to a court noble of the Fujiwara line named Kasuga Moto-mitsu, who flourished in the beginning of the eleventh century, but it is probable that most of the pecu- liarities of the school had been gradually evolved before this time. The name of Yamato-riu was retained until the thirteenth century, and the school in the interval numbered many cele- brated painters. In the thirteenth century the most famous artists were Nobu-zane and Tsune-taka; the latter then at the head of the school, assumed the family name of Tosa, which was thenceforth retained by his descendants as the permanent title of the Academy, which, however, underwent no immediate change save in name. ; : :
“The Academy has continued to the present day. Mitsuoki, the chief representative of the school in the seventeenth century was distinguished by the elaborate delicacy of his drawing and coloring.”
ANDERSON.
Mirsvoxr. Born 1616. .Died 1691. “The last of the great artists of the Tosa school.”
1. One pair six-panelled screens: court ladies view- ing a game of football.
KANO SCHOOL.
Was founded by Masa-nobu, born 1424, died 1520.
“The works of the school exhibit two distinct manners with many intermediate gradations; the one characterized by rapidity of execution and simplicity of material, the other by decorative effect, in which full play was given for complexity of design and splendor of coloring. The most ‘impressionistic’ of these sketches were landscapes, many of which offer an extraordinary com- bination of artistic treatment with a dexterity that approached dangerously near to pictorial jugglery. Such works were most frequently in monochrome, but occasionally the effect was heightened by a few light washes of color.
“The second or decorative manner was distinguished in most cases by a more careful outline, usually with a finer brush, and by a free, often lavish use of gold and color. It was compara- tively little favored by the artists of the first three generations, but began to appear in some force in the mural embellishments of the great castles carried out in the time of Hideyoshi by his protegés, Yeitoku and Sanraku, and became more and more pronounced from the beginning of the eighteenth century, till at length all the brilliancy and elaboration of the Tosa and Buddhist paintings reappeared in the works of the school.”’
ANDERSON.
“The specimens of central interest are, of course, the screens painted by the incomparable Sesshu, steeped in Chinese poetry and art and the vivid impressions of Chinese scenery. These specimens are the mural painting of the east; contemporary with the early Venetians, Raphael, and their eclectic followers. It was Yeitoku and Sanraku who girdled the lofty walls of Hideyoshi’s palaces with painted panoramas of Chinese court- scenes, enamelled in deep glowing pigment upon colossal gilded backgrounds. And it was Sesshu who in the sombre days of Ashikaga made the stately living and reception rooms of medi- tating priests mirror the sacred Chinese peaks and valleys where the founders of the Zen sect had drawn from Nature herself their illuminating inspiration.” FENELLOSA.
KANO SCHOOL 7
SessHu. Born in the Province of Bichuiin 1421. Dred 1507.
2. One six-panelled screen: Chinese landscape.
“This shows a rich Chinese mountain landscape, with all the accessories of tree, rock, distant range, cloud, river, hamlet, temple, scholar and peasant. It is a com- plete panorama of the sort of romantic life that surrounded the court of Sung at its southern capital of Hangchow in the twelfth century. This, too, is in the Shin or ‘true’ style of execution, which attempts the full ren- dering of parts, and is not content with a rough broad impression. Strong oppositions of values are not aimed at, rather does it bring out the fullness and variety of nature’s soft gray textures, subtly differentiated as in the middle tones of a clear photograph. Each smallest passage is a realistic study, though falling into place in the grand panorama. When this work was first exhibited at the Art Museum of Boston, 1894, I wrote of it in the catalogue: “The grand masses of its toppling crags, the stormy waves of its distant peaks, the feathery breadth of its middle foliage, and the stern outlines of its fore- ground trees and temple-roofs, are typical of the greatest qualities in Sesshu’s work.’
“‘Sesshu is the greatest master of the black and white school of painting which came into Japan in the fifteenth century as a precious legacy from the great Sung dynasty of China. Great in all subjects, he was especially trans- cendent in landscape, building his work on the Chinese Kakei of Sung. He went to China and studied from the very scenes where Kakei painted. He so surpassed the contemporary artists of Ming that the Chinese Emperor invited him to paint on the walls of his palace. And yet he was no mere copyist of any artist’s style. He stands as an independent master side by side with the Sung leaders. He has probably had more influence on the whole subsequent course of Japanese art than any other one man.
“Genuine works by Sesshu, even small kakemono and album pieces, have always been rare, and esteemed as the gems of Japanese collections. Large examples like this screen showing Sesshu’s mural scale, have been regarded by Japanese as the greatest treasures of their national art. That is why so few have reached foreign countries. There are only two others in America, a pair in the Boston Art Museum collection. I do not know of any in Europe.” FENELLOSA.
8 KANO SCHOOL
Moronosu. Born 1476. Died 1559. 3. One six-panelled screen: flowers, trees and birds. 4. One pair decorated wooden doors.
“His paintings were dashed in with extraordinary facility and with a caligraphic force which has never been surpassed.” ANDERSON.
“In art Motonobu stood firm and alone. A dozen great geniuses had disputed his father’s supremacy. Now he had no rival but his brother Utanosuke. He was heir to all the Chinese traditions, all the Japanese
Zen styles’. . . a genius greater than his en- vironment. He died in 1559, after a long life of undisputed triumph.’’ FENELLOSA.
Yertoxu. Born 1545. Died 15983.
5. One six-panelled screen: mountains and pine trees.
“A noble example. How simple are the elements that compose this picture; the great pines, the moun- tains, the snow; but what a sense of vastness, of majesty, of solitude! A certain solidity of effect allies such work as this to the masterpieces of Europe; and in its own kind I do not know where we shall find painting to surpass it, whether in Japan or in the West.” BInyon.
““Yeitoku Kano is considered an artist of extraordi- nary power. He studied art under his father Naonobu and his grandfather Motonobu. At the bidding of Nobunaga Oda, whose patronage he enjoyed, Yeitoku decorated the walls and paper doors in the Ando casile with paintings. Subsequently he did likewise, at the request of Taiko, to the gilded walls in the Juraka and Osaka castles. He died in 1593 at the age of forty-eight. In later years he was known by the name of Ko-Yeitoku or Ancient Yeitoku.”’ Tue Koxka.
“Yeitoku was trained in Motonobu’s school, and inherited the lofty traditions of Ashikaga painting. Hence a style that might easily have fallen into vulgarity and parade preserved in his hands weight and grandeur.
The typical masterpieces of Yeitoku and his pupils were immense screens, decorations on walls or sliding panels, painted in opaque pigments of rich color on gold leaf. The effect was one of extraordinary magnificence. Nothing could surpass the stately im-
nyoyweax Aq °G ‘ON
nsyoAON Ag “FON
KANO SCHOOL 9
pressiveness of Yeitoku at his best. He painted horses in their stalls or in the freedom of the solitary hills; tigers menacing and irresistible; fabulous lions of strange but royal aspect; birds of rich plumage on forest boughs; fawns flying from the retreat of tall waving grasses, heroes and princesses of old Chinese legend, and superb landscapes.” BINYON.
SANRAKU, AND OTHERS. Born 1559. Died 16365.
6. One pair six-panelled screens: interior view of a Japanese home.
“A splendid example of the rich effects reached by the school of Kano. The large spacing and angular composition of line are very striking. The color, too, playing on a key from black to gold is quite character- istic of the gorgeous palaces of Hideyoshi. The painting of the folding screens forming a part of the subject is masterly. The drawing of the sea-birds on these is quite like Sanraku. The bits of ink landscape are in the style of a late pupil of Monotobu. The work may be by several hands, of whom Sanraku is probably one.”’
FENELLOSA.
“Tn his youth Sanraku was a page in the service of Hideyoshi, but his master, having observed him absorbed in sketching a horse in the sand instead of attending to his duties, placed him under the tuition of Yeitoku whose son-in-law he afterwards became. He was asso- ciated with his father-in-law in the mural decorations in the castles of Hideyoshi and may be regarded as one of the greatest colorists and most original designers of his school.” ANDERSON.
SosHu. 16th century.
7. One pair six-panelled screens: the palace life of a Chinese Emperor.
“The subject is taken from the palace life of a Chinese Emperor of the Tang dynasty, probably Emperor Genso, under whom Chinese culture reached its apex. Though the screens would be called Yeitoku by most Japanese, but by comparison with kakemono and other screens in Boston and Japan I judge them to be by Kano Soshu, Yeitoku’s older brother, the oldest son of Shoyei and the grandson of Motonobu. After Yeitoku and Sanraku, he is probably the greatest Kano painter of his period.”
FENELLOSA.
10 KANO SCHOOL
ARTIST UNKNOWN. 8. One two-panelled screen: large bamboo trees. ARTIST UNKNOWN.
9. One two-panelled screen: wisteria over bamboo poles.
Lin Liane. Chinese. Ming dynasty. Flourished 1450 to 1465. Japanese name Rin-rio.
10. One pair of panels: Ho-o birds, rocks and flowers.
“Lin Liang was a native of Kuangtung who became eminent as a painter of flowers, fruit, birds, trees, etc. He is said to have been a very rapid worker, using his brush as though he were writing the ‘grass character’ beyond compare in his own day.” GILES.
Koyetsu. Born 1556. Died 1637.
11. One pair six-panelled screens: garden scene with bridge.
12. Small painting: sea-bird and waves.
13. Lacquer box: decorated with floral designs in mother-of-pearl.
14. Tea bowl: warm gray glaze.
15. Incense box: decorated with head of deer in relief.
16. Incense box: decorated with sitting stork in relief.
“In the beginning of the seventeenth century, there appeared in Kyoto a lacquerer of uncommon talent, Koyetsu Hannami, who by virtue of his ability in calig- raphy and painting, invented a style of lacquering of unusual merit. In the quality of designs and of tech- nique, no other productions can bear comparison with his, for Koyetsu’s art was the joint product of his high personality and his varied accomplishments in literature, painting, the Chanoyu, and even in landscape gardening. Koyetsu, among many other innovations in lacquer work, brought in the use of tin, lead and mother-of- pearl. Highly accomplished as Koyetsu was in the lac- quering art, it after all was to him a mere diversion of his leisure hours, for his chief duty was to examine and judge old swords, an occupation of considerable im- portance in ancient times. For this reason he did not leave behind him very many productions, and this fact accounts for the rarity of genuine pieces from his hand. Of whom he first learned the art is past finding out, though it is known that in ceramics he received instruc- tion from Koho.” THe Koxxka.
KANO SCHOOL 11
Sotatsu. Born 1623. Dred 1685.
17. One pair six-panelled screens: garden scene with
figures.
“With Koyetsu is associated another man of genius, his friend Sotatsu. The two sometimes worked together on a single makemono, Koyetsu adding specimens of his beautiful writing to Sotatsu’s paintings. Little is known of Sotatsu’s life, but his works reveal a consum- mate genius for design. Among all the eminent flower- painters of Japan he stands, in the estimation of his countrymen, supreme. . . . Technically he was an innovation. He mixed gold with his Chinese ink, add-. ing a hidden lustre and rare gleam to grey and black. The leaves of his flowers are often veined with gold. He was fond of effacing the ground; we see shoots of bamboo and young fern-fronds springing up from space. His typical masterpieces are screens overlaid with gold or silver leaf, on which the pigment is gorgeously encrusted. Yet, hismagnificence of color, which loves broad spaces of lapis blue, and exults in crimsons, emerald, and purple, keeps always a stately dignity; a marvelous sense of measure holds all the elements of his art in balance.”
BINYON.
Korin. Born 1640. Dred 1716.
aS
19. 20.
One pair six-panelled screens: chrysanthemums
and waves.
One pair decorated wooden doors.
A decorated fan: waves and boat containing three
persons.
*‘Korin was related to Koyetsu in that his grand- mother was the elder sister of the latter. Korin’s grand- father had been in hard circumstances before he turned out to be a dry-goods merchant, but at the time of the birth of our artistic genius, his father was driving a pros- perous trade. The latter was a man of considerable culture, having mastered the secrets of caligraphy under Koyetsu, an uncle on his wife’s side. Though born of a mercantile family, Korin did not succeed to his father’s trade but instead chose painting as his life work. He
12
KANO SCHOOL
studied art, some say under Yasunobu Kano, but ac- cording to others under Tsunenobu Kano. It is, how- ever, evident that Korin admired the styles of Koyetsu and Sotatsu which he followed until he evolved one of his own. Like Koyetsu, Korin was also adept in the Chanoyu and in landscape gardening.
“The careless and indifferent manner in which ex- temporaneous works of Korin are apparently done gives one at first an impression that he was too independent of the conventionalities of art. But closer study of his work compels a change of opinion, the admiration ex- torted being all the greater because in no one of his pro- ductions is there a trace of that mental toil so inseparable from mediocrity. In truth his pictures mirror most faith- fully the characteristics of the age in which he lived, so varied and so suggestive. His creations are always rich in grace and beauty, and never marred by that wild gro- tesqueness which has too often been mistaken for nobility. The beauty of Korin’s art is in his loftiness of conception and in the facile strokes of his brush. A painter of the impressionist school, as Korin was, he did not concern himself about accuracy so long as he suc- ceeded in imparting some spiritual significance, which significance, however, may in many cases escape the perception of matter-of-fact observers,—this subtlety being the very thing which so delights the hearts of true lovers of Japanese art.
“As originators of new decorative designs i in the field of modern painting, Korin and some of his accomplished followers are deservedly entitled to high praise. Com- bining the telling strokes of the Kanos with the fasci- nating coloring of the Tosas, the style of the Korin school is marked by qualities ethereal in tone and irre- sistible in effect. Itis because of its remarkable success in creating a style of the purely Japanese type by the amal- gamation of styles radically different in their genius, that the Korin school has been honored with its high place in the history of Japanese art.
“It was Korin who decorated with life-size flower masses in gold and flowing color the sliding doors of the aristocratic Yashikis of Toku-Gawa.”’
Tue KoxKa.
(© io js 9 ipo Me
d
By Sotatsu
No. 17
Sot Stn tt cen tant mm A at am
mR Rin een
uloy Ag
KANO SCHOOL 13
Kenzan. Born 1662. Died 1743.
21.
Q2. 23. 24.
25.
26.
Q7.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
One four-panelled screen: hill-top, flowers and willow trees.
Small painting: flowers. Wood box: decorated with chrysanthemums.
Tea bowl: decorated with floral design in blue, yellow and white on buff ground.
Tea bowl: decorated with floral designs in white on black ground.
Tea bowl: decorated with plum blossoms on red ground.
Tea bowl: decorated with floral design and in- scription in brown and blue on creamish-gray ground.
Fire pot: decorated with landscape and inscrip- tion in black on gray ground.
Fire pot: decorated with floral designs around shoulder on white ground.
Oblong incense box: decorated with blossoming plum branch on rich red ground.
Circular incense box: decorated with floral design in black and olive on creamish-white ground.
Circular incense box: decorated with grasses and leaves in blue on white ground.
Flower jar. Persian. Lapis lazuli glaze, with relief inscription on shoulder.
14
KANO#SCHOOL
34. Flower jar. Mesopotamian.
Rich green glaze mottled with gold; richly iridescent and showing decorations in black un- der the glaze.
**Son of Soken, and brother of the illustrious Korin Yuigen was the artist’s given name but as pseudonyms he used, besides Kenzan, several others such as Shinsei, Shoko, To-in, Gyokudo, Reikai, Tozen and Shuseido. A man of versatile talent Kenzan did not confine himself to art but also showed many accomplishments in litera- ture and in the Chanoyu, both of which he studied un- der his distinguished contemporary Yoken Fujimura. Nor did the artist neglect religious studies which he pursued under a celebrated divine of his time. He first set up his kiln in the village of Narutaki, a suburb of Kyoto, and the fact that the village lay to the INUI i. e. to the northwest of the Imperial Palace, led him to adopt the name of Kenzan or Northwestern Hill. Later he followed Prince Kimihiro to Yedo (now Tokyo) and fixed his abode at Iriya-no-sato for his revered patron had entered the priesthood and dwelt in the Rinno-ji Temple, near by on Uyeno Hill. Here the artist con- tinued his favorite occupation and was accordingly called ‘Triya-Kenzan.’ : ; :
“At one time in his later years Kenzan had a kiln set up in a humble cottage at Rokkenbori in Yedo. Whenever invited he would pay his respects to his patron Prince, often in his working-clothes soiled with clay. At one time seeing the unsightly habiliments of the artist, the Prince presented him with a suit of fine silk. Putting it on the honored craftsman returned home and at once resumed his work without a thought of his costly garment. This one fact shows how indif- ferent he was to worldly vanities, and how devoted he was to his occupation. : ; ’
“Kenzan died in the third year of the Kwampo Era (1743 A. D.) at the age of eighty-one. At the time of his death he was absolutely penniless, so that his Impe- rial patron is said to have graciously provided his funeral expenses. On one side of his tomb was carved a verse to the following effect:
‘Sorrows and pleasures once passed, leave naught but dreams.’
“In most of his pottery works he signed himself Shisui Kenzan, or Shisui Shinsei, or simply Kenzan. Then,
OKIOoO.
KANO SCHOOL 15
too, his talent was not limited to that particular industry only, indeed his genius revealed itself also in caligraphy, painting and literature Next to ceramics, painting was his chief accomplishment, he having most favorably handled flowers and birds, and sometimes even land- scapes. His style favored that of Koyetsu and Sotatsu more than that of Korin; for he seems to have laid great stress on the power of touch, and to have pre- ferred a bold, unconventional tone to beauty of coloring. This fact is clearly proved by the vigorous designs on his pottery. His paintings show nothing of the crudity and blemishes of the so-called ‘porcelain painters’ of later ages. ‘Truly Kenzan deserves a place in the ranks of first-class painters.
“Although Kenzan belonged to the school which bears the name of his illustrious brother, he, unlike Korin who affected beautiful coloring, took to ink- sketches of classic simplicity, which taste may be ac- counted for by his intense devotion to religion and the Chanoyu ceremony, both of which have a recognized quieting influence upon the hearts of their devotees. Still, Kenzan’s pictures were not always in black and white; on the contrary they sometimes were illuminated in a splendor of colors.”
THE Koxxa.
Born 1732. Died 1795. Founder of Shijo School.
35. One four-panelled screen: marine view and flying
geese.
“Okio was one of the most original reformers in modern Japanese art. He came at a time when the ancient national schools had withered away and every kind of extravagant experiment was being tried. He chose a new lead in realism, and invented, with the suggestion of the old Chinese realists of Yuen, an ad- equate technique that aimed to render the very texture of things. In all subjects he was famous, but in land- scapes he was most original. Unfortunately landscapes are rare among his works.”
FENELLOSA,
16
KANO SCHOOL
““Okio is too absolute a master of his means; he is no longer the wooer of beauty, but the sovereign, dis- passionate observer who can do with his brush all he wills, to the utmost limits, so it seems, of his ambition. We prize him most in those wonderful pictures of carp glid- ing and swerving through water; of great pine branches powdered with snow; of willow or maple spreading their faultless tracery against a serene space of sky; of birds in flight seen as we might see them if we had an eagle’s eye to follow them through the air. All such themes of nature his art seems to hold and image for us as if with the heightened purity of a mirror’s reflection.”
Brnyon.
1 |
| |
st nnsansetey
ee
By Hokusai
No. 36.
17
UKIOYE SCHOOL.
Hoxusat. Born 1759. Died 1849.
36. One pair four-panelled screens: Enoshima Island.
‘““Not only has he been ealled the greatest designer of Ukioye, but the greatest Japanese artist of all time. Others, and especially all his own countrymen, outside of the classes to which he catered, have condemned him as coarse, uninspired and demoralizing. There is some truth on both sides. He was born an artist, without ques- tion. The world danced in fresh pictures before his vision; and to see for him was to depict. He drew a greater variety of things, more rapidly, and more vitally, than any other artist of his day; he saw pictorial relations freshly, and created them with individuality and spon- taneity. This power over line, notan, and color was almost endless when he chose to exercise it. There is nothing out of which he could not make a composition. His illustrated books together compose an encyclopaedia of the world. And yet he never rose to the level of those great ideas which have made of Oriental civilization a force that can never die out of human culture; ideals of refinement, harmony, restraint, brotherhood, conse- cration, literary fastidiousness, the incommensurability of spirit with matter; scorn of money, of worldly advan- tage, of any slavery to a mere means. His was a world cut off from all standards, except the intensity of its own impressions, of its pleasures. No artist ever revelled so childishly, genially, humorously in pure externality. Aesthetically, too, his pictorial ideas, though many and striking, are not generally of the highest, the most in- ward quality. We cannot define what, in music, enables us to recognize the inner superiority of a theme, say of Beethoven as contrasted with Berlioz. One may be as musical as the other, and yet not be charged with some nameless perfection. So, in pictorial ideas, line and color themes, among those that are truly artistic, there is an endless difference in rank. What constitutes it, who can say? And yet human consciousness is con- structed to recognize it unerringly. So in Hokusai, there is no lack of solid artistic construction; but in his themes we miss some last perfection of fibre, some inner tem-
18
UKIOYE SCHOOL
pering, some unfathomable depth, something which, in literature, constitutes the very poetry of poetry; something that tones the soul like a bird’s note at morn- ing, makes it innocent and fragrant like a wild flower, pure as a child, of diamond texture, concentrating and flashing lights that no merely mortal eye hath seen.
‘And yet we have to admit that, in this very worldly side of his genius, lay Hokusai’s peculiar power. This was the supreme opportunity of becoming the mouth- piece of a generation. His middle age fell on a date, between 1800 and 1820, in which, as we have seen, the lower world of Yedo had surrendered itself to its own impulses, steeped itself in excesses, lowered its standards, defied all idealisms. That an artist should arise who could make of this very degraded material the starting point for fresh creative flights, give it, as it were, a pseudo-ideality abstractly aesthetic, is a remarkable phenomenon.”
FENELLOSA.
AMERICAN ARTISTS ROOMS II and III
Cuass, WILLIAM MERRITT.
Born in Franklin, Ind., 1849. Pupil of B. F. Hayes in Ind- ianapolis; J. O. Eaton in New York; A. Wagner and Piloty in Munich. Medal, Centennial Exposition, Philadelphia, 1876; Honorable Mention, Paris Salon, 1881; Honors, Munich, 1883; Silver Medal, Paris Salon, 1889; First Prize, Cleveland Art Asso- ciation, 1894; Shaw Prize, Society of American Artists, 1895; Gold Medal of Honor, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1895; Gold Medal, Paris Exposition, 1900; Temple Gold Medal, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1901; Gold Medal, Pan- American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; Gold Medal, Charleston Ex- sition, 1902; First Corcoran Prize, Society of Washington Artists, 1904. Member National Academy of Design, 1890; Soctety of American Artists, 1879; American Water Color Society; Munich Secession; Ten American Painters; National Institute of Arts and Letters. Also teacher.
37. Summer sunshine. Loaned by Frank J. Hecker.
CuurcH, FREDERICK STUART.
Born in Grand Rapids, Mich., 1842. Pupil of L. E. Wilmarth, Walter Shirlaw, National Academy of Design and Art Students’ League in New York. Silver Medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904. Member National Academy of Design, 1885; Society of American tae 1890; American Water Color Society; New York Etching
ub.
38. The fog. Loaned by Frank J. Hecker.
20 AMERICAN ARTISTS
Cox, Kenyon.
Born Warren, O., Oct. 27, 1856. Pupil of Carolus-Duran and Gérome in Paris. Second Haligarten Prize, National Academy of Design, 1889; Two Bronze Medals, Paris Exposition, 1889; Temple Silver Medal, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1891; Medal, Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; Gold Medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904. Member National Academy of Design, 1908; Society of American Artists, 1882; National Society of Mural Painters; Architectural League of New York, 1889; Fellow- ship Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts; Art Students’ League of New York; National Institute of Arts and Letters. Specialty, mural decoration. Also writer on art and teacher.
39. Plenty. Loaned by William T. Evans.
DAINGERFIELD, ELLIOTT.
Born in Harper's Ferry, Va., March 26, 1859. Came to New York in 1880. Studied in New York. Silver Medal, Pan-Ameri- can Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; Clarke Prize, National Academy of Design, 1902. Member New York Water Color Club; Society of American Artists, 1903; National Academy of Design, 1906. Member faculty Philadelphia School of Design.
40. The incandescent sun. Loaned by the artist.
Dewine, THomas WILMER.
Born in Boston, May 4, 1851. Pupil of Boulanger and Lefebvre in Paris. Clarke Prize, National Academy of Design, 1887; Sil- ver Medal, Paris Exposition, 1889; Gold Medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; Gold Medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904; Lippincott Prize, Pennsyluania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1908. Member Ten American Painters, National Academy of Design, 1888. Specialty, figures.
41. Green and rose. ~ Loaned by the artist. 42. ‘The recitation. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
43. Portrait in blue. Loaned by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C. (Freer Collection).
44. Portrait in white. Loaned by Charles L. Freer. AS, #4
any *S “A Ad DOd AHL ‘8€ oN
a - iS ————— ss =
a
ereve
sett Se een eee aa
‘O- sulysly{qng poueqd 94} Aq yYysUAdOD Sulma([ “AA seMoyT, Ag NOLLVLIOdY AHL ‘cr “ON
NN en ee
AMERICAN ARTISTS 21
Dow, ArtHuR WESLEY.
Born in Ipswich, Mass. Pupil of Boulanger, Lefebvre, Doucet and Delance in Paris. Honorable Mention, Paris Exposition, 1889; Bronze Medal for Painting, Honorable Mention for Woed- cuts, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; Medal, Boston Mechanics Association. Member National Arts Club; Copley Society, 1892; Boston Society of Arts and Crafts; National Society of Craftsmen; Eastern Art Teachers’ Association. (pres.) Pro- fessor of Fine Arts, Teachers’ College, Columbia Unwersity, director Summer Art School, Ipswich, Mass. Specialty, landscapes. Author of “‘Composition” and “Prints from Wood Blocks.”
45. The full tide. Loaned by the artist. 46. Summer. Loaned by the artist.
Hassam, CHILDE.
Born in Boston, 1859. Pupil of Boulanger and Lefebvre in Paris. Bronze Medal, Paris Exposition, 1889; Gold Medal, Munich, 1892; Medal, Art Club of Philadelphia. 1892; Medal, Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; Prize, Cleveland Art Asso- ciation, 1893; Webb Prize, Society of American Artists, 1895; Prize, Boston Art Club, 1896; Second Class Medal, Carnegie Instt- tute, Pittsburgh, 1898; Temple Gold Medal, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1889; Silver Medal, Paris Exposition, 1900; Gold Medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; Gold Medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904; Clarke Prize, National Academy of Design, 1905; Third Class Medal, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, 1905; Lippincott Prize, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1906; Carnegie Prize, Society of American Artists, 1906; Third Prize, Worcester, 1906. Member American Water Color Soctety; New York Water Color Club; Boston Art Club; Ten American Painters; Associate National Academy of Design, 1902; National Academy of Design, 1906; Munich Secession (cor.); Associé Socvété Nationale des Beaux-Arts, Paris; National Institute of Arts and Letters.
47. The Chinese merchants. Loaned by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C. (Freer Col- lection).
48. Thenorth shore moonlight. Loaned by the artist. 49. Sundown—Newport. Loaned by the artist.
: ¥ % wt > = >
22 AMERICAN ARTISTS
Homer, WINSLOW.
Born in Boston, Feb. 24, 1836. Pupil of National Academy of Design and F. Rondel; mainly self-taught. First Prize, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, 1896; Gold Medal, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1896; Gold Medal, Paris Exposition, 1900; Gold Medal for Water Chir: Pon-Anericas Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; Temple Gold Medal, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1902; Gold Medal, Charleston Exposition, 1902; Gold Medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904. Member National Academy of Design, 1865; American Water Color Society; Century Association; National Institute of Aris and Letters.
50. Early evening. Loaned by Charles L. Freer.
“ee tule i feeble * 4 4
INNESS, GEORGE.
Born in Newburg, N. Y., May 1, 1825; died in Scotland, August 3, 1894. Mainly self-taught. His only regular instructor was Régis Gignoux in whose New York studio he studied for one month in 1845. Visited Rome and Florence and in 1850 painted his first version of “Saint Peters at Rome.” Elected member of the National Academy in 1868. Medal Paris Exposition, 1889.
51. Autumn by the sea. Loaned by Frank J. Hecker.
Metcaur, Wiuuarp L.
Born Lowell, Mass. Pupil of Boulanger and Lefebvre, Paris. Honorable Mention, Paris Salon, 1888; Medal, Columbian Exposi- tion Chicago, 1893; Webb Prize, Society American Artists, 1896; Honorable Mention, Paris Exposition, 1900; Silver Medal, Pan- American Exposition, 1901; Silver Medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904. Member American Water-Color Society; Ten American Painters, Instructor Cooper Union New York and Rhode Island School of Design.
52. The green canopy. Loaned by the artist.
53. Unfolding buds. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
AMERICAN ARTISTS 28
Metcuers, GARI.
Born in Detroit, Mich., 1860. Pupil of Lefebvre and Boulanger in Paris. Honorable Mention, Paris Salon, 1886; First Class Medal, Amsterdam, 1887; Third Class Medal, Paris Salon, 1888; First Class Medal, Munich, 1888; Grand Prize, Paris Exposition, 1889; First Prize, American Institute of Architects, 1891; Medal of Honor, Berlin, 1891; Gold Medal, Art Club of Philadelphia, 1892; Medal of Honor, Antwerp, 1894; Temple Gold Medal, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1896; First Class Medal, Vienna, 1898; Gold Medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; Knight of the Order of St. Michael of Bavaria; Chevalier of the Legion of Honor of France, Officer, 1904; Gold Medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904. Member Paris Society of American Painters; Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, Paris; International Society of Artists, London; Munich Secession (cor.); Associate National Academy of Design, 1904; National Academy of Design, 1906; National Institute of Arts and Letters.
54. Portrait of Mrs. Gari Melchers. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
55. Maternity. Loaned by the artist.
REDFIELD, Epwarp WILLIS.
Born Bridgeville, Del., Dec. 19, 1868. Pupil of the Pennsyl- vania Academy of the Fine Arts; Bouguereau and Robert-Fleury in Paris. Medal, Art Club of Philadelphia, 1896; Bronze Medal, Paris Exposition, 1900; Bronze Medal, Pan-American Exposi- tion, Buffalo, 1901; Temple Medal, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1903; Second Hallgarten Prize, National Academy of Design, 1904; Shaw Fund Prize; Soctety of American Artists, 1904; Silver Medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904; Jennie Sésnan Gold Medal, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1905; Medal of Second Class, Carnegie Institute, 1905; Webb Prize, Society of American Artists, 1906; Gold Medal of Honor, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1907; Third Prize, Corcoran Art Gallery, 1907. Member Society of American Artists, 1903; Assocrate Academy of Design, 1904; National Academy of Design, 1906; Art Club of Philadelphia; Fellowship Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Specialty, landscapes.
56. The brook in winter. Loaned by the artist.
24 AMERICAN ARTISTS Rep, Rospert.
Born Stockbridge, Mass., 1863. Pupil Boston Museum, Art Students League and Boulanger and Lefebvre of Paris. Medal Columbian Exposition Chicago, 1893; Clarke Prize, National Acad- emy of Design, 1898; Silver Medal for Painting and Gold Medal for Mural Decoration, Paris Exposition, 1900; Silver Medal, Pan- American Exposition, 1901; Silver Medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904. Associate National Academy, member National Institute of Arts and Letters and Ten American Painters.
57. Evening. Loaned by the artist.
Ryper, ALBERT PINKHAM.
Born New Bedford, Mass., March 19, 1847. Pupil of National Academy of Design under William E. Marshall. Silver Medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901. Member Society of American Artists, 1878; Associate National Academy of Design, 1902; National Academy of Design, 1906.
58. A horseman. Loaned by N. E. Montross.
SCHILLING, ALEXANDER.
Born at Chicago. Pupil of G. 8. Collins. Gold Medal, Art Club of Philadelphia; Silver Medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904; Member American Water-Color Society and Etching Club of New York. )
59. Moonlight. Loaned by Mrs. 5. Stein.
StTEIcHEN, EpUARD J.
Studio at 291 Fifth Ave., New York, and 103 Boulevard du Montparnasse, Paris.
60. The blue hour—Lake George. Loaned by the artist.
62. In our garden at Voulangis—Mrs. S. Loaned by the artist.
Siig
="
a
COPA DETROIT PUBUNSYNGED,
.. ORPB TS.
No. 53. UNFOLDING BUDS By Willard L. Metcalf
Copyright by the Detroit Publishing Co.
No. 54. PORTRAIT OF MRS. GARI MELCHERS By Gari Melchers
Copyright by the Detroit Publishing Co:
AMERICAN ARTISTS 25
Tuayer, ApBott HENDERSON.
Born in Boston, Mass., August 12, 1849. Pupil of Gérome and Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Member National Academy of Design, 1901; Society of American Painters, 1879; Royal Academy of San Luca, Rome; Artists’ Fund Society; National Institute of Arts and Letters.
63. The virgin. Loaned by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C. (Freer Collection).
Tryon, Dwicut W.
Born Hartford, Conn., 1849. Pupil of C. Daubigny, Jacques- son de la Chevreuse, A. Guillemet and H. Harpignies in Paris. Bronze Medal, Boston, 1882; Gold Medals, American Art Associa- tion, 1886 and 1887; Third Hallgarten Prize, National Academy of Design, 1887; Ellsworth Prize, Art Institute, Chicago, 1888; Palmer Prize, Chicago Interstate Exposition, 1889; Medal, Colum- bian Exposition, 1893; Webb Prize, Society American Artists, 1889; First Class Gold Medal, Munich International Exposition, 1892; First Prize, Cleveland Interstate Exposition, 1895; Furst Prize, Tennessee Centennial, 1897; Gold Medal, Carnegie Institute, 1899; Chronological Medal, Carnegie Institute, 1899; Gold Medal, Pan- American Exposition, 1901; Gold Medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904. Member National Academy, Society American Artvsts, American Water-Color Soctety. Professor of Art, Smith College.
64. Moonlight over the sea. Loaned by the artist.
64a Morning in May. Loaned by the artist.
65. Before sunrise—June. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
66. Autumn morning. Loaned by the National Gal- lery of Art, Washington, D. C. (Freer Col- lection).
67. Twilight—Autumn. Loaned by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C. (Freer Collection).
ft” Gait Fis ok &
26 AMERICAN ARTISTS
TwatcHMan, Joun H.
Born in Cincinnati, 1853. Pupil of School of Design and Dwoeneck, Cincinnati, and of Art School, Munich. Medal, World’s Fair, Chicago, 1893; Society of American Artists, 1888 (Webb Prize); Temple Gold Medal, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1895. Member American Art Club, Munich.
68. Drying sails. Loaned by Charles L. Freer.
Waker, Horatio.
Born in Canada, 1858. Evans Prize, American Water Color Society, 1888; Gold Medal, Competitive Exposition at American Art Galleries, New York, 1887; Bronze Medal, Paris Exposition, 1889; Gold Medal and Diploma, Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; Gold Medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; Gold Medal, Charleston Exposition, 1902; Gold Medal for Oil and Gold Medal for Water Colors, St. Louis Exposition, 1904; Gold Medal of Honor, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1906; First Prize, Worcester, 1907. Member National Academy of De- sign, 1891; Society of American Artists, 1887; National Institute of Arts and Letters; Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colors, England; American Water Color Society; Artists’ Fund Society; Artists’ Aid Society.
69. The wood cutter. Loaned by N. E. Montross. 70. The enchanted Sty—Circe and the friends of
Ulysses. Loaned by the artist. 71. Autumn—Shepherd and sheep. Loaned by the artist.
Wetr, Junien ALDEN.
Born in West Point, N. Y., August 30, 1852. Pupil of his father, Robert W. Weir; Gérome in Paris. Honorable Mention, Paris Salon, 1882; Silver Medal for Painting and Bronze for Drawing, Paris Exposition, 1889; Medal, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, 1897; Prize ($2,000), American Art Association, New York; Bronze Medal, Paris Exposition, 1900; Gold Medal, Pan- American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; Gold Medal for Paintings and Silver for Engravings, St. Louis Exposition, 1904; Inness Medal, National Academy of Design, 1906. Member National Academy of Design, 1880; American Water Color Society; New York Etching Club; Artists’ Aid Society of New York; Century Association; National Institute of Arts and Letters.
72. Return of the fishing party. Loaned by the artist. 73. Windham landscape. Loaned by the artist.
AMERICAN ARTISTS 27
WHISTLER, JAMES McNEILL.
Born 1834, died 1903. Studied two years under Gleyre, Paris. Medals, Paris, 1883 (Third Class); 1889 (Gold); Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1894 (Temple Gold). Officer of the Legion of Honor. Represented in the Luxembourg, Paris; Glas- gow Corporation Gallery; the Dresden Gallery and the Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh.
74. Blue and silver—Trouville. Loaned by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C. (Freer Collection).
75. Trafalgar Square. Loaned by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C. (Freer Collection).
Wyant, A. H.
“ Born in the little Ohio town of Port Washington, his early art desires got him no farther than the painting of signs, which he did till he was twenty, when he moved to Cincinnati. There, for the first time he saw some meritorious paintings and he was filled with the desire to make pictures. He even came East to consult with George Inness. He was always delicate in health, and as a means of improving his physical condition he joined a government exploring expedition to Arizona and New Mexico. Unfortunately, there were unusual hardships, with the added trial of the party being under the command of a brutal man and, instead of a change for the better, he received a stroke of paralysis, whereby he forever lost the use of his right hand. Undaunted, however, he immediately set about learning to use his left, and happily his work suffered in no wise. While during his life his work brought only modest prices, he was never lacking patrons, and he did not know the grind of poverty combined with a lack of appreciation. Yet it was not really until after his death that the public generally awoke to a realization of his greatness.”
Artuur HoEBEr.
76. Early autumn—Keene Valley. Loaned by Frank J. Hecker.
] i |
so agges a
No. 63. THE VIRGIN By Abbott H. Thayer
No. 66.. AUTUMN MORNING By D. W. Tryon
Copy reght i & Py Mie rentress. :
No. 70. THE ENCHANTED STY CIRCE AND THE FRIENDS OF ULYSSES
By Horatio Walker
Copyright by N. E. Montross
MICHIGAN ARTISTS ROOMS IV and V
AvEeRY, KENNETH NEWELL.
Born Detroit, 1883. Pupil of Jean Paul Laurens. Exhibited in the Salon, Paris, and in several exhibitions in America. 77. Un bourgeois. Loaned by Mrs. J. H. Avery. 78. Portrait of the artist. Loaned by Mrs. J. H. Avery.
Bacon, Irvine R.
79. Pensioned off. Loaned by the artist. 80. A windy day. Loaned by the artist.
Bartow, Myron.
Born in Tonia, Mich., 1873. Studied at the Detroit Museum of Art School, and at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts under Géréme, He is a Member of the American Art Association, Royal Institute of Oil Painters, London, and Philadelphia Art Club; Siz Academic Silver Medals, Paris; Gold Medal, St. Lowis, 1904.
81. The reader. Loaned by Mrs. E. T. Barbour.
CxuurcH, FREDERICK STUART.
Decoration for a dining room. ‘“Flapjacks.’’ Loaned by Charles L. Freer. Over mantel piece.
30 MICHIGAN ARTISTS
Cone.Ly, Wi.uiam B.
Born in New York. One of the pioneer artists of Michigan. Studied at the Academy, New York. Established the first art school in Detroit.
8la. Portrait of R. Storrs Willis, Esq. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
Coussz, EANGER Irvine.
Born Saginaw, Mich., 1866. Pupil of National Academy of Design, New York; Bouguereau, Robert Fleury and Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris. Shaw Prize, Salmagundi Club, 1899; Second Hallgarten Prize, National Academy of Design, 1900; _ Proctor Prize, Salmagundi Club, 1900; Honorable Mention, Paris Expo- sition, 1900; Honorable Mention, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; First Hallgarten Prize, 1902; Two Bronze Medals, St. Louis Exposition, 1904. Associate of the National Academy; Member American Water-Color Society; Salmagundi Club, 1898; New York Water-Color Club, 1902; Life Member of the Lotus Club.
82. Indian and turkeys. Loaned by Charles W. Ward.
Crapo-SmitH, L.
Born in Detroit. Studied with Bouguereau and at the Julian Academy, Paris; with Julius Rolshoven and William M. Chase in New York, and with George Hitchcock in Holland. Exhibited Paris Salon, with the Western Artists, Pennsylvania Academy, New York Society of Water-Colorists. Medal, International Exposition, St. Louis, 1904.
83. The gold screen. Loaned by the artist. 84. House of Madame H. Loaned by the artist.
Daso, LEON.
Born Detroit, 1868. Studied in France and Italy. Member of the National Arts Club, New York.
85. The wave. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
MICHIGAN ARTISTS 31 Daso, T. Scort.
Born in Detroit. Studied in France, where he is now living. A frequent exhibitor abroad.
86. Morning on the Seine. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
GARRETSON, Miss Drtua.
Studied at the Detroit Museum of Art School, National Academy of Design and Art Students’ League. Exhibited American Woman’s Art Association, Paris; National Academy of Design; American Water-Color Society; New York Water-Color Club; Philadelphia Art Club; Art Institute, Chicago, and Museum of Fine Arts, St. Louis.
87. Cloud effect, Vesuvius. Loaned by the artist.
GarRREtsoN, Miss Lixie.
88. Lake Como. Loaned by the artist.
Girs, JosEPH W.
Born in Detroit. Studied in Paris under Bouguereau and Fleury, and at the Royal Academy at Munich. Returned to Detroit, 1890; taught in the Museum of Art School for five years, and later established the Fine Arts Academy at Detroit, which he has successfully conducted for the past fifteen years.
89. Day dreams. Loaned by the artist. 90. Mildred. Loaned by the artist.
$2 MICHIGAN ARTISTS
Hopkin, Ropert.
Born in Glasgow, Scotland, about 1832; died Detroit, 1909. A Marine artist who spent his entire time in Detroit with the ex- ception of two years spent in Chicago. He is very well known in Detroti, but seldom exhibited outside his own locality.
91. The deserted home. Loaned by William C. Weber.
92. Marine. Loaned by Charles L. Clark.
Ivzes, Percy.
Born in Detroit, 1864. Studied with L. T. Ives, Thomas Eakins in Philadelphia for three years and in Paris for six years. Exhibited, Salon, Paris; National Academy, New York; World’s Fair, Chicago; Pan-American, Buffalo, where he recewed Honor- able Mention; St. Lows Hxposition. Member Western Artists and Member Jury of Award, St. Louis Exposition, 1904.
93. In the shadow. Leoaned by the artist.
Ives, L. T. Born 1834; died 1894. Studied for two years under Page in
Rome. Returning to Detroit, he took up the study of law which he practiced for twelve years, which he then abandoned for art.
94. Ideal head. Loaned by Charles L. Clark.
McEwen, ALEXANDRINE.
94a. Miniatures. Loaned by the artist.
McEwen, KATHERINE.
94b. The white fog. Loaned by the artist.
No. 95. -PORTRAIT OF GENERAL R. A. ALGER By Gari Melchers
No. 104.
“TK MARVEL” (Dr. Donald G. Mitchell) By Gari Melchers
Copyright by the Detroit Publishing Co.
MICHIGAN ARTISTS 83
MeEtcHuers, GARI.
Born in Detroit, 1860. Studied under Boulanger and Lefebvre, Paris. Honorable Mention, Salon, 1886; First Class Medal, Amsterdam, 1887; Third Class Medal, Salon, Paris, 1888; First Class Medal, Munich, 1888; Grand Prize, Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1889; First Prize Art Institute, Chicago, 1891; Medal of Honor, Berlin, 1891; Gold Medal, Philadelphia Art Club, 1892; Medal of Honor, Antwerp, 1894; Temple Gold Medal, Pennsyl- vania Academy of Fine Arts, 1896; First Class Medal, Vienna, 1898; Gold Medal, Pan-American Exposition, 1901. Member Paris Society of American Painters; Société Nationale des Beaux- Arts, Paris; International Society of Painters, Sculptors and Gravers, London; Corresponding Member of the Secession, Munich; Chevalier of the Legion of Honor, France, and Knight of the Order of St. Michael, Bavaria.
95. Portrait of General R. A. Alger. Loaned by Mrs. R. A. Alger.
96. Portrait of Mrs. Frederick M. Alger. Loaned by Mr. and Mrs. E. Y. Swift.
97. Portrait of Mrs. Henry D. Shelden. Loaned by Mr. and Mrs. Henry D. Shelden.
98. Portrait of Julius Stroh. Loaned by Julius
Stroh.
99. The two communicants. Loaned by Julius Stroh.
100. Portrait of Mrs. Julius Stroh. Loaned by Julius Stroh.
101. The shepherdess. Loaned by Julius Stroh.
102. Portrait of Mrs. Julius Melchers. Loaned by Mrs. Spencer Otis.
103. Vespers. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
104. Portrait of Ik Marvel. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
105.. The wedding. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
106. The garden party. Loaned by the Detroit Club. 107. “La novice.”’ Loaned by Frederick M. Alger. 108. ‘‘Sainte Gudule.”? Loaned by Charles M. Swift.
84 MICHIGAN ARTISTS
Peck, Miss Junta.
109. Pewabic pottery. Loaned by the artist. 110. Saidee. Loaned by the artist.
Pirts, LENDALL.
Born in Detroit, 1875. Studied in France, Switzerland and Germany. Graduated at Harvard, returned to Paris for thorough course under the best masters.
111. Source of the Romanche. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
RousHoveEN, JULIUS.
Born in Detroit, 1858. Studied in New York, Munich, Dussel- dorf, Paris with Fleury and in Florence where he now resides. Exhibited several years in Paris Salon, in London and many promi- nent. exhibitions in the United States.. Represented in the perma- nent collection Detroit Museum of Art.
112. Refectory of San Damiano, Assisi. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
Swirt, Ivan.
Born in Wayne, Mich., 1873. Pupil of the Art Institute, Chicago, and also studied in Europe. He now resides at Harbor Springs, Mich., where besides painting landscapes, he writes char- acter sketches and poems of the Mackinac region.
113. In the shadow of the hills. Loaned by the Detroit Museum of Art.
Wicker, JoHNn PAuvt.
Born at Ypsilanti. Studied seven years in Paris under Bou- guereau, Fleury and Ferdinand Coimon. Exhibited in the Salon, Paris, three times. Associate Director, Fine Arts Academy, Detroit.
114. Motif. Loaned by the artist.
No. 105. THE WEDDING By Gari Melchers
Copyright by the Detroit Publishing Co.
Opel.
o. 82. INDIAN AND TURKEYS By E. I. Couse
THE REFECTORY OF SAN D:
By Julius Rolshoven
JTANO, ASSISI
Copyright by the Detroit Publishing Co.
WOOD ENGRAVINGS
By
Henry Wolf, N. A. ROOM VI
Born Eckwersheim, Alsace, 1852. Accorded an Honorable Mention ai the Salon, Paris, in 1888; a gold medal at the Salon in 1895; an Honorable Mention at the Exposition-Universelle, Paris, 1889; a medal at the World’s Fair, Chicago, 1893; a silver medal at the Exposition-Universelle, Paris, 1900; a silver medal at the Exposition des Beaux-Arts at Rouen in 1903; and a diploma and grand Medal of Honor at the Universal Exposition at St. Louis in 1904, “awarded by the International Superior Jury for his distinguished services for the advancement of the art of wood engraving.” He has served as a member of the American National Juries of Selection for the Paris Exposition of 1889 and 1900; of the juries of selection and recompense for the Pan- American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901, and similar juries for the Universal Exposition, Si. Louis, 1904.
At the age of fifteen he went to Strasburg to study in the school of Arts and Crafts. There he met the wood engraver, Jacques Levy, and through him was attracted to the art and at the same time he sought to perfect his drawing by becoming a pupil of Emile Schweitzer. In 1871 he came to America, and the end of the next year saw him settled in the city of New York, where he has been content to live and work, a citizen of the United States by adoption.
During the eighties and early nineties ‘‘American wood engraving, of which he was the flower, astonished the world by reason of its excellence,” and for the first time Europe looked to the United States for an art and proceeded to follow it. Under the patronage of the Century and Harper’s magazines great strides were made, not only in the intelligent handling of the burin but in perfecting the printing process, and in improving the quality of paper to be printed upon.
36
WOOD ENGRAVINGS
But the work was slow and costly. Photographic processes had already made their appearance, and with the discovery of the “‘half-tone”’ process, which could reproduce drawings and photographs in one-twentieth of the time in which the wood engraver could do it, with a relative reduction in cost, wood engraving at its most brilliant period was dealt a death blow. As the newer method of reproduction gained in popularity, the men who had worked side by side with Mr. Wolf turned, one after another, to other and more lucrative branches of art expression, and he alone remained with box-wood before him and graver in hand striving to express those things, and doing those works, which only time and posterity can truly reward.
In an article, “The Rise and Decline of Wood Engrav- ing,” written by Mr. Wolf, he says: “To engrave a painting is quite different from reproducing a drawing in black and white. Here you have the values before you, the engraver needs only to render them. In the painting there are many colors—relative values that must be taken into consideration—the harmony must be rendered. Oftentimes the painting is very large; the engraving is sometimes in proportion to it as one to a hundred. . . . In such cases the engraver has to eliminate, keeping the eyes on the essential parts, in order not to overcharge the engraving with unnecessary details.
“The wood cutter of Durer’s time reproduced simple facsimile. This required only patience and a steady hand, but little thought. The modern wood engraver has to render tone, light, shade, atmosphere, texture in lines that must be improvised to suit the details of the subject. It requires deep study; the engraver has to calculate how much wood to take out of the block, how much to leave untouched, in order to reproduce in black and white the relative values and the effect of a drawing or painting. The engraver has to be an artist. His art is difficult, the technique is hard to master; he has to practice a great many years till he knows his ma- terial. As the engraver proceeds on his block he cannot see the effect of his work as does the draughtsman, the painter, the sculptor; all he sees are colorless lines and stipple. By his experience only is he able to calculate and see in his mind how the variety of lines will look when printed on the paper. Every line, every dot has to be reckoned with—each one must contribute to the harmonious whole.
WOOD ENGRAVINGS 37
“An untouched plate would print black; lines or stipple cut out with the graver remain white. The graver’s means are stipple, line, and cross line; with these elements he has to run the whole gamut from black to white to reproduce a painting, whether land- scape, genre or portrait.”
It must not be thought Mr. Wolf must wait for posthumous fame to be appreciated. Already his prints are in the great collections of Europe and America—the Villia Doria at Rome, the Ecole au Livre at Paris, Bibliothéque Nationale, Paris, at the Musée Municipal, Strasburg, Alsace, at the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy, Buffalo, New York, at the John Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis, Indiana, and many others, Budapest Mu-
‘seum, Congressional Library, New York Public Library,
etc., and in many private collections.
On the occasion of his receiving a medal at the Exposi- tion des Beaux-Arts, Rouen, in 1903, an art critic of that city said: ‘Mr. Henry Wolf is perhaps the first wood engraver of the world. He possesses a delicacy of burin that hardly allows the execution to be seen; while the suppleness of his graving is such that his proofs might easily be mistaken for paintings in grisaile”’ —a delicate gray. Truly, as Mrs. Chandler says in her appreciation of the master wood engraver, “by some subtle magnetic power he catches the very feeling of the painter, and, through his own fine soul and touch, transmits it to us. While the lines in his prints do not fail to preserve the outward appearance of the original, they fairly vibrate with sympathetic desire to make us know the very spirit of the painting.”
In the present collection one has ample opportunity to study the engraver’s interpretation of paintings by men like Chase, Weir, Sargent, Alexander, Shannon, etc., men still living and whose work is peculiarly associated with this country, as well as Leonardo da_ Vinci, Velasquez, Vermeer, Manet, and our own Whistler. And finally, certainly not least in point of interest, are Mr. Wolf’s four originals—‘“The Evening Star,” “The Morning Star,’ “A Scene in Lexington, N. Y.,” and “Morning Mists.” Surely one may say, with small fear of contradiction, that here at last is a painter- wood-engraver.
SS) ee)
stile) oe 4 ep Nae 8 ave sit ,
RO“ a oR et ieee a ee ke er es ake ie ee m 6 Dm & CH MS DD & SB © DO & © © HH“ 2 & SB © 1
WOOD ENGRAVINGS
Woman at the Window, after Vermeer. Boy with a Sword, after Manet.
Don Balthazar Carlos, after Velasquez. Portrait of a Girl, after de Predis.
Thomas Carlyle, after Whistler.
My Mother, after Whistler.
Miss Alexander, after Whistler
Little Lady Sophie of Soho, after Whistler. Mr. Jean Léon Gérome. 3 |
Sir Henry Irving.
William T. Evans, Esq., after Jongers. Robert Louis Stevenson.
Mr. Joseph Pulitzer, after Sargent. Thomas Jefferson, after Charles Wilson Peale. Beatrice d’Este, after Leonardo da Vinci. The Engraver Henry Wolf, after Irving R. Wiles. Spanish Girl, after Velasquez.
George Washington, after Gilbert Stuart. Judge Jones, after Gilbert Stuart.
Hon. Joseph H. Choate, after Sargent. James C. Carter, Esq., after Sargent.
Girl with Parrot, after Sargent.
Portrait of a Man, after Lenbach.
Portrait of Mrs. Creelman, after Shannon.
25 26 Q7 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 Al
42
43
4A
45
WOOD ENGRAVINGS 39
Portrait of a Lady, after Irving R. Wiles. Lady with a Lute, after Vermeer.
New England Peddler, after Eastman Johnson. The Music Room, after Whistler. Q q, a {2 Shipwrecked Sailor, after Howard Pyle.
A Quiet Hour, after John W. Alexander.
Girl with Mirror, after Irving R. Wiles.
In the Adirondacks, after Wyant.
The Roadside, after R. Swain Gifford.
The Woodgatherers, after George Inness. Information, after Meissonier.
A Mousmeée, after Robert Blum.
A Flower, after John W. Alexander.
A Gentlewoman, after J. Alden Weir.
A Canal in Artois, France, after Cazin.
Le Crépuscule, after Alexander Harrison.
The Evening Star; original engraving by Henry Wolf.
The Morning Star; original engraving by Henry Wolf.
A Scene in Lexington, N. Y.; original engraving
by Henry Wolf.
Morning Mists; original engraving by Henry Wolf.
Day Dreams, after Thomas Couture.
-
pod
y Frat eae eee od Ee ee See SST eat , a fe
SE ES
RTA ent astipeadaeies
DS ie a ani Aa phim
aan tne nn Sg ee aeeeyeenner aber we pee ene
SAa es acohetne a parteeielion-Geabaet oie 4 ea en atone 115.505 Fone ninth wl me Sos raining im a AS 9 San te een Seta pe seth Recreate ante mov ne ae
SRF Ba we peta as ine een oe ete ane oa
eR AR en Ny eRe pe en cee
Slice 5 hee ee = SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION LIBRARIES
wii [
3 9088 01576 7908
Pigs bo poaaie se Ca OA bet eR ROE GE Gt aia 0 at BS atts ih plan nw pam
oe Parag BPR PLO 6 wet 08 ght Serpe oh atte te
a Sine core fae at ag oe ete a Semin png igen Pap fa
aie se eionissiw Shia caipapesipnsciod
Pet Pat ae Pe pre he pe pe peat Mime wm pricpe inags Pipe ipo Ug wipe aay kre pl emtipat so DiS pak SL ag ae pe ook ae Se a Rome pane aca se AO a ee cera inn ee teen aie ear ge aa Meee tes pb or :
wate rae ee ones . Fo meg bycegn ae a baba pope POE? Om joes RPI aL ASO Ap i iA APA LOIRE LOLOL IS Se Ot pe mI es SEE SOP MEL SI AE SINE EO IER AN Peps IE LSE EOI. GEMS PIETIS
ba aren tp, Wo ga hin indepen pend ¥ er ran nem cat hp Doers pangs Sa FEF ¥ SE8 IA 9A 10 pn we Png PO a ta 4 Ee Oe ep Digan a taba pd gee Ragen repr aan de er A wees OP Spee ped any Ae ek ANPP PAP PLD jo oe mi re Ca =:
Pas Rob fer alan pai a aR A Pa ee no BL apart LE PN Soe
batigheen gee ee end 5 seenet edie? os ab BAe
a LORENA Ao pt FAS OPH bt Bk Sm Ppl pe ee 6 Af me ON APE TO Pt 7 PLAS iS pine gs pesto aneg iene ae Nene glee : ne ie Payot oa bay ps Pm a tae PR AO! pie PRE ey
digs miner seca 9 se,
aearn pe vaue
Pyrenean Pape
Matha atte maaae eaigeeie se BLS 0 pn Sg ae
MY PRE AE S H098 gd Pig ELA OO ON Yow pig Le A eT Lm PA ate ioe a PIS pt oO pee eRe St PORE A PE”
Pears Ga at OY PN OITA AR TS PP PO NR
t cacSgmre Spite ery op lip spac eBeDee ee EES PANNE T ps 9h aguas ami eng toa LEY Dapp po ora baron ROA USA pee PGE aden og pO A CP nt th np a PR Ca a DIET AOA An
pera trees Fig sper cain ona ain ae pet SEEM prey Lg hip aig ec lec te cooe ee OOe A A pha IE Ge GA EM PANS Miah IG pa Og 0 IO gh GS pe a PDD PA? Gig VOGT OD ORLA AE OOD PLE te pla EG PI IA IANA APA EERE EE OLE IP"
, add ag is date it Sa digi ve i 4 SS REN Yt Pt FOU NS ehyet WES Dao ee ons wr sealing. . . -, se wae. co OT NA Es ae gue Oe Oe Oe SF iacteteasdnediticts ita cate tamie ed Paved a $9 pe ry Jala beige OSC ag bes passacee pppoe pena Pi Seog bas Lyd ask ir OAM Yo ga El * PI oe OEE yaa eens piebebaanslge 2 SPOR IRC aE = “
ngs’ fi Pore is 9 etre oS ME SATE CLANS pa 5 tS g mL pa page FN EE PANO GIO RPM BE POPS TRE fest p ops Bag Ae PLD RAO OAT OL EERE OR OR
z BAS A AO ABS pb EO Fri) ad Ce nega eae OF O Lp i La OEE AS NOSE pe OO eer pat 0a eames eae) Ape FLL i te Tar een pin Amst a re nt maak ae at no ee fim mag
eed ngae
Prine saris tipase's
ek det ed OE es
Ba
Spo SA pl beaban fun pt GO came sw 2 pita pw bind er nse yA Ac mal ON GE LDN pi hop DIS LAI IS LO LPL” LAGE ICA PS FE DELP GO LEP AIO P orig / ae page eet nh pe ge EN I AT i eet a Dp dime aoe,
we LM om at Pg ge A on ee FPO agi 4 OE SODA patent
Hs pap se oe AE ee en pe
ENT tt SIE TONED
PONS Oa Ft 8 age Prete pert oae® pote tee eID Be gate Dip pe pie AO aa RPM fen pH EG ad tne OI
Pane rag HAO pest ge eo bp peipmiginsete= Sak, Cane pear ona pe a8 NAR IE AY So LM EE YADA IT a IG NP BIP DOES AP LY TIAA e
Fae st seas otis NEA nga A hg Aan WP ao papa end ALD Brad BO fa ge 5 if AAP EAD FC TM LLO LO Ii Dot SRD PIO AEGEAN LOA LARPS AAD IAL ALA EPS LAOS a agence ae glad ded ag net oe EEO pont asec ome DER OA
A spate 8 rgd we oe Po pe ga deer gah eb goinaawpAgU pA eI De, Hoe bap Aibe ay paleo FLAP ag angm ge en ap AR DOES EASE PAPAL Pe Pip ACE tie tA! PRO PO
COS Pre oe en rari pipe we sm aod pb pang ae Pet ke Ah lg ru tN ah EAP PLL dE i GS EY fa BAAR GRE AM AED LER A Gl A
eH teh Ba Reet otnairarnk avec hs boat ated a Ae eer aR Roe OSE TO oe ne Ee LAA ie A eee SEAS IE Ie
2 OE Ia Real ew DEG AAP Abel npr at aD IG AP pela Mh MATELY EH On GLY IOS LL PER RES SL OO 5 PEt I a I tom AD mM aa
Ie POUT SSDI TT ANIA pt gn et LEAR as GAGE REA gt FERPA PO EAE NETO PALAIS. a
ee pe eC I Ie ENERO iT OTST Pee PAE IE IED tee ree oer ah ea a SURE GE ee eI
See a at a mites a ee oh
a Sn ee ee nae
a eres ep enrga men pn
See oe eat ged Gener Sob e De TO cede igs rise os OF abe ge
meio fe inom te Pg Fw P Gag PaO pee Pe pened a pipe
HER EE 9) paar 2 ove
fo pa og
oF a gage fm ij aged ge
iat pa I ap net Sh ES TAD Ae Nt A a PN Eitan cm wae AT ne
Maia the wae iat as meee ates ie Soin enema oanereree sarees 5 5
PEA OO gap act pe peak
Beene fae oO oo td ng Dh) abe gt Panga
St paneer eels: SMO RARER peers apatite pier neato ao mem AT ooED Blpetidhe apr dedutr uA eno omgeyspere orem Dei Bifaip ties pagent. MPEP Pap lige praia inte RIOT AEE ahd Maen ae al has a mares ome ee et ee ete en ton Dime a od a sapesAtie® peietg Spm asl fara ie babe d stiches pared ee OE ob eie mad at ase RST ASG ae Lagos net ha ILA ANEE OL AI BA Cake par ropa SE adit tone ane PA EET Mr LIE PLEA ois sy tite Bape AP AP ping AE be Pe TAPS AMOI EE OS PALA ot A Ve AIO 8 ha ea BRSI PIII ALS PLY NAAR ep et ear eee ate ple Sle Ne te aad ee ea See =; re ee IN MA BAS SGN pS POSE LE PEP A Pa I ID: te GeO O ATRIAL SS me ; Bins oben sie aati ee TAR HOSS mm PI I ARLE em ate PG te EPA A OL it OE nS Sap gag h rere erat go ig e ges esr peel se bere pe a ea a cl a eae - Par sees “ss “ ee Ral ReeeITT iittectpriae Reseda ne TD ee aes ea ene ein prt a A ne oe aed RN AAS AO em mie ROSIE ap get POEL AY ANG AS Bert 5 ra ee heb A Gy parr pal obwig= Oude separ a Fa aetna ate at eae SEO aI tO ET aS er ee ea Neri 4k. tiewpieainbeasinys dente typ, “4 Cayce Md NS pl pene pa ob when me pe pear ire oe pe af? pa Po bee = tee eh? Mes rndn ee Ree p referers pabads peas ne LE FOIA PAIL TEs Ae Me COT Se HL CPE OED al a ete trey erage naib ee POLO TOT ONES ae PRA Ite a ese a jp ee Po 0s nae: ta pes tee a gg 9 LEARNS RO Fe ju penta PLY ta te pane a ST Ne aT Ie OIE SOD eg eee amen meet ASAIO S po ere prion 7 ss Aer ae Be Sopa en apie map ad Soe cA RD AN aap eT EAA aN ge EAE OT ce aS et MeL ad acm paste eeioas pie a tr eye EI BN IRIE RR A NAR TC GP el aes A RAR PD ALLAN DAI AI te hat Pea A SOP A RA, Sse rn Fn Sea api stack ee
nip sawacann 3
ete melrnig
aoe ep ee eg
SE ey re partd ee LILES 5g
ESSE aS SMR Mth piel In tile tetioe emt ate aba areal rea gate bee ee
ER EL isis nn meh nome oe, megs oe ee PAE ae gt pho Sn fed et ait Sk a LD Saag So tan ee Od a Stk TO am SD PRITAM PDS 6 FE , . Pie LG SIE AVES E GE tees Py
PRES A I pte alg DP HLA fn FAREED ion Hot