Word: artistical
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...furor which Ignace Jan Paderewski created in the musical world of 1890 heralded a great artist. Today he fulfills the traditional threescore years and ten of human life. This seventieth birthday of a great pianist is not bounded by reminiscence. Boston would still throng the concert hall to hear Paderewski play...
Here's Audacity! is boldly illustrated by Artist Eben Given...
...forwarded some of his plates to Edward Crowninshield, bachelor brother of Bachelor Editor Frank Crowninshield of Vanity Fair. Edward Augustus Crowninshield, 60, was a famed amateur tennis player of the '90s, second president of the West Side (Forest Hills) Tennis Club. Among his good friends now is Tennis-Artist Helen Wills Moody. One of the first men to play ice hockey in the U. S., he founded, with two others, the St. Nicholas Rink, played on the St. Nicholas team (first amateur hockey team). Few men know so much about Chinese Lowestoft, few own or have handled so many...
Commissioned by TIME to paint the King & Queen of Great Britain in Parliament robes (see front cover) Artist Edward Barnard Lintott of London, Paris and Manhattan* was at home last week in his pale green, high ceilinged 57th Street, Manhattan, studio. Now 54, Artist Lintott looks ten years younger, is large and broad, immensely genial, bears a marked resemblance to London's favorite music-hall comedian, bushy-browed George Robey. As a painter he lived ten years in Paris, studied under the late great Jean-Paul Laurens and Benjamin Jean Joseph Constant, wrote a text book on watercolor painting...
...Artist Lintott painted his first society portrait, after the War, of Lady Diana Manners, as she lay in bed. Since then he has done hundreds, expects to do many more. Privately he hates society jobs, quotes his friend the late great John Singer Sargent that "portrait painting, my boy, is a pimp's profession." One portrait, however, that he thoroughly enjoyed was that of faithful James Miller, ancient, honorable red-nosed steward of Princeton's Ivy Club. Because Artist Lintott painted faithful James smiling quizzically over a silver cocktail shaker, timorous club trustees refused to accept the picture...