Word: dutche
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...burlesque note. Every one of the other characters--except perhaps the city people (from Reinhartz's social Eutopia, Reading)--is strikingly individualized by author and actor. Mrs. Fiske's sureness and beauty of voice and diction alone are a rare treat, set in the fresh surroundings of the old Dutch community and in a stage setting in every way satisfying. J.W.D SEYMOUR...
Rutgers College at New Brunswick, N. J., is to celebrate its 150th anniversary this week. It is fitting that the minister from the Netherlands is to represent his government at an institution where the Dutch Reformed religious faith has dominated. Governor Fielder and representatives of practically every college in the United States are to join in the celebration. One of the features is to be a historical pageant in which 700 alumni and graduates will take part. Springfield Republican...
...this also--as an aid to historical instruction. It is to bring out, concisely and palpably, the great epochs in the artistic development of the Germanic nationalities which in the Middle Ages made up the bulk of the Holy Roman Empire: the Austrian, Swiss, South German, North German, Dutch and Flemish peoples. It is to follow out this development from the age of the Migrations, the Merovingian Monarchy, and the Karolingian Empire on, through all its most important phases down to our own time...
...Lippi, "Madonna and Child"; Turner, "Pas de Calais"; Byzantine panel, 13th century, "Scenes from Life of St. Peter"; Rogier van der Weyden, "Noli me tangere"; Lucas Cranach, "Lady in Red Gown"; Filippino Lippi, "Descent from the Cross"; Moretto da Brescia, "The Magdalen"; 16th century Flemish pictures, "Annunciation," and "Crucifixion"; Dutch pictures, Rembrandt, "St. Bartholomew," Franz Hals, "Portrait of a Man Seated," David Teniers, the Younger, "The Five Senses," Girolamo da Santa Croce, "Portrait of a Man"; Nicholas Maes, "Portrait of a Man"; Rubens, "Meleager and Atalanta"; Nicholas Maes, "The Lace-Maker"; Jacobella, "Madonna and Child"; Corot, "Landscape"; Gainsborough, "Landscape"; Daubigny...
...pictures of exceptional merit have been added to the loan exhibition of Dutch paintings, now on view at the Fogg Art Museum. These are Rubens' splendid "Meleager and Atlanta," and "The Lace-Maker," by Nicholas Maes, a characteristic genre picture of his best period. The paintings which remain on exhibition include one in oil by Rembrandt and one by Franz Hals. There is also an excellent Van Ostade of a group of peasants playing cards, illustrating well the remarkable skill of the Dutch masters of that period in genre painting. These pictures are loaned through the kindness of Mr. Henry...