HOW TO SHOW PICTURES EstelleMHuril "v^* 1 ." ■ 1 " i 31 PBS&- It t f A Ml! am t*3tifl&$j£r "^ V From oarbon print bj Braun, Clement A: Co. John Andrew & Son, Sc. THE HOLY XIGHT ^DETAIL) Dresden Gallery 11* 4 ' ' . ' * * lit •« « .« « HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN BY ESTELLE M. HURLL AUTHOR OF THE RIVERSIDE ART SERIES BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY •Ebe OitJcrtfiDe ptcstf CambnOoc IS h COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY ESTELLE M. HURL!* Cfjc &ibe rstfic JBrcSS CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS U . S . A » • m • * * ; • . < •••.... •"< : : •; •*' •••": : : .\ "' •■ • :'■ '■■• '.:-•■ • •:• . To J. C. II. WHOSE HELP, ENCOURAGEMENT AND CRITICISM HAVE MADE THE IMPOSSIBLE POSSIBLE 419773 PREFACE The first suggestion for this little book came from Miss Elizabeth McCracken, editor of Home Progress, whose enthusiasm and sympathy have been a con- stant inspiration. In her wide correspondence with mothers in regard to the training of children, she dis- covered the need of a book giving practical advice about pictures for children. A similar report came from the libraries, where the same need had long been noticed at the consulting-desks. The call from art educators and public school teachers has been equally urgent. As the custom of hanging pictures in the schoolroom has become almost universal, the demand has arisen for helpful information in matters of art. I am especially grateful to Mr. Henry Turner Bailey, editor of the School Arts Magazine, and Mr. James Frederick Hopkins, director of the Massachusetts Normal Art School, for their words of encouragement and counsel. My chapter on the "Use of Pictures in the Schoolroom" owes much to valuable advice from some experienced teachers. Z\I iss Mary Austin, of the New Bedford High School, a pioneer in the use of pictures to illustrate historical study, has shown me how much can be done in this line. Miss Josephine B. Stuart, supervisor of the Primary Schools in New Bedford, has cooperated cordially in pointing out the many advantages of pictures in the lower grades. To her, and to Miss Lucy Bedlow, director of drawing in vi PREFACE New Bedford, I am indebted for the privilege of put- ting methods and theories to a practical test in the schoolroom. I have had three aims in preparing the following chapters: first, to answer some theoretical questions concerning the hows, whys, and whatabouts of pic- tures; second, to offer practical suggestions to mothers and teachers about showing pictures to chil- dren; third, to supply information about the most desirable picture material for children. The repertory of the art dealers is constantly increasing, and the time will no doubt soon come when all the important pictures of public collections will be available in popular reproductions. ESTELLE M. HURLL. Watertown, Mass., May, 1, 1914. CONTEXTS I. INTRODUCTION The child's delight in pictures — The vital questions concerning the child's pictures — Permanent effect of good and had art on the taste — Difference between the general knowledge of books and that of pictures — The multipli- cation of process reproductions — How companionship helps the child in picture study — Picture enjoyment spoiled by mechanical methods 1 II. THE CHILD AND THE PICTURE The child's first pleasure in pictures due to recognition — The element of curiosity — The story picture and the appeal to the imagination — Subjects to which children are indifferent, portraiture and pure landscape — Prepar- ing the way for enjoyment of nature pictures — Subjects to withhold from children: the vulgar and sensuous, the repugnant and horrible — Mistake of forcing uninterest- ing subjects upon the child — The child's unaffected joy in art 6 III. HOW THE PICTURE IS MADE Advantage to mothers and educators in knowing some- thing of the construction of a picture — Ruskin's defini- tion of composition — Principality — Favorite composi- tional forms of various painters — Repetition — Exam- ples -Contrast — Examples — Consistency and contin- uity — Distinction between the subject and the art of a pietun — The child's gradual awakening to the beauties of composition — Reference books 1C IV. HOW TO MAKE PICTURES TELL STORIES The value of pictures in supplying stories to tell children — The Aurora — Difference in children in hi owing the -ies of the home pictures — The Children's Picture H a Story of Landseer's Shoeing — Prince Ii.ilt;i>;ir on his Pony — Raphael's St. Michael and the Dragon- Child's share in the story-telling — Picture story-telling viii CONTENTS in schools — Millet's Feeding her Birds — Distinction between this method and picture reading as pursued in some schools — The story of Christ's life told in pictures — Christmas story program in pictures and verse ... 26 V. THE GAME OF PICTURE-POSING An old game in a new form — Picture-posing fixes pic- ture in the memory and helps in self-expression — Prac- tical experiments in picture-posing in the schools — Mil- let's Sower — Titian's Lavinia — Murillo's Fruit Venders — Madame Le Brun and her Daughter — Rubens's Two Sons — William M. Chase's Alice — Larger possibilities for the game in the home — Picture-posing in amateur photography — Desirable qualities in pictures chosen for posing — Lists 43 VI. PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS TO THE MOTHER FOR THE CHILD'S PICTURE EDUCATION Decorations of the nursery — Illustrated books — Scrapbooks — Visiting art museums and exhibitions — The use of the camera — Home picture games . ... 56 VII. THE USE OF PICTURES LN THE SCHOOL- ROOM Twofold value of pictures in school, for decoration and to enrich the courses of study — Pictures in the primary school to illustrate the first ideas taught the child, ani- mals, family love, labor — Pictures in language work as subjects for compositions — Distinction between story- telling and description — Pictures in the study of litera- ture — Portraits of authors — Illustrations of poems — Indirect illustration — Shakespearean collections — The evolution of book-making — Illustrations of mythology — Pictures in history — Portrait list — Illustrations of ancient history — French history — English history — American history — Care not to let the utilitarian view outweigh the artistic 65 VIH. ANIMAL PICTURES Essential qualities of good animal art — Animal art among the ancients — Animal painting among early Chris- CONTENTS ix tian artists — Beginning of modern animal painting in seventeenth century — Child's favorites, domestic pets. then wild animals — Pictures <>f children with pets — Many-sided animal life shown by collation of pictures by different artists: dog, lion, deer, horse, sheep, fox — Cat- tle painting in Dutch school — French schools — Land- seer and Bonheur — Henrietta Ronner's eats — Photo- graphs of animals — Reference books — Lists .... 84 LX. PICTURES OF CHILDREN Popularity and value of pictures of children — Late historical development of subject — The Madonna sub- ject — Contrasting motives in two great Raphaels — Charity — Holy Family — Subjects from infancy of Jesus — Child angels — Value of child portraiture — Rarity in Renaissance and popularity in seventeenth cen- tury — Essentia] qualities of good child portraiture — \ elasquez — Greuze — Van Dyck — English eighteenth- century school — Reynolds and his group — Modern examples — Lists — Reference books 97 X. STORY PICTURES Importance of choosing good picture material for story- telling — Distinction between building story on a picture and drawing story out of a picture — Story pictures which never lose interest and those which go out of fashion — Murillo's Beggar Boys — Jan Steen's picture of child life — Peter de Hooch's domestic little girls — Variety of story interests appealing to child in pictures — Dutch seventeenth-century school — Chardin — Millet — Breton — Pictures of haymaking — Horatio Walker — 1 ' tures < »f sea life — Bradford — Winslow Homer — The Fighting Temeraire and the Constitution — Story pic- tures illustrating lives of saints, heroes, and martyrs — St. Margaret — St. Francis — St. Anthony — St. Chris- topher — Maiden saints — Allegory in mural decoration — Life of Jesus — Lists 117 APPENDIX LisL-> of Books for a Working Library in Art Study . . 133 ILLUSTRATIONS Correggio: The Holy Night (Detail) . . . Frontispiece Reynolds: Penelope Boothby Facing 8 Raphael: St. Michael slaying the Dragon ... 22 Landseer: Shoeing 30 Velasquez: Prince Baltasar Carlos on nis pony . 32 Famous Pictures as Posed by School Children — (1) Le Brun: Madame Le Brun and her Daughter (2) Millet: The Sower 46 Titian: Lavinia 48 Millet: Feeding nER Birds 58 Correggio: Diana 74 Michelangelo: The Delphic Sybil 76 Landseer: A Distinguished Member of the Humane Society 86 Reynolds: Miss Bowles 88 Murillo: Jesus and John, "The Children of the Shell" 100 Van Dyck: Charles, Prince of Wales .... 106 Murillo: The Fruit Venders 118 Titian: St. Christopher 126 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN I INTRODUCTION In preparing the Riverside Art Series for publica- tion some years ago, I first came to a full realization of what a picture may mean in a child's life. It is like a magic carpet transporting him to distant realms, or like Aladdin's lamp bringing him for the time being his heart's desire. No figure is too fanciful to express the wondrous capacity it has for quickening the imagination and giving joy. "We can hardly overstate its influence upon the mind and character. It is sometimes said that this is a mechanical age and ours is a mercenary, not an art-loving, people. But this is not the testimony which conies from the home and school. The children all love pictures, love to look at them, love to hear about them, love to possess them. And we, who have the shaping of their youthful tastes, arc eager to guide them aright. We want to consider what pictures our children like best, and why; what pictures W€ want them to like, and why; how we c; n cultivate their taste for the best art, and where W€ an find the material. Such questions con- cern the deep issues of life. If the child's single moment of pleasure were all that was to be con- 2 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN sidered, the matter would be simple enough. The very fact that the imagination needs so little to set it going, and supplies so many deficiencies, makes his elders a bit careless about the pictures they give him. If a poor thing affords him as much enjoyment as a masterpiece, why bother to get anything better? As well give him a comic supplement as a Raphael's Madonna, and trouble no more about it. But the faithful educator is concerned with the child's future, and the object of all culture is rounded development. Everything in the child's environment is chosen for this end, and the pictures should be among the most carefully selected of all his surrounding influences. It is an almost cruel fact of psychology that a lack of youthful training can never be fully made up in after years. We see the inexorable law illustrated in the lives of hundreds of people about us, in manners, speech, and taste. So if children are surrounded by sentimental or meretricious pictures, they are seri- ously handicapped in after life in their susceptibility to noble art. On the other hand, the young mind fed only on the best pictures will by and by turn natu- rally to the good and reject the inferior. If the taste is cultivated in the impressionable years, it will become as sensitive to aesthetic impressions as a deli- cately adjusted instrument to atmospheric condi- tions. The theory is clear enough, but there have been many difficulties in its practical application. For obvious reasons graphic art is not nearly so widely understood or appreciated as literature. It is over four centuries since the printing press brought INTRODUCTION 3 books into general circulation, but it is less than half a century since photography brought good pictures within general reach. It is no wonder, then, that many who are well versed in reading are still more or less ignorant of art. Some of us whose childhood fell in the seventies were brought up among well-filled bookshelves, while the home pictures were few in number and crude in quality. The last twenty-five years have seen a complete revolution in this matter. The home and the school may now be decorated with the same art treasures that millionaires enjoy, and all through the magic of process reproduction. The photographer has carried his camera into every corner of the earth and has photographed all the wonders of nature and archi- tecture. Without setting foot out of doors we may travel all around the world in imagination by cover- ing our walls with photographic views. Even more remarkable is the photographic work done in all the great galleries of painting and sculpture, reproducing for us the world's masterpieces. The Greek marbles of the Vatican and the British Museum, and the works of Michelangelo, may now be as familiar to the children of America as they once were to the children of Athens and of Florence. The paintings of Raphael and Titian, of Holbein and Diirer, of Rembrandt and Frans Hals, of Rubens and Van Dyck, of Velasquez and Murillo, of Reynolds and Gainsborough, of Corot and Millet, of a multitude of contemporary painters, French, German, Dutch, Italian, Scandi- navian, English, and American, are all within our 4 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN reach, if we will put forth our hands to take them. Besides photographic prints, there are all sorts of so- called process pictures, photogravures, half-tones, and so on, ranging in price from several dollars to one cent each. The reproductions are in delicately shaded grays and browns, some even in facsimile colors, interpreting the original beauty of the pictures with wonderful accuracy. With such treasures at our command, the coming generation ought to become as familiar with good pictures as with good books, and should be able to discriminate as correctly in artistic as in literary matters. Educators and parents are striving towards this end. A child's pleasure in a picture is greatly increased by the sympathetic companionship of an older per- son. Though his imagination is keener than his elder's, his powers of observation are presumably less developed. His natural impatience to turn the page of a book, or hurry on to the next room of a gallery, can be restrained by pointing out the details of the composition. In forming habits of observation, the memory is trained to retain distinct images of the pictures worth knowing. It is surprising how vague our ideas are of many supposedly familiar things. The Sistine Madonna, for instance, is probably one of the best known pictures in the world, but if one were called upon to describe it fully, how many recall the foreshortened hand of the Pope, the crossed legs of the Child, the Virgin's bare feet, and other similar details? A clear memory image of a masterpiece is a sort of touchstone to carry about as a test for other pictures. INTRODUCTION 5 The first rule in all our dealings with children is not to talk down to them, and this is especially true in selecting their pictures. Nothing is too good for them. Some pictures may treat subjects beyond a child's comprehension, but none are beyond him in artistic excellence. The best children's pictures were not made for children at all. Only the illustrators of children's books have consciously addressed a juve- nile audience. The great masters worked in obedience to their own heavenly vision, and it is one of the tests of success when a picture appeals equally to all ages and all sorts and conditions. Pictures are primarily intended for pure aesthetic joy, and it is a thousand pities to assume a didactic tone in showing them to children. Let them be, like the stories we tell, among their dearest delights. Above all things else we must avoid mechanical methods of instruction as the most deadly blight to the imagination. We cannot be too careful lest the child's perception be dulled by prosaic influences, or his taste vitiated by unworthy material. For the imagination is the key by which we unlock the doors of beauty. While the divine gift is still unspoiled, the child is most keenly alive to the joys of life. II THE CHILD AND THE PICTURE In selecting pictures for children we must take the child's point of view. He likes a picture for what it shows him. His interest is in the subject, not in the art. He does not know or care whether it is beautiful, or cleverly treated, rare or famous or what not. He wants to know what it is about. If it represents something which pleases him, that is enough. He has reasons of his own for his preferences, apparently growing out of very simple psychological principles. It is for us to study and gratify these childish prefer- ences, making them a stepping-stone for the higher appreciation of art. I recently asked a young mother what pictures her little boy likes best. "Animals," was the prompt reply. Glancing around the nursery, I saw a perfect men- agerie of toys: horses, dogs, cats, sheep, etc., in every imaginable material from rubber and china to the most realistic imitations in skin and fur. The father had begun in the child's infancy to bring home toys of this sort, and it was a natural transition from toy to picture. A baby girl's first toy is commonly the doll, and from this the natural transition is to pictures of babies. If daddy happens to be fond of yachting, the boy's first toys are likely to be boats, and from these he is ready for shipping scenes. If mother has THE CHILD AND THE PICTURE 7 a fad for gardening, the little girl, brought up among flowers, will naturally like pictures of flowers. Both boys and girls spontaneously point out other chil- dren as soon as they begin to "take notice." Natu- rally enough, then, the pictures of children secure their immediate response. In short, the child's first pleasure in pictures seems to consist largely in the principle of recognition. He is proud and pleased to be able to identify an object. You arouse his interest in a picture by pointing out the familiar features. The other day I dropped a bank-book which opened on a small woodcut of the "Institution for Savings," a very uninteresting edifice. My four- year-old nephew fell upon it eagerly. "See the cunning house," he exclaimed, gazing at it with the rapture of Ruskin before the cathedral of Amiens. This plainly was the sheer joy of recognizing a familiar thing in miniature. The child's first favorites, then, in the way of pictures, are from the subjects most familiar to him in his toys and surroundings. These are easy to supply, and should be in the best possible form, artis- tically and mechanically. They should represent large, plain, simple objects, making what educators call a "unit." Many designs intended for children are made in a decorative style to please the illustra- tor, and are not at all suitable for the young. Intri- cacy of line is confusing to the child's rye. A figure must emerge well from the background to be clearly distinguished. Impressionism is not for children. At fir.^t the pictured object is not so satisfying as the 8 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN real thing, because it cannot be handled. The pic- tured baby cannot be hugged, nor the pictured animal dragged about the nursery floor. In the course of time, however, pictures make a place of their own in the child's affections. They are perhaps the most restful of all his playthings. Certainly they afford his most quiet amusement — much to the mother's relief. Next to the principle of recognition in the child's picture experience comes the element of curiosity. He is eternally asking questions and trying to in- crease his stock of ideas. Pictures like all other objects will contribute to this end. From pictures of domestic pets so easily identified, he passes with awe and curiosity to pictures of wild animals which have never come into his ken : elephants, camels, and lions; and from these again to mythical beasts like the dragon. From pictures of houses and churches, such as he sees daily, he turns with inquiring eyes to views of splendid public buildings such as he has never known. From children of his own class, in dress and appearance like his own, he advances to the child life of other periods and lands. In these cases the new thing is enough like the old to seem halfway familiar, and still so unfamiliar as to stimulate new interest. The child must begin with what he can understand, but his thirst for knowledge gives him a zest for something beyond, not so far beyond, how- ever, that it is in outer darkness. The universal rule of progress is by one step at a time. It is singular how the opposite pleasures of recog- nition and curiosity alternate and balance each other PENELOPE Bi M I I IIUV THE CHILD AND THE PICTURE 9 in a child's likes and dislikes. All boys and girls have a strong conservative element in their make-up, the girl clinging tenaciously to her battered old dolls, and the boy loyal to his dismembered dogs and horses. At the same time they are always teasing for some new toy or amusement. So with pictures. At times they seem interested only in something familiar, and again they utterly refuse to look at the "tiresome old" picture book they "know by heart." I have a box of miscellaneous prints which tests the caliber of many an unsuspecting little visitor. While I am busy at my desk, this box is explored, and the dis- coverer brings me the special treasures selected. I remember one little girl whose amusement consisted in counting out the pictures she herself happened to have. Another surprised me very much by finding a few old photographs I had entirely forgotten. They were Nativity subjects by some early Italian painters, quite archaic in style and supposedly unattractive to a child. But in this case they were the reminder of a happy hour in the schoolroom, and the child poured forth to me the story of the manger as she had heard it from her teacher. All the charming modern chil- dren's pictures counted for nothing beside these which suggested a familiar train of thought. ( 'hildren of a different temperament choose the striking and unusual things to have them explained. 'What is the giant [St. Christopher] going to do with the baby on his shoulder?" " Why does a little boy [Prince Charles] wear a lace bonnet, or a little girl [Penelope Boothby] lace mittens?" 10 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN As soon as the child is capable of grasping more than one object at a time, or, in other words, of relating the various elements of a composition, he progresses from the single object, or unit, to the story picture. His pleasure is now of a higher order than mere recognition or curiosity: it is the awak- ening of the imagination. This faculty once aroused needs only the right touch to transport him into a paradise of joy. The good story picture is the great desideratum. This may be illustrative of a text or anecdotic in itself. In either case his lively fancy finds plenty of exercise in reading the story into the picture or the picture into the story. The story subjects he likes best at first are those drawn from his own little world, but he soon grows to new inter- ests. As kindergartners so well understand, children enjoy seeing things done, and those pictures are ever popular which portray the primitive tasks of life like spinning, knitting, sewing, churning butter and feeding hens, sowing the seed and gathering the har- vest. Other subjects follow in due order, and go far towards widening the horizon of the child's mind. There are certain classes of subjects to which the child remains long indifferent. He has no use for adult portraits, generally speaking, unless they are connected with some story. They are all very well to vary the monotony of a history lesson, but taken by themselves, they are dull and uninteresting. This is natural enough. What normal, wide-awake child enjoys sitting in a company of silent grown-ups? Landscape art pure and simple does not interest THE CHILD AND THE PICTURE 11 the average child to any extent. The love of nature in early years is due in a measure to the exhilarating effect of air and sunshine. The great out-of-doors is a glorious playground in which the child delights to sport like any other healthy young animal. As his mind develops, the latent esthetic impulses are awakened. He rejoices in the "shout of color to glad color, " and his heart leaps up at the sight of the rain- bow in the sky. Though beauty must make its first appeal to the senses, it finds its way at last to the inner spirit, quickening the imagination, and creating a joy which is quite of its own kind. We can never draw a hard-and-fast line between the sense experi- ence and the underlying aesthetic joy, but we come to recognize the signs of the deepening experience in our children's maturer years. In the mean time we can hardly expect a pictured out-of-doors to produce the same effect that the world of nature does on the child. It lacks the stimulating influence of sun and air. Nature pictures like nature poetry must bide their time. We need not be discouraged if our chil- dren fail to respond to Corot and Inness, but we can please them best by giving them photographs of the woods and meadows associated with their own sum- mer outings. They usually respond more quickly to actual views of natural scenery than to ideal land- scape. Subjects representing the unusual and striking in nature, like Niagara Falls and the majestic peaks of the Alps, also arouse their interest. Another open- ing wedge to the appreciation of pure landscape art is the animal picture with landscape setting, like some 12 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN of the Dutch or French cattle subjects. It has been a capital idea in some schoolroom decorations to arrange a series of such subjects to follow the se- quence of the seasons. This correlation of landscape art and nature study makes a pleasant introduction to an otherwise uninteresting subject. In schools where pupils are taught to recognize the forms of trees, I am told that landscape pictures take on a peculiar interest if they contain well-defined tree examples. Besides the subjects which the children do not themselves like are those which we do not want them to like. The vulgar and the sensuous should, of course, be eliminated from their repertory. The imagination should be fed only on the pure and clean. The beauty of the human figure should be taught chiefly through the ideal forms of great sculpture. The child familiarized with the austere and chaste nobility of the Greek gods will be embarrassed by no impure suggestions. The repugnant and the horrible should likewise be kept from children. We pride ourselves that we have traveled a long way from the mediaeval period when churches were decorated with the martyrdom of saints and the last sufferings of the Saviour. In their place we have moving-picture shows which display all the details of disaster and crime as if actually taking place before our eyes. Philanthropists are trying to save the children from patronizing these places, and we must avoid a similar element in illustrated newspapers and magazines and in prints. If a child is attracted by such things, he THE CHILD AND THE PICTURE 13 shows a morbid taste which should be repressed. If he shrinks from them, he should be carefully guarded from anything which will give a shock to his sensitive nature. I recently heard of a little boy of five who was convulsed with grief over the fate of a picture kitten — left alone on a rock in a stormy sea. A friend of mine once confessed to me that she had never quite recovered from the horror of a vivid picture of the Deluge shown to her in her childhood. The grotesque often has a certain comic element in it which has its value in amusing the child, but the line is sometimes hard to draw between the grotesque and the gruesome. I have seen illustrated books of fairy tales in which the ogre who looks so funny to the grown-ups is a very alarming creature to the child. The children who are terrified by the circus clown — and there are not a few such — are of the kind whose pictures must be carefully chosen. Pictures which are outside a child's range of inter- est should certainly not be forced upon him. If he is overdosed by zealous parents and teachers with sub- jects beyond his comprehension, or not appealing to his preferences, he may revolt altogether. Whatever a child likes to hear about, or read about, or look at in real life, that he enjoys in a picture. We must look, then, for the material which connects naturally With the average child's experience, and we should provide it in sufficient variety. Some of us recall with amusement a period in the nineties when the schools "discovered" the Madonna, so to speak, and the children were treated to the subject till they 14 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN were tired. A little girl I knew, coming home to lunch one day to find a dish she especially disliked, exclaimed wearily, "If there's anything I hate it's turkey soup and Madonnas." Boys and girls have different tastes, corresponding to their different interests. On the whole, however, we may be fairly sure that all children will like pictures of animals, pictures of child life, and pictures with story interest. Under these headings I have collected a quantity of available subjects for home and school use. In our collecting we must never forget to choose good art. Though the child himself finds his chief delight in what the picture is about, we must take pains to note how it is made. We remember that it is not for to-day merely, but for the future, that we are building. Let the first pictures be such as will last a lifetime, so that the man may never be ashamed of the treasures of his boyhood, enjoying them in increasing measure as he develops the higher appreci- ation of art. The child's enjoyment of pictures is unhampered by any prejudices or preconceived ideas. There is a certain advantage in having nothing to unlearn. The motives which actuate the adult do not affect him at all. It means nothing to him that a picture is by Raphael or Titian, as he has never heard of these worthies. When his love of beauty is aroused, it is an unaffected joy. We must never force our own tastes and opinions upon him. It is better to admire the wrong thing sincerely than the right thing insin- cerely. As the child learns more about the principles THE CHILD AND THE PICTURE 15 of art and craftsmanship, the critical faculties enter into his experience and enrich his pleasure. At a certain stage of his development we can help the child to understand and appreciate how the picture is made, as I try to explain in the next chapter. The whole tale of our art enjoyment is a threefold one: the perfect picture satisfies the senses, stimulates the critical faculties, and inspires the spiritual imag- ination. The body, mind, and spirit are all involved. The keener the senses, the more susceptible the imag- ination and the more extensive the technical knowl- edge, the greater will be the capacity to enjoy. The most encouraging thing about training the aesthetic sense is that if started right, and properly nourished, it will come to sure fruition. Ill HOW THE PICTURE IS MADE If you are giving a child a cake, it adds nothing to his enjoyment to tell him that it came from an expen- sive caterer, that it contains certain ingredients and was made by certain rules, or that it will contribute to his nourishment. If it is good, he eats it and wants more, and your object is accomplished. The careful mother, however, must be sure that the cake comes from a trustworthy source, and is composed of whole- some materials, and if she is of the domestic sort, she knows pretty nearly how it was made. So in the matter of pictures: one need not worry the child by didactic explanations in regard to the artist or his art, converting his pleasure into a "lesson." Yet all that teacher and mother can learn about the making of the picture will enable them the better to choose those pictures which will foster the child's love of art. The critical knowledge, which increases so much our own aesthetic enjoyment, may little by little be imparted to the child as occasion offers. The more unconsciously he absorbs such instruction, the better. The art of teaching at its highest point is an art of concealing art. How, then, is a work of art produced? By a mere haphazard process? Assuredly not. In the first place, the mere mechanical achievement of reproducing a HOW THE riCTURE IS MADE 17 drawing or painting in the form of a print is a marvel. We accept this as a matter of course, as we do alS other manufactured articles. In this age of industrial miracles, we have no time to praise one above another. Behind the machinery is the artist with his simple tools, pencil, brush, and color. Here is the wizard perform- ance by which a few dexterous strokes will transform a blank sheet into a living creature, or fill vacancy with a fairy world. Outwardly the success of his work depends upon his craftsmanship. He must be master of a thousand technical details. He must know anatomy, perspective, the values of light and shade, modeling, drawing, the mixing of colors, and whatever else has to do with the manipulation of the raw materials. Of all that makes up the so-called technique of art the ordinary layman has little ink- ling. Only one who has tried his own hand at it has any notion that what looks so easy is really so hard. And just as a few elementary lessons in the use of any musical instrument give the amateur some faint idea of the skill represented in a great orchestra, so the drawing lessons of the public school train the eye to discriminate between fine and faulty draughtsman- ship. It is a fashion in certain social circles to fre- quent the haunts of artists and pick up some of the studio vernacular, but it is a question how far this goes towards raising art standards. What will really help us to a more intelligent appreciation of a picture is to understand its structure. For every noble work of art is based on principles as well defined as the laws of nature, — principles which are common to all 18 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN the branches of the fine arts : painting, sculpture, po- etry, music, and architecture. It is true that in the highest creative work, the artist acts as by inspira- tion, without conscious analysis. But when his work is done, it is tested by its conformity to certain laws of composition. The symmetry of a tree seems like a happy accident, but as a matter of fact there are phyllotactic laws governing the position of every branch. The stars seem scattered over the sky as carelessly as the leaves on a tree, yet each one is a world revolving in a fixed orbit by immutable laws. Nothing "happens" either in nature or art. "Composition means literally and simply putting things together so as to make one thing out of them, the nature and goodness of which they all have a share in producing." This is Ruskin's definition in the Elements of Drawing, and I have never found a better one. It means that in a true art composition there is a reason for everything. Not a single line or spot of color is superfluous or meaningless. Every touch contributes to the whole effect. The architect, sculptor, painter, musician, and poet shape their materials into a complete and perfect oneness — a unity. The methods of reducing variety to unity constitute the laws of composition. To begin with, a picture contains some one feature to which all others are subordinate. This is Princi- pality, and by this law every means should be taken to fix attention upon the supreme point of interest. In some cases the scheme of color brings the impor- tant element into prominence. Again the method of HOW THE PICTURE IS MADE 19 lighting is the artist's device for emphasizing his Leading idea. In a portrait by Rembrandt the won- derful high light in the face illumines the very soul of the sitter, and is intensified by the heavy shadows from which it emerges. In most pictures the principal features are shown by the use of a diagram or frame- work, so to speak, on which the linear composition is built. One can trace the structural form by connect- ing the strongest lines of the picture. Notice, for instance, how carefully the four figures are placed in Landseer's Shooing. ()n the left side the three heads — the horse's, the donkey's, and the dog's — are all in line. On the right, the blacksmith stands so that his entire figure will come compactly within the diagram. One of the commonest compositional forms is the pyramid, which was a favorite device with the Italian masters, especially Raphael. Some of his Madonna pictures and Holy Families, referred to in my lists, are in this style. Murillo used this form a great deal in arranging his groups, the Children of the Shell being an excellent example. The lamb is lying in such a position that a line drawn from the Christ-child's head to the left corner forms one oblique side of the pyramid, and the diagram is completed on the other side by a line running along the back of the kneeling St. John. The two Fruit Venders also lean towards each other in attitudes which bring the figures within a pyramidal outline. Sir Joshua Reynolds, who, like Murillo, derived much from the Italians, arranged many portraits in pyramidal style. Miss Bowles is an 20 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN instance, the spreading dress on one side and the spaniel on the other helping to produce the desired effect. Many of Millet's peasant figures, like the Milkmaid, the Man with the Hoe, and the Woman Churning, are posed in a way to suggest the pyrami- dal outline. In all these cases, of course, the apex of the pyramid is the focal point of the picture, the point the painter wishes you to see. Some beautiful elliptical designs are illustrated in compositions by Botticelli, the Lippi, and Michel- angelo. The Delphic Sibyl of the Sistine Chapel ceiling is drawn in this form. Trace the curve de- scribed by her scroll and continue it along the edge of her robe to form an arched line on the left side. This meets the complementary curve of her back and makes a complete ellipse. Even more wonderful, perhaps, is the Italian tondo, or circular design, so perfectly consummated in Botticelli's Incoronata and Raphael's Chair Madonna. Here the lines flow around in concentric circles, producing a charming effect which has been likened to the clustering petals of a rose. Titian had a way of bisecting his space with a diagonal line, as in the Pesaro Madonna, where the draperies fall in a sort of cascade across the picture. The portrait of Lavinia is designed in the same way, the foundation line being the long curve running diagonally across the canvas from upper left to lower right corner. Van Dyck and Rubens, who were Titian adorers, imitated this method with great success. Van Dyck's St. Martin dividing his Cloak with a Beggar is constructed in II the Leading idea of the picture. In describ- ing a picture to one who has not seen it, or in showing a picture to a child, we are unconsciously guided by this law of Principality in picking out the most important feature of the picture at the first glance. Next to Principality let us note the law of composi- tion most pleasing to the child: Repetition. No one who reads or tells stories to children can fail to observe the gurgle of delight which greets the recur- rence of some repeated line. How eagerly the little listener waits for the catch phrase. The oldest story- tellers made abundant use of this principle, as we see in the Old Testament literature, and it is the most captivating quality in popular verse and song. Repetition is the simplest element in decorative design. One'of the child's never-failing amusements is to pick out the repetitive feature in the rugs and wall hangings. The first lessons in designing are based on this principle, and teachers often use the 1 Palace in Venice to illustrate the beauty of this device. Repetition occurs in a picture in many forms: in color, mass, or line. "We see it illustrated in a very .simple way in Landseer's composition of the Newfoundland Dog where the cloud forms repeat the ripples in the water. A clever example of Repe- tition is found in the favorite school picture of Prince 22 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN Baltasar on his pony (Velasquez). How charmingly the boy's scarf and sash, and even his baton, empha- size the diagonal line described by the pony's spirited attitude. Without any suspicion of the reason, the child catches the buoyant sense of the forward motion expressed in the whole picture. Precisely the same idea is carried out in Guido Reni's Aurora in a suc- cession of parallel curves across the composition. Long before either of these pictures was painted, however, Raphael had set the example in St. Michael and the Dragon. In this composition the uplifted spear of the warrior angel makes a line parallel with that running the length of his right side and along the right leg, while his sword swings back in a line parallel with the left leg. These devices add to the spirited effect of the attitude. Repetition is offset, compositionally speaking, by Contrast. This principle, as the word implies, means a direct opposition of elements, light to dark, the perpendicular to the horizontal, the convex to the concave, etc. The main diagonal line of St. Michael and the Dragon (running from upper left to lower right) is offset by the diagonals running directly across them. These contrasting lines may be traced, one across the left arm and left wing of the angel, and another across the outstretched arms of the prostrate victim. In exactly the same way the curve of Lavin- ia's uplifted arm cuts across the curve of her swaying body and Diana's right arm cuts the long line extend- ing from her left hand to her right foot. The drawing of Millet's Sower is on a similar plan. The predomi- Y;- v ; " S I. MI( MAI I -I. WIN''. THI I' ' n ■ . . Pc HOW THE PICTURE IS MADE 28 nant curve of the Aurora is similarly counterbalanced by a series of shorter lines curving in the opposite direction. Contrast comes into effective play where a good many figures are brought together: youth offset by age, gayety by seriousness, motion by repose. The angelic beauty of Raphael's St. Michael is contrasted with the ugliness of Satan; the rugged strength of St. Christopher by the infantine face of the Christ-child; the aristocratic sleekness of the horse in Landseer's Shoeing by the shaggy coat of the plebeian donkey. Such devices, however, must not be too pronounced. They are held in check by the laws of Consistency and Continuity. In other words, the elements of a good composition are homogeneous, and hold to- gether well, so to speak. All the color should conform harmoniously with the one scheme and the flow of line should be complete and satisfying. It is obvious that the art of a picture may be con- sidered quite apart from the subject, and that we may admire the composition as such, either in color or line, whether the subject is "pretty" or not, and whether we like or dislike the theme. The word "art" is not a synonym for prettiness or sentimentality, though the popular taste so often calls for these qualities. Some of the noblest pictures contain figures which are far from "pretty" in the general acceptance of that term, like Millet's Milkmaid, or Water ( arrier, or the Man with the Iloe. Van Kyck's famous portrait of the Man with the Pink represents an almosl ludicrously ugly subject treated with con- 24 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN summate artistry. Rembrandt's Anatomy Lesson, which repels the average person, is one of the world's masterpieces. It is often with pictures, as with novels, whose cleverness we are bound to admit, but whose themes are unpleasant or objectionable. A Drunken Bacchanal by Rubens may delight us for its color, or a Tavern Brawl by Teniers or Brouwer attract us for its life and action, however disgusting we may think the subject. The distinction should be kept clearly in mind between subject and art. Never- theless, the perfect picture is that which unites noble ideals with strong craftsmanship. Such should be the art we set before our children. No hard-and-fast rules can be laid down about the age at which the child may be taught the artistic qualities of a picture, so much depends upon the natural aptitude. Generally speaking, children are curious to hear how things are made. They like to see the wheels go round, and they are pleased to learn that even pictures have secrets. Repetition and Contrast are the most readily noticed of all qualities. Often without any hint from an elder the child points out in a picture one, two, three spots of red, or a curved line here and another like it there. The pupil who is fond of drawing may very likely ask questions which will open the way naturally to simple explanations. He is quick to see how his lessons in design may be applied to the structure of a picture. I knew a boy of fourteen who became much inter- ested in Raphael's compositions as a help in his camera work. He had attended an art lecture only HOW THE PICTURE IS MADE 25 for the fun of hearing his sister speak in public, but when the diagrams of the various Madonna groups were explained, he observed at once their application to the arrangement of figures in photographs. An intelligent lad who has a definite motive like this can learn a great deal by placing tracing-paper over the photograph of a good composition, and outlining in pencil tin- strongest lines. I am confident that ingen- ious mothers and teachers can make a great deal of picture-posing or tableaux to show the children how much better the effect is when the figures are properly related. The boy taking the exact pose of Millet's Sower, and the girl posing a la Lavinia must get some notion of the rhythmic flow of line in these master- pieces. Another chapter is given to the full explana- tion of this subject. When the botanist analyzes a flower he must needs leave it in fragments, but the process once over, he ever after remembers the blossom in its entirety. The critical analysis of a picture would be a sad process if it were the end and object of our interest. Whatever we see in the beauty of its make-up should help us to enjoy it better as a whole. For the true work of art, like one of God's flowers, is made first and foremost to delight the heart of man. Reference Books: — M. S. EmeBT. Hmr to Enjoy Pictures. John C. Van Dyke. Art for Art's Sake. Charles II. Caffin. Guide to the Study of Pictures. John Riskin. Element* qf Drawing. Arthur W. Dow. Composition. George Lansing Raymond. The Genesis of Art Form. IV HOW TO MAKE PICTURES TELL STORIES A child's insatiable thirst for stories is one of the demands which every mother has to meet as best she may. The story-teller's gift is a special endowment not vouchsafed to many. The most of us have to cultivate it assiduously for the benefit of the little ones. We rack our brains for new ideas, or look through many books in search of interesting subjects. Even when we have a good story to tell, we begin haltingly, failing in the power to express ourselves fluently, and unable to produce a vivid impression. Now here is where a certain class of pictures can help us out amazingly. The picture which illustrates a dramatic situation, in other words, the anecdotic or story picture, has undreamed-of possibilities in the way of story entertainment. It furnishes us a subject and puts the story into our very mouths, so to speak. All children take naturally to pictures, and we secure their attention at once when we produce a print or open an illustrated book. Usually, however, their interest quickly flags, unless guided by an older com- panion. The young mind, untrained to concentra- tion, flits from subject to subject, as a butterfly from one blossom to another. But let the mother begin to talk about the picture, and the child fixes eager eyes upon it, and follows every word with breathless atten- HOW TO MAKE PICTURES TELL STORIES 27 tion. And "talking about" a picture is simply letting the picture talk, provided, of course, that it is the right sort of picture. The artist does all the work: one has only to follow his thought. Xo descriptive phrases are needed: the objects describe themselves. The process of unfolding the story becomes more and more fascinating as we go on, and the teacher usually learns more than the pupil. Suppose the child comes with the familiar request at a moment when the mother is too weary for any new invention. Her eyes fall upon Guido Reni's Aurora hanging over the mantelpiece. It is one of the colored reproductions so many people bring home from abroad and which our large art stores now sell. Here is a story ready to hand. She begins in this wise : Every morning the sun god Apollo starts forth on a journey across the sky. Aurora gives him the signal and leads the way, floating in the air and scattering roses on the sleeping world which lies far below. Apollo sits in his chariot and guides his horses four abreast, as they dash along so swiftly that the wind fills out his fluttering garments and blows back his golden curls. The little winged love god Cupid flies through the air just over the team carrying his flam- ing torch, for wherever the sun shines, love and joy are sure to follow. Apollo is accompanied by all the hours which fill the day, each one beautiful, no two alike, and every one bringing the right time for some special duty or pleasure. First come the maid- ens of the morning in the delicate colors of early day- light, their faces full of anticipation. Then follow the 28 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN glowing noontide hours in warm colors, when life and strength are in their fullness, and then the waning hours of afternoon in pale tints and with pensive faces. All are linked hand in hand, keeping perfect step, none missing and none delaying. So the proces- sion moves along, and presently the world awakens to welcome the Dawn, and to follow the course of the chariot across the sky. If you look out of the window and gaze up towards the sun, you may see how far Apollo has gone on his way, and you know that the horses are still speeding onward that every hour may have its turn in blessing the world. A very simple world-old tale is this, which you might never have thought of putting in this way if the Italian painter had not composed it for you. In homes which are decorated with good works of art the natural beginning is with the subjects on the walls. When the children come to love the pictures with which they are surrounded, they will hold fast to these ideals all their lives. The "silent influence" of good art is all very well in its way, but it will be greatly strengthened by a little judicious story- telling. I was rather shocked one day when a charm- ing young girl, halfway through college, professed that she knew nothing at all about any of the beauti- ful pictures with which her home was filled. I have a small boy friend, only five years old, who could quite put her to shame with all he knows about the pictures in his home. He is on familiar terms with Titian's Lavinia and Sir Joshua Reynolds's Miss Bowles, and likes to tell of the little English maid's frolics with her H()\V TO MAKE PICTURES TELL STORIES 29 spaniel in the great park where we see them. He loves the Si>tine Madonna and explains how the beautiful mother, with her baby boy upon her arm, hearing from afar the call of the Buffering and sorrow- ful, came out of the dim angel hosts of heaven and hastened forth with shining eyes to bring her child to help people in their trouble. I shall be much dis- appointed if this promising child does not grow up to discriminate between Raphael and Bouguereau, between Reynolds and Greuze, between the strong and sincere in art, and the weak and sentimental. If we have good success with our picture story- telling, it will gradually take a place of its own in the home life. The "Children's Picture Hour" should be a regular institution corresponding to the "Story Hour," and perhaps alternating with it at certain intervals. The mother should keep a good supply of pictures on hand, with some always in reserve for a surprise. They are easier to get than books, and cheaper, too. The art dealers have excellent lists of penny, nickel, and dime prints, and if we wish some- thing more expensive, we may get fine photographs from original paintings both at home and abroad. Files of old magazines are a rich storehouse of treas- ures. From their pages we may cull pictures by famous illustrators, like Howard Pyle, E. A. Abbey, Maxfield Parrish, Boutet de Monvel, Jessie Wilcox Smith, and many others. The typical child's collection contains plenty of animal pictures, and these are a prolific source of story material. Landseer's Shoeing is just what we 30 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN want to explain the blacksmith's occupation and tell a story about the bay mare standing at the forge. Her name is Betty, a fine, high-bred creature with straight legs, arching neck, and a pure white star on her forehead. Her master, Mr. Bell, takes pride in having her rubbed down till her glossy sides fairly shine. She is so intelligent that when the time comes for her regular visit to the blacksmith she walks off of her own accord to the familiar spot. The blood- hound Laura, her boon companion, has followed her here. No halter is necessary to keep her standing, but she takes her place quietly as if perfectly at home. A shaggy little donkey is also there waiting his turn very meekly. When Betty appeared at the shop, the blacksmith first removed her old shoes and pared and filed her feet. Then he chose new shoes as near the right size as possible and shaped them one by one. Holding the shoe in his long tongs, he thrusts it into the fire while he fans the flame with the bellows. Thence it is transferred, a glowing red crescent, to the pointed anvil near the window. Now the work- man swings his hammer upon it with ringing strokes and the sparks fly up in a shower. The soft metal is shaped at will, the ends are bent to form the heels, the holes pierced for the nails, and the shoe is ready to try on. If it is a satisfactory fit, it is thrust hissing into a barrel of cold water, and when it is hardened, it is nailed to the hoof. Betty is now having the left hind shoe fastened in place. The blacksmith holds her foot between his legs against his leather apron. Laura thrusts her nose out inquisitively as if super- SHOEING National &i. HOW TO MAKE PICTURES TELL STORIES 31 intending the job. This outline of a story can be filled in with many details in regard to each of the four figures in the picture. The blacksmith's tools and even the birdcage may come in for a share of attention. The picture of Prince Baltasar Carlos on his pony (by Velasquez) carries a story winch any one may read on the surface, but which may be greatly en- riched by some historical information about the original of the young cavalier. The whole story runs something like this: In the country of Spain, nearly three hundred years ago, lived a prince name Bal- tasar Carlos. He was the first child of King Philip IV and Queen Isabella, and was therefore the heir- apparent to the tlirone of a great and powerful king- dom. The king was a sober, long-faced man, but the prince was a chubby boy, of sunny nature and win- ning ways. Great hopes were centered in his future, and he was his father's idol as well as the darling of the court. Whatever toys were to be had were of course supplied to him, but in those far-away times there were none of the wonderful mechanical inven- tions which are made nowadays for children's amusement. To entertain the little prince, a dwarf was employed as a playmate. 1 But Prince Baltasar liked animals better than toys, and playing with his pets was more fun than playing with a dwarf. This pleased the king very much, for he was himself a true sportsman, and the best horseman in Spain. lie was determined to give his son every advantage of fine 1 See picture of Prince and Dwarf in the Boston Art Miw-um. 32 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN physical training. The prince was sent to a riding- school when still a tiny child, and showed great skill and daring. His Uncle Fernando, with whom he was a favorite, was almost as proud as was the king, of the boy's sportsmanship. He made the prince fine presents of armor and dogs, and once sent him a spirited pony. By the time Prince Baltasar was six years old, he could ride his mount like a little man, sitting erect in the saddle with perfect ease. He had, of course, many fine clothes, as became a prince, and he liked to wear a certain green velvet embroidered jacket, with a bright-colored sash tied diagonally across his breast with the fringed ends fluttering behind. With this costume he had a high-crowned, broad-brimmed hat which was very jaunty. As a crowning touch, his gauntlets and riding-boots gave him a look of real manliness. Dressed in this way he had many a fine gallop along the country roads, exer- cising the plump little pony, which was so well fed in the royal stables that it needed a brisk gallop now and then. The pony was as playful as his rider, and knew how to please his master. Of course a prince could not ride unattended. His riding-master or some courtier followed at a suitable distance to see that no harm befell the boy. Some- times this attendant would go on ahead, wheel around, and watch the little cavalier approach. Then how proudly the six-year-old boy would square his shoulders and sit at attention. To teach him how to bear himself as a king, he was given a baton, the symbol of authority, and told how to carry it, and PRINCE BALTASAR CARLOS ON HIS PONY Tin- Pi i ' ■ o .'. -■ v. \fa frid :.•%'•.,.*'•; : • . HOW TO MAKE PICTURES TELL STORIES 33 how to use it to give orders. It was like playing he was field marshal at some great military occasion. The pony seemed to enter into the spirit of the game, by leaping forward with great effect. The king had a court painter named Velasquez, of whom he was very fond. Velasquez had become much attached to the royal household, and liked nothing so much as to paint the portrait of the young prince to please the king. He had visited the riding-school to watch the boy's progress in horsemanship, and often saw him on his country rides. The inspiration came to him that he could make a splendid picture of the scene, and he threw himself into this task with unusual enthusiasm. He used a large canvas, which made the subject seem very real and lifelike. The king was so proud of it that he kept it in his favorite palace, and it has been handed down to our own day in all its original beauty. The highest aim of every faithful parent is to im- press upon the children the necessity of fighting against temptation. So great is the power of evil in the world that we have come to speak of it in personi- fied form as a terrible beast going about seeking whom he may devour, or in Biblical phrase as the fallen angel Satan, the arch-deceiver, who makes wrong- doing attractive and lures the weak to destruction. The old legend of St. George and the Dragon is really an allegory in which the soul's victory over sin is expressed. An attractive picture of this subject, like Raphael's or Carpaccio's, will be a great help in the home in teaching the desired moral. The subject 34 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN of St. Michael slaying the dragon is even better, and Raphael's spirited composition is an admirable illus- tration from which to tell the story. St. Michael is described in the book of Revelation as one of the archangels, the warrior who leads the angelic hosts to victory in the great conflict between the powers of light and the powers of darkness (Rev. ix, 7). Swift as a flash of lightning is his motion through space, his aim is unfailing, his arm powerful. At his coming the Evil One falls prostrate and writhing, his courage vanishes — for he is really a coward ; he knows there is no hope for him, the end has come. With one strong, sure stroke the avenging spear does its work, and the enemy is put down forever. No anger mars the victor's serene countenance, for his is a holy cause. His face shines with heavenly glory. He is eager to be on his way as a messenger of peace rather than an avenger. The world beyond is waiting for him, and he scarcely pauses for his work; his wings are spread, and his body poised for immediate flight. And so we, having put down once and for all the tempting thought, go on our way rejoicing to the good deeds of the day. In making a picture tell its story, our aim is to lead the child to look as well as to listen. If we do all the talking ourselves, his attention will wander from the object before him. A few questions will help him to draw out some of the story for himself. If he points out the salient features as we mention them, his interest is quickened and his powers of observation stimulated. By and by he will know the picture by HOW TO MAKE TICTURES TELL STORIES 98 heart, and is proud and pleased to retell the story. He will then clamor for another, but he is always faithful to his iirst favorites. The joyous pastime of making pictures tell stories is quite as feasible in the school as in the house, except that here with a larger audience the picture must be large enough for all to see. Almost every modern schoolroom, especially in the primary grades, boasts at least one such treasure. Millet is a prime favorite, and one of the most familiar schoolroom subjects is the so-called Feeding her Birds. This is the kind of picture which tells its own story so readily that the children know it by heart and never tire of it. The baby brother is the pet of the two sisters. They have been playing to- gether in the yard, and it was for him that the rude cart was made which now lies discarded during the lunch-time. They have played so hard that they are glad to sit down in the doorway to rest. Their funny wooden shoes make a noisy clatter when they are moving about, but now all is still save for the clucking of the hens which run up in the hope of getting some crumbs. Father is still hard at work in the garden and mother never rests but in this feeding-time. How hungry they all three are, yet the sisters generously let the little brother have the first taste. The younger of two girls can hardly wait, but watches the spoon with open mouth. Usually it is broth which French peasant families make the chief article of a meal, nourishing and appetizing. And the warmth is agreeable, too, we may be sure. For though the 36 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN weather is mild enough for gardening, it is not so warm but that close caps and high-neck dresses are worn. If the school supply of pictures is rather limited, the enthusiastic teacher may supplement it with bor- rowed prints of large size from outside sources, — library collections and private houses. Who would not be glad to lend a favorite picture to a schoolroom for a week, that the picture might tell its own beau- tiful story to the children? So much has been said and written of late about the value of story-telling in the schools, as a means of recreation and education, that it is superfluous in this place to present any argu- ments in its favor. Our teachers all believe in it heart- ily, but many are timid in their experiments, and lack confidence in their ability. Good pictures will fortify them wonderfully for the task and furnish the necessary material. It will be seen that making pictures tell stories is somewhat different from the so-called " picture read- ing " used in some schools as a part of the language work. The latter is apt to be fabrication rather than interpretation, and leads the child far afield. Is it not taking a great liberty with a fine work of art to tack an entirely extraneous story upon it? One could so easily spoil a good thing in this way. The child grown to years of discretion may wish with all his heart he could forget some of the foolish tales of his own invention about some masterpiece. Picture story subjects may be of various kinds, dealing with child life or ranging over all the world HOW TO MAKE PICTURES TELL STORIES 37 interests, dealing with the life of the home or with outdoor pursuits, illustrating history, legend, or mythology. In another chapter I have classified sonic of the material most available and desirable for the purpose. Many of us believe that the most important story subject we can possibly present to the children in our homes is the life of Christ. This is the story, too, which many mothers find the hardest to tell at their own initiative. The New Testament narrative is a little beyond the child's early understanding, and is somewhat lacking in the explicitness which the child loves. The artist's imagination here comes to our aid with his wonderful magic. With a wealth of illus- trations to draw from, we have only to set the pic- tures before our children and the story unfolds itself with very simple interpretation on our part. We need not be troubled about theological explanations, or stumble over difficult Biblical phrases. The picture does all the story-t riling. It shows how the angel Gabriel came to tell Mary of the high calling of her coming bab.-; how the young mother bent rapturously over her child as he lay on a bed of straw; how the shepherds came from the fields, and the wise men from the East, with their gifts; how the mother carried her babe in her arms aa she rode on a donkey into Egypt, with Joseph leading the way; how the twelve-year-old boy astonished the learned doctors in the Temple by his wise questions; how Jesus, come to manhood, was tempted in the wilderness and baptized in the river Jordan; how he went about doing good, gracing the wedding feast, blessing the 38 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN children, encouraging the fishermen, healing the sick, and raising the dead ; how he was transfigured before three of his disciples; how he sat at supper with the twelve on the eve of his betrayal; how he was ar- rested, falsely accused, brought before Pontius Pilate, and crucified; how he rose again from the dead, ap- peared to Mary in the garden, ate supper with two of his friends at Emmaus, and finally ascended into heaven. Some of the print manufacturers have complete sets illustrating the life of Christ from good works of art. These are desirable possessions alike for the home and Sunday School. I am inclined to think, however, that a child prizes most a collection which has been accumulated slowly rather than bought as a whole, especially if he adds to it by his own exertions. Illustrations may be cut out of magazines, religious weeklies, and advertising literature of various kinds and supplemented by bought prints and post-cards. I must here tell of the little nine-year-old girl to whom I once gave a scrapbook of my own making containing good Christ pictures arranged in chrono- logical order, which became her chief delight. We began by reading the story together as the pictures unfolded it. How eagerly we passed from page to page till we reached the glorious climax. It was not long before she preferred to tell the story all by herself, and I can still hear the little voice falter sor- rowfully over the picture where his "cruel enemies crucified him," lingering tenderly on the next page where the loving women prepared him for burial, then breaking out joyously, "But he rose again from the HOW TO MAKE PICTURES TELL STORIES 39 dead and finally ascended into heaven." The child, now grown a woman, still keeps the tattered "Jesus book" among her cherished treasures. What the child's mother thought of the book may also be of interest. It came at a moment when she most needed it — longing as she was to have her little girl know and love the Christ story, but feeling shy and incom- petent to tell it in her own words. The pictures gave her confidence, and literally furnished her vocabulary. The same sort of testimony came to me some years later when I published the Life of Our Lord in Art. A woman who was almost a stranger stopped me in the street one day to tell me how she used the book as a means of telling the Christ story to her children. "I didn't know just how to begin," she said, "and the pictures solved the problem for me." A picture story program for Christmas-time can be arranged as a very acceptable entertainment either in the home or school. In the larger gatherings a stereopticon or radiopticon is more effective, but the mother talking in her own home circle can use any sort of prints. The Nativity story can be made up in a series of pictures from the Old Masters, each one interpreted by verses or old carols. Good Christmas poetry is as abundant as good Christmas art, and it is pleasant to match the subjects, making the poet tell the story of the picture. From my own collection I have arranged a list something like this: — 1. Lumi*s Nativity in the Cathedral at Como. (A choir of angels overhead.) Interpreted by a verse from Richard Watson Gilder's Christmas hymn: — 40 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN "Tell me what is this innumerable throng Singing in the heavens a loud angelic song? These are they who come with swift and shining feet From round about the throne of God the Lord of Light to greet." 2. Correggio's Notte of the Dresden'Gallery, or Fritz von Uhde's Holy Night. Interpreted by Alice Archer Sewall's poem, "How Love Came": 1 — "The night was darker than ever before (So dark is sin) When the Great Love came to the stable door And entered in. "And laid himself in the breath of kine And the warmth of hay And whispered to the stars to shine, And to break, the day." 8. Van Dyck's Presepio, Corsini, Rome (child asleep on mother's lap). Interpreted by G. K. Chesterton's Carol : — "The Christ-child lay on Mary's lap." 4. Bouguereau's Repose (angels playing on musical in- struments and baby asleep). Interpreted by the Benediction Carol (Dyke's) : — "Sleep, Holy Babe, upon thy mother's breast; Great Lord of earth and sea and sky, How sweet it is to see thee lie In such a place of rest. "Sleep, Holy Babe, thine angels watch around, All bending low with folded wings Before the incarnate king of kings, In reverent awe profound." 1 From Ode to Girlhood and Other Poems, copyright 1899, by Harper and Brothers. HOW TO MAKE PICTURES TELL STORIES 41 5. Three Wise Men on the Way, by Portaels, or Three Magi, by La Farge (Boston Art Museum). Inter- preted by the old hymn, "We three kings of Orient are," or by the third stanza of Richard Watson Gilder's Hymn. 6. Ghirlandajo's Adoration of Kings, or Burne-Jones's Star of Bethlehem. Interpreted by Burdett's Carol, the second stanza of which tells, — "How they opened all their treasures Kneeling to that infant King; Gave the gold and fragrant incense Gave the myrrh in offering." 7. Lotto's Adoration of the Shepherds (at Brescia, Ma- donna kneeling) . Interpreted by this verse by Estelle M. Hurll, in Christian Endeavor World, Christmas, 1911: — " Upon her knees before the Holy Child The mother falls adoring. This is He Whom prophets have foretold, the Undefiled, Whose coming all the world has longed to see. A heavenly messenger proclaims his birth, Angelic voices loud hosannas sing: She humbly prays and bows herself to earth, The 6rst to worship him as Christ the king." 8. Raphael's Chair Madonna. Interpreted by an old carol : — "When I see the mother holding In her arms the heavenly boy. Thousand blissful thoughts unfolding Fill my heart with sweetest joy. . ........... "Each round other fondly twining Pour the shafts of mutual love, Thii-k as flowers in meadows winning Countless as the stars above." 42 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN 9. Botticelli's Madonna in the Louvre. Interpreted by Alice Archer Sewall's poem, "Madonna and Child": 1 — " Little Son, little Son, climb up to my breast, And lie amid its warmth at rest." But shut those stranger eyes from me, My Rose, my Sorrow, my Peace divine, And call me ' mother ' and not ' Mary,' Although thou art not mine. " It is I would climb to thy little breast. O, hold me there and let me rest! It is I am weak and weary and small, And thy soft arms can carry me. So put them under me, God, my All, And let me quiet be." 10. Raphael's Sistine Madonna, as a climax to the pro- gram, is best interpreted by some single verse expressing the devotional spirit of the Christmas story. Some suitable ones from old church hymns are: — "Good Christian men, rejoice With heart and soul and voice; Now ye need not fear the grave: Peace! Peace! Jesus Christ was born to save. Calls you one and calls you all To gain his everlasting hall: Christ was born to save." or "Praise to Jesus, Holy Child, Gentle infant meek and mild; Who can fill all hearts with peace, Who can make all sorrows cease. Hail the messenger of love Sent to man from God above." 1 From Ode to Girlhood and Other Poems, copyright 1899, by Harper and Brothers. THE GAME OF PICTURE-POSING Of many delightful ways of familiarizing our chil- dren with good art, the game of picture-posing is one which captivates the child's fancy at once. It is an attempt to "act out" or reproduce a famous picture. The child "plays" he is the figure in the picture, and assumes the same pose and gesture to the best of his ability. The game is a somewhat modernized version of one of the most popular of old-time amusements, the tableau rivatit. In days when most of our pleasures were home-made, "tableaux" were next in favor to amateur theatricals. They were a favorite pastime in stormy days indoors, when we invented our own subjects as we went along. The multiplication of children's amusements has relegated this fashion to the background, but it is now being revived in new form. The idea of reproducing famous masterpieces has usually been associated with the more ambitious efforts of public entertainments. To adopt it as a children's game is a comparatively new departure, just as it is a new thing for children to get masterpieces in penny prints. The plan is well worth working out both in the home and the school. The theory is perfectly simple. What could make children look at a picture more attentively than the suggestion that they are to reproduce the action of 44 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN the figures? To get the pose and arrange the drapery correctly, they have to make a careful study of the lines and masses of the composition. While they are having a great deal of fun, they are unconsciously learning something of pictures. They are surely not likely to forget the make-up of a picture they have handled in this way. Quite aside from the art stand- point, such a game is a means of developing self- expression. On this ground it is of special interest to the primary teacher. It connects closely with the dramatic games now growing in popularity in the schoolroom. Apparently it accomplishes similar results helping the child towards flexibility and free- dom, while it gives him something worth remember- ing all his life. Some wonderful and never-to-be-forgotten morn- ings of picture games have strengthened my confi- dence in this new educational method. I had the privilege of visiting a primary school, to try a pro- gram with the children, and the experiment suc- ceeded beyond my fondest expectations. Besides my parcel of pictures, the rest of the apparatus was of the most limited kind. The teacher and I had hastily col- lected a few odds and ends in the way of properties. It is not necessary or desirable to introduce costumes and accessories into the schoolroom. In the home the conditions are altogether different and permit an expansion of the idea as I shall presently explain; but in the school the plan is on the simplest basis. Our selection of pictures had been made very carefully on this account. Pose rather than costume was the THE GAME OF PICTURE-POSING 45 guiding principle of choice. So we took the following six subjects: — Millet's Sower; Titian's Lavinia; Murillo's Fruit Venders; Madame Le Brun and her Daughter; Rubens's Two Sons; William M. Chase's Alice. My big parcel was eyed with eager curiosity, and every little face broke into smiles at the announce- ment of a new game. To prepare the way, the chil- dren first played one of their dramatic games, and while the runaway sheep were in the meadow, and the cows in the corn, little Boy Blue being fast asleep in the corner, we had a chance to pick out the boys and girls best adapted to the picture roles. It was a slum neighborhood with a mixture of nationalities; most of the children were poorly dressed, and some were very dirty. It might seem an unfavorable field for an art experiment. But what we wanted most was respon- siveness, and this good quality was found in abundant measure. The Portuguese children promised well for the Spanish types of Murillo's street children, and plenty of boys would do for the Sower, but how to match, among the ill-clad, anaemic little children of the poor, the plump, richly gowned Lavinia, or the elegant, high-bred sons of Rubens? However, we did not let such difficulties deter us. These sons of toil need the picture study, even more than the children of the rich, to bring beauty into starved lives. We had 46 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN come for their benefit, not to arrange an elaborate art entertainment for a cultured audience. We began our program by fastening to the black- board a large photograph of the Sower, and telling the familiar but ever new story of seed-time and harvest : how the sower carries in his bag the precious grain to feed many hungry folk; how the seed falls into the ground to soften and swell and push up a tiny shoot; how the blades grow into tall, strong stalks which bear the wheat-ears; how the grain ripens and is made into flour, and finally into fragrant loaves of bread. The sower's task is far-reaching in its results, and he regards the planting season very seriously. The story made every boy in the room want to be a sower, and we called up a little fellow to the desk and posed him just below the picture. The rest of the children formed an expectant audience, looking from picture to poser to pronounce upon the merits of the reproduction. The small sower was given a half-tone print to examine carefully, and then he manfully stepped forth as if to his task. The teacher's large shopping-bag was slung over his left arm and we taught him how to fling his right arm to and fro to scatter the seed, describing the arc of a circle in the motion. After repeating this action several times, we arrested his arm at the proper point to imitate the gesture of the picture. We were well satisfied with his success, and if his tremulous smile was not quite like the solemn dignity of the Norman peasant, it was certainly pleasant to see. Titian's Lavinia now replaced the Sower on the MADAME LE BRUN AND HER DAUGHTER THE SOWER FAMOUS PICTURES IS POSED BY SCHOOl CHILDREN » % • r TIIE GAME OF PICTURE-POSING 47 wall, and the children listened to the story of the old Venetian painter's devotion to his motherless daugh- ter. I told them how he loved to dress her in pretty clothes to make pictures of her; how he used to send for her when he was entertaining his guests in the garden and let her bring luscious fruits for their refreshment. When the question came, "Would any little girl like to play Lavinia?" every girl in the room was at our disposal. A little Jewess with kinky hair and round face came nearest to the type, but her "middy blouse" made her impossible. The child who wore the right kind of dress (as to cut) had little sticks of arms too weak to lift a tray of fruit. Here was a dilemma till the resourceful teacher hit upon the simple expedient of having the two exchange dresses for a few minutes. Lavinia advanced shyly, but forgot herself in the absorbing occupation of arranging the fruit just as in the picture. We had supplied a ten-cent silver tray for the purpose. Care- fully but decidedly the child placed each apple, then set the lemon aslant in the foreground, and laid on top the pink cotton rose we gave her. Then she took a long, steady look at the picture, as she was bidden, lifted the tray to the level of the forehead, turned her face to the audience, and behold Lavinia in the flesh. With instinctive grace she had poised the tray in exactly the right way, her plump arms describing the same curve as the original Lavinia's. An immediate success like this is a rare inspiration. Perhaps one ought not to expect to reach perfection twice. When the photographer came the next week to catch 48 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN Lavinia in his camera, the long delay in setting up the instrument wearied the child, and stiffened her muscles. At the critical moment she clutched the tray bravely but awkwardly, and did not lift it high enough to produce the right effect. So our best pic- ture of this little school Lavinia is only a memory. The story of the Fruit Venders appealed mightily to a class of children who themselves earn money by selling fruit, candy, and papers. As the photograph was pinned up, it brought forth a murmur of ap- proval : the subject was within the experience of the audience. The girl of the picture has sold out her stock and is counting over her earnings, while the boy, who is but just setting forth, looks on with generous pleasure in her success. It is a charming tale of cheer- ful industry and good fellowship. We chose a boy and girl of the same relative ages, who were much in earnest to do their parts well. An empty waste- basket was rather an inadequate representation of the young merchant's large stock of Andalusian grapes, but it was of the proper size and shape for the pose, and happily the children's imagination was equal to the supply of this trifling deficiency. Madame Le Brun and her Daughter requires no accessories, and of course we did not disrobe our model like the lady of the picture. The photograph brought forth the story of another idolized artist's daughter, the painter this time being a charming Frenchwoman, A picture or a story illustrating family love is always welcomed by the teacher as an opportunity to impress an obvious lesson. For this • rj * /p* *^ ^ V i>j' - 1 • 1 1 * i h 4r»^i Hr k. A Jl *J -3? 1 l 2 ; Si Pr. Ilk* I OVINIA Berlin Gallery THE GAME OF PICTURE-POSING 49 group we arranged a teacher with an affectionate little girl who was only too pleased to embrace the object of her affection. The subject is not quite so easy aa it looks: the lady must be seated at a height to require the child while standing to reach up a bit to bring her head to the mother's chin. The little arm must fall within the bend of the larger arm, to form a parallel curve. When the group is arranged the out- line should describe the form of a pyramid. Rubens's Sons is a lovely presentation of brotherly companionship. When this picture was put up, I explained the rich velvet and satin costumes as the Flemish court dress of the seventeenth century. The artist was court painter to the Archduke Albert and Isabella, and was in high favor with royalties. So he gave his eldest son the name of his patron, and both buys enjoyed all the advantages of his wealth and station. But fine clothes did not seem to spoil them as they sometimes do less sensible lads; their frank round faces make them very likable. It happened that one of the boys in our school was an Albert, and he was eager to play the part of Albert Rubens. For the younger boy, whose name was Nicholas, we found a lad of proportionate height. The two took their places below the picture. Of course boys are not expected to wear velvet and satin in school, and our models were not at all embarrassed by their shabbi- ness. They were proud and pleased with the honor, and blissfully unconscious of any incongruity between their threadbare suits and the elegant attire of their prototypes. Indeed, for the time being they fancied 50 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN themselves dressed like the picture. As they looked at the print we asked each in turn, "How are the feet placed?" "Where is the right hand?" "Where the left?" and at every inquiry, the member in question assumed the proper position. A curious detail in the picture is the captive goldfinch whose perch is held by the younger boy. To secure a similar use of the hands we took a school ruler. It occurred to me after- wards that a more pictorial substitute would have been a small flag, or perhaps a whirling paper "windmill." The picture of Alice needs but little explanation to the average school girl. Skipping rope is one of the favorite games which never loses its fascination. To substitute a ribbon for a rope and draw it tightly across the back seems a simple matter. Yet the pic- ture is hard to make satisfactory simply because it requires entire self-forgetfulness to free it from stiff- ness. The original Alice is having a delightful time with no thought of looking pretty. Our little Alice, when practicing privately in the school hall, threw herself into the game with charming abandon and grace, not unworthy of the original. But when the eyes of the schoolroom were focused upon her, she lost her charm. Only a 'premiere danseuse would feel at ease under such circumstances. We carried the picture program from grade to grade, and in each room made a special hit with some one subject. With older classes we took more pains to explain the lines of the composition, illustrating the idea by simple diagrams on the blackboard. The THE GAME OF PICTURE -POSING 51 counterbalancing diagonals in the figure of the Sower, as well as of Alice, the pyramidal outline of the group of the Fruit Venders and Madame Le Brun and her Daughter, tlu> curves of Lavinia's swaying body and uplifted arm, were all pointed out in the pictures and in the models. A six-subject program is inordinately long, and was permitted only for purposes of experi- ment. Under ordinary circumstances, in the school- room, a single picture at a time, like a single dramatic game or a story, is quite enough for an occasional exercise. A pleasant device for giving all the children a chance to take part is to have the girls all stand- ing together for the Lavinia pose, and the boys all together for the Sower. A single girl and boy may then be called out to pose for the class. When we see how much can be done with the game cf picture-posing in the school, it is easy to imagine the almost endless possibilities for its enjoyment in the home. Here there is no need of haste, as in the schoolroom, and time and thought may go towards perfecting the result. Here, too, are facilities for accessories and costumes to complete the faithfulness of the reproduction. The repertory of subjects can be greatly enlarged. Many pictures, impracticable in the schoolroom for lack of theatrical properties, can be worked out easily in the home. With a large fam- ily of children or a neighborhood circle, it may be developed as tar as one may wish. The effect is en- hanced by the use of a frame. It is important to hold the children to a strict ideal of accuracy in the essentials. For this reason a single 52 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN picture should be done over and over again. We become fond of certain ones, as of certain oft- repeated songs. Every attempt ought to better previous efforts, and all the family must learn to be very critical. Every detail of the composition should be examined, remembering that nothing is too small to have a reason for its introduction. The angle at which a hat is set, the direction of the eyes, even the length of a ribbon, may seriously affect the success of the picture. Picture-posing opens a very interesting class of subjects for the amateur photographer. When his ingenuity is taxed for new ideas, he can find pleasure and profit in reproducing the compositions of the masters. If he has groups of figures to arrange, he may interest his sitters in posing a la some famous portrait group of an old master. The subjects for picture games cannot be chosen at random. A great deal of thought must go into the selection. Millet's figures are admirably adapted to the purpose. They have the plastic qualities of sculpture, and by merely reproducing attitude and gesture, the poser suggests the essential quality of the original. Other artists have made much of cos- tume, and the success of the reproduction depends upon the careful study of these details. This is the case with Van Dyck and Velasquez. The English and Spanish royalties whom they painted would never be recognized without their court finery, for there is little distinctive in their attitude or gesture. Many famous portrait heads by the old masters are THE GAME OF PICTURE-POSING 53 remembered for their quaint or fantastic headgear: the so-called Beatrice d'Este with her gold-meshed hair-net; Beatrice Cenci, with her big turban; Hol- bein's Jane Seymour, with her pointed cap; Botti- celli's Lucrezia Tornabuoni, with the pearl festoons and strange aigrette. Some of Reynolds's child pictures are delightful subjects within reach of all. Penelope Boothby's mob cap and lace mitts, Sim- plicity's cap, and the Strawberry Girl's turban are easily imitated. Of course, the kind of portrait painting which depends upon psychological interest is quite beyond the province of our simple game. An elaborate landscape composition is also obvi- ously impossible in house tableaux without painted scenery, and it is best not to be too ambitious in this direction, keeping to the simplest settings. An out- of-doors program may be arranged in the summer, making a unique entertainment. Then the Sower, and the Lark, Murillo's Beggar Boys, and some of Reynolds's portraits can be rendered with most satisfactory effect. After a few experiments in picture-posing, children will enjoy selecting their own subjects, rummaging through illustrated books and magazines for their material. The following lists may be helpful as a beginning: — Single Girl Figures — Titian's Lavinia. Chase's Alice. Reynolds's Penelope Boothhy, Age of Innocence, Miss Bowles, Strawberry Girl. 54 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN Bouguereau's Broken Pitcher. Greuze's Broken Pitcher. Madame Le Brun's Girl with Muff. Hoecker's Girl with Cat. Breton's Lark, the Gleaner, the Shepherd's Star. Girl portraits requiring careful costuming — Old Italian — Beatrice d'Este. Titian's Bella. Van Dyck's Princess Mary (detail of the group of Chil- dren of Charles I). Velasquez's Princess Margaret (bust in the Louvre). Velasquez's Princess Margaret (full length in Vienna). Velasquez's Princess Maria Theresa (full length in Madrid). Single Boy Figures — Millet's Sower. French's Minute Man (sculpture). Velasquez's Mcenippus, iEsop. Manet's Boy with a Sword. Reynolds's Little Samuel. Volk's Young Pioneer. Sully's Torn Hat (head only). Cuyp's boy head. Boy portraits requiring careful costuming — Gainsborough's Blue Boy. Millais's Bubbles. Watteau's Gilles of the Louvre (without accessory figures). Van Dyck's William of Nassau. Van Dyck's Prince Charles (detail of the group of Chil- dren of Charles I). Van Dyck's Prince James or " Baby Stuart " (detail of the above group). Paris Bordone. Boy's head. Two Boys — Rubens's Sons. Millais's Princes in the Tower. THE GAME OF PICTURE-POSING 55 Boy and Girl — Murillo's Fruit Venders. Millet's Potato Planters, Angelus, and Going to Work. Boughton's John Alden and Priscilla. Millais's Huguenot Lovers. Van Dyck's Prince William and Princess Mary (elab- orate costumes). Older Girl and Small Child — Bouguereau's Sister and Brother. Millet's Knitting Lesson. Madame Le Brun and her Daughter. Sergeant Kendall's An Interlude. Older Girl and Two Children — Abbot Thayer's Caritas and Virgin Enthroned. VI PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS TO THE MOTHER FOR THE CHILD'S PICTURE EDUCATION To surround the child with good pictures chosen from subjects of greatest interest to him and in suf- ficient variety, to train his eye gradually in artistic discrimination and color feeling, to awaken his sense of joy in beauty, — this has been the burden of my little preachment. So may we wisely foster a love of art which will delight and enrich his life. The mother who has these aims in view always welcomes eagerly any helps towards carrying them out. Story-telling and the game of posing I have described at some length as two important picture pleasures of the home and school. It still remains to make a few practical suggestions to mothers who are anxious to provide every advantage for the child. To begin with, the nursery decorations are of prime importance. The place should be a veritable picture gallery of delight to the little folks. For a child's symmetrical development, there should be as much variety as possible in the selections, both in subject and treatment. Delightful as are Sir Joshua's children, and beautiful as is the Madonna theme, the nursery should not be all Sir Joshuas and Madonnas. Where two Madonna pictures are hung they should represent quite dissimilar ideals : the Chair Madonna PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS 57 contrasted with the Sistine, an Italian work with a German, or an old master with some modern picture. In methods of arrangement, some of the kindergarten ideas may be borrowed to advantage as they are ingenious and practical. A frieze on the level of the child's eyes, made of separate prints and changed from time to time, is a pretty thing. Also a burlap screen on which pictures may be fastened tempo- rarily. The color element should be decidedly promi- nent but should be carefully studied to harmonize with the scheme of decoration. The bright, crude prints once regarded as peculiarly adapted to chil- dren have given place to artistic process work in soft tints and low key, which the child soon learns to prefer. Anything that is good in itself may be pressed into service, however cheap the form, post-cards in harmonious colors, magazine supplements, artistic calendars, and what-not. But with all the cheap and transient material, let us have one truly great thing as a fixture in the nursery, as an inspiring influence to follow one from the cradle to the grave. A Ma- donna and Child, St. Michael and the Dragon, the Boy Christ in the Temple, the Children of the Shell, or the Guardian Angel are especially good for this purpose. For other subjects consult the lists of ani- mal, child and story pictures. If the house is too small for a distinctive nursery, the living-room should contain at least one conspicuous picture which is of special interest to the child. One of Millet's sub- jects makes an excellent all-around family favorite. Illustrated children's books should be chosen with 58 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN great care. It is false economy to buy crude, poor books from the bargain counters in order to spend more money on toys and other less important nursery furnishings. A really good illustrated book is copy- righted and commands a good price, as it should, but it is worth the cost. Happy the nursery possessing any of Boutet de Monvel's priceless volumes, or Walter Crane's illustrated fairy tales, or Kate Greenaway's lovely designs. 1 Not the least attractive of illustrated nursery volumes are the children's scrapbooks of their own making. For this purpose the material should be accumulated gradually, as a delightful pursuit, the mother gently directing the collection that it may consist of really good things. It is best not to draw the lines too sharply to discourage a child, but so far as possible weed out inferior pictures from time to time. A scrapbook of miscellaneous pictures is best adapted to the little ones, but as children grow older they are more interested to specialize in their col- lections. Definite subjects may be chosen for their books : animals, child figures, mythology, chivalry, his- tory, Italian art, American art, Bible story, the life of Christ, famous beauties, authors, royalties and so on. A very pleasing idea for boys and girls bearing his- torical names, or names of saints, is to find pictures of their famous prototypes. The Georges may look for 1 Among present-day illustrators, Jessie Wilcox Smith, Millicent Sow- erby and Arthur Rackham do charming work for children. A beautiful art treasure for children is Mrs. Isabel Anderson's Great Sea Horse, a col- lection of fairy tales with illustrations designed by the mural painter, John Elliott. t • \ »-• -;'■■•. t Br*ua ' lemrat ^ I >. I 1 I DING HER BIRDS PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS 59 the subject of St. George and the Dragon, or for the figure of St. George in armor represented in so many old altar pieces. They will find also portraits of sover- eigns, painters, and poets of that name, as well as a certain United States President. The Marys, Cath- erines, and Margarets will find charming pictures of saints of corresponding names among the works of old Italian masters. Cooperation and competition are the life of collections as of business. The children will keep up their interest much longer if the parents join with them in their search, and the fashion must spread through the neighborhood to give greatest zest to the game. Never throw away a good picture. A large box or drawer may be set apart for the purpose and the children taught to carry thither every print or card that falls into their hands, and which for the moment they do not know where to place. From time to time the contents may be examined and sorted. Some of the pictures will do for one kind of scrapbook and some for another. Some may be laid between the pages of books, as extra illustrations. Your books of history, travel, and biography may be greatly en- riched in this way by portraits and views collected from various sources. Some of the tiny pictures may be put together for doll's scrapbooks. Some may be mounted on cards for Christmas or birthday gifts, decorated with appropriate inscriptions — or quota- tions from poetry. Growing boys and girls should be encouraged to fill their own rooms with pictures of their own choosing. Even if they make mistakes, the 60 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN experience will help towards forming their taste. They usually get together a medley of posters, souvenir programs, college pennants, valentines, and snap- shot photographs. But in the midst let us see that they have some really good picture which has come as a Christmas or birthday gift. Some strong and interesting heads for a boy's room are Michelan- gelo's David, Rembrandt's Officer, and Frans Hals's Laughing Cavalier. A girl of fine feeling likes the heads now commonly separated out by photograph- ers from famous compositions of old masters (Luini, Perugino, Raphael, Titian, etc.); Angels, Saints, or Madonnas. Burne-Jones's Flamma Vestalis, or Rossetti's Blessed Damozel are also favorites. Other subjects of suitable kinds for our young folks' rooms are suggested in the various lists scattered through these chapters. The practice of taking our children to art mu- seums and exhibitions is one which cannot be too often urged upon parents. It is worth making a great effort and even going a long distance from time to time to afford the child this advantage. 1 Such a visit must be made a genuine treat, — not a disguised lesson, — planned and talked of beforehand as a festive occasion. Naturally it is a part of the festivity to have a car-ride and a luncheon. The first object is 1 In the Metropolitan Museum, New York, delightful art lectures for children have drawn hundreds of juvenile visitors to the place and in Boston professional story-tellers are employed to conduct children's parties through the Museum. But these public methods, valuable as they are, should not be substituted for the visits of parents, with their own children, to study the pictures together. PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS 61 to pet impressions, and as the whole atmosphere of the place is unique, it eannot fail to produce some effect upon the imagination. One need not feel dis- COUraged if the children come away without having apparently learned anything. A long time after they may refer to something you supposed they did not notice. A second visit brings a pleasant sense of familiarity. They enjoy recognizing something they saw before, and look at it now a bit more attentively. Little by little you may bring them around to look at vour own favorites, or draw their attention to the best things. But you must begin diplomatically and bide your time. If a child is going to enjoy himself, you must not be too officious in leading the way. If you say, "Come, look at this," he may hang back a little. But if you suddenly leave him and start off on your own account to look at some picture, he is pretty sure to follow. There is absolutely no use in deciding beforehand what pictures you are going to show a child, or what he will like best. The one thing you can count on is that he will surprise you. I remember the first time I took a small boy to the Boston Art Museum bent on educational ends, I had hard work to get him out of the Japanese Garden, and as soon as he had dutifully followed me through the picture gallery he wished to return to this en- chanted spot. A little friend whom I took to the American Old Masters room, for the express purpose of seeing the George and Martha Washington por- traits, was so entranced with the antique pianos that he cast but a single languid glance at the Father of his 62 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN country. But he surprised me quite as much when we were hurrying through the next room, where I was sure there was nothing to interest him, by pausing before the great Velasquez, the Prince Baltasar and Dwarf, with sudden decisive approval, "That's a nice picture." And so it is. After all, what does it matter what the child likes best, pianos, pictures, or what- not, so long as it is something in this fairyland of art which will make him want to come again? That is the great desideratum. A picture gallery on a free day is a delightful resort for children. One can pick up many chance acquaintances there. The choosing game almost always meets a response. I have some- times managed to make friends very quickly with stray young visitors by proposing that we all walk around slowly, and choose the picture we like best. The Modern Masters room at the Boston Museum has many favorites. I have seen boys there quickly choose Regnault's Horses of Achilles, the Boy with the Hurdy-Gurdy, and Tarbell's beautiful portrait of children on horseback. The use of the camera opens a valuable opportu- nity for training boys and girls in matters of art. The young photographer wants to learn to make pictures, and his experiments duplicate in a far-off way the experience of the great artists. His first care is to get the image in the right place on the plate. If he is taking a house, he must have enough sky above it, enough grass in the foreground, and enough space on each side to look well. Repeated attempts show him what different effects he gets by changing the dis- PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS 63 tance and the point of view. He begins to realize that a landscape painter has a reason for every tree and rock in his picture. When there are figures to photo- graph, t he arrangement of the lines, the position of the hands, the turn of the head, and the focus of the eyes arc all points to notice. If the amateur is really anxious to do good work, the pictures of the masters sud- denly become very interesting to him. The Raphaels, Titians, and Rembrandts, once regarded as very dull and grown-up subjects, are found worthy the study of every aspiring young photographer. What better arrangement for a mother holding a baby than in the Granduca Madonna (Raphael)? "What pose more graceful than that of the Man with the Glove (Ti- tian)? And when was a group about a table more beautifully planned than in the Syndics of the Cloth Guild (Rembrandt)? The young people whose camera work teaches them to appreciate such pic- tures have made an excellent beginning in art study. The amateur's artistic progress depends very much upon the help of parents. Indiscriminate praise is almost as bad as indifference. Sympathetic criticism is just what is needed. The right-minded boy or girl is glad to learn how the work can be bettered. In a home adorned with good works of art, where all the family are familiar with pictures, many little picture games may be invented to play with the chil- dren. There is one in which each by turn describes a picture for the others to guess the name. A half-hour of this easy guessing is very pleasant while sitting on the piazza in the dark of summer nights. The game is 64 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN made harder when the mother describes an altogether new picture, and the children listen intently in order to identify it among a mixed collection of picture postals and prints brought forth at the close of the description. Mothers will also find that a bedtime picture may occasionally be substituted for a bed- time story, the picture being vividly described, not actually seen. The love of pictures, like the love of books and music, binds parents and children together in delightful intimacy, and will permeate all the home intercourse. VII THE USE OF PICTURES IN THE SCHOOLROOM 1 In the modern schoolroom of the progressive type, pictures are among the most valued possessions. First of all, from the viewpoint of mere decoration, they add immeasurably to the attractiveness of the child's environment. Artistically considered their chief func- tion is to minister to the sense of beauty, to create an atmosphere of culture, and to develop the taste for good art. This is indeed enough to ask of pictures. For purely artistic reasons, every school in the land, like every home, should be beautified with genuine works of art. But the latter-day teacher makes pic- tures serve many purposes besides their original aesthetic end, using them in a multitude of ways to enrich the course of study. Even these secondary uses have an indirect artistic value, for any method is praiseworthy which arouses a child's interest in good art. The work of the school grades begins with stocking the child's mind with certain fundamental concepts: ideas of animals, flowers, fruit, and the various phenomena of nature; ideas of the family: 1 In many of our large dtiei there are societies to further artistic inter- ests in the schools; The School Art League of New York; tin- Ch Publie School Art Society ; the Buffalo School Art Association ; and similar organisations in Columbus, Ohio; Kvanston. Illinois; Houston. Texas; Washington. D.C. ; and Worcester, Massachusetts. A great work has aU<> been done l>y many women's clubs and High School Alumni as- sociations in furnishing pictures for schoolroom decoration. 66 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN the relations of parents, brothers, and sisters; ideas of home life and occupations; ideas of the world's work, in the field and factory, on land and sea; ideas of the child's own interests, activities, and plays. What a storehouse of pictures is at the primary teacher's command to impress all these lessons upon the pupil's mind. If large pictures are not to be had, small prints are almost always available; if expensive prints cannot be afforded, the newspapers and adver- tisements come to our aid. As to the variety of animal pictures to be had, I speak at length in a special chapter. We have dogs and deer by Landseer and Rosa Bonheur; lions by Barye, Bonheur, and Rubens; horses by Bonheur, Dagnan-Bouveret, and many others; cows by Troy on and Van Marcke; sheep by Mauve; foxes by Liljfors and Winslow Homer. Let me urge again the importance of choosing really good animal art, pic- tures of animals which are alive, not stuffed; animals which show their real nature, not the caricatured half- human type. In bringing out the happiness of family love all teachers find the Madonna pictures the most satis- factory expression of motherly tenderness. The strong maternal element in Raphael's Chair Madonna makes it a prime favorite, and Dagnan-Bouveret's Madonna of the Arbor is another making the same sort of appeal. Beautiful portraits of mother and child are Madame Le Brun and her Daughter, Rom- ney's Mrs. Cawardine and Babe, and many examples by Reynolds, like the Duchess of Devonshire and her USE OF PICTURES IN THE SCHOOLROOM 07 Baby; Lady Spencer and Boy; Mrs. Payne-Gallway, and so on through a long list. Meyer von Bremen's Little Brother shows two children eagerly gazing on the newborn baby in the arms of the mother. Millet's First Step brings in the whole family, the mother supporting the baby toddler as he starts on his jour- ney across the yard to the outstretched arms of his kneeling father. Bouguereau's Sister and Brother is used to show how the older child becomes a little mother to the younger, and Rubens's Two Sons charmingly illustrates brotherly love. To illustrate farm labor Millet and Breton furnish many subjects, from the sowing of the seed to the gleaning of the harvest. The spirit of play — simple gayety of heart — is delightfully illustrated in such subjects as Chase's Alice, Israels's Boys with a Boat and Murillo's Beggar Boys. How all these pictures may be used for story-telling and for the game of pic- ture-posing I explain in separate chapters. The teacher may also have ways of her own for pointing out the lessons she wishes to inculcate. The use of pictures in language work runs through all the school grades. The picture furnishes some- thing to talk about or write about. It stimulates observation, starts up the thinking apparatus, and arouses the imagination. Among younger children teachers usually prefer story pictures, that is, illus- trative or anecdotic compositions embodying a more or less dramatic situation. The pupil is drawn out by a series of questions: "When did the action take place, that is, at what time of the day or season of the 68 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN year?" "Where does the action take place, indoors or out, in city or country, and in what land? " "Who are the actors? and what are they doing?" This process is called picture-reading, and forms the basis of the pupil's story composition. The method is one which easily lends itself to exaggeration, if we go beyond the limits of these questions. It is best to keep our "reading" to just what is really written in the picture, merely getting out of it the meaning the artist put into it for our pleasure. When we build upon this foundation a long imaginary tale about the persons of the picture, the process is apt to lead far afield from the proper use of pictures. The sharp distinction which is made in language work between description and narration applies equally to pic- tures. Sully's Torn Hat, for instance, or Manet's Boy with the Sword, is a subject for description, while Blommers's Shrimp Fishers or Kaulbach's Pied Piper is really a story picture. A story picture may be treated in either way, descriptively or dramati- cally, but the non-story picture is less flexible, and should be merely described. A landscape, for in- stance, is not, properly speaking, a story picture, and in language work should be reserved for pure nature description. The chapters on "Animals," "Chil- dren's Pictures," and "Story Pictures" will suggest abundant material to the language teacher. The writer of a composition based upon a picture is bound to scrutinize the subject until every detail is stamped on the memory, and thus the child's art repertory is enlarged. USE OF PICTURES IN TIIK SCHOOLROOM 69 The uses of pictures in the study of literature are manifold. It is a long standing custom for teachers to familiarize their pupils with the portraits of the poets whose works they are taught to love. The benign countenance of Longfellow and the prophet-like head of Tennyson look down from many schoolroom walls. For nineteenth-century writers it is customary to use the accredited photographic portraits. For the celebrities of the older centuries we have many ideal heads. Raphael's two great frescoes in the Hall of the Segnatura (Vatican) called Parnassus and the School of Athens, contain some fine figures of the poets and philosophers of antiquity: Homer, Dante, Virgil, and Ovid, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, etc. I always find high-school pupils greatly interested in these pictures, though I do not recall seeing them in any school hall or catalogue. v Two modern pictures giving vivid interest to the life story of the poets represented are Munkacsy's Milton dictating Para- dise Lost and Dicksee's Swift and Stella. A few illustrations of famous poems are specially adapted to schoolroom decoration, for the benefit of the literature classes. Such are: Hiawatha a- a boy, by Elizabeth Xorris; Walker's four lunettes in the Congressional Library illustrating the Boy of Winander Wordsworth's Prelude), Adonis (Shelley), Endymion K«-;iK , and Comus (Milton); Landseer's Twa Dogs, t(. illustrate Burns's poem; Kaulbach's 1 Since thi" was written I have seen with grr.it pleasure a beau- tiful Anindd print of the PfcrnaMlM in the W'altham (Man.) High School . 70 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN Pied Piper, for Browning's poem; Boughton's John Alden and Priscilla, for Miles Standish; Stothard's Canterbury Pilgrims for Chaucer's Prologue. For older classes, Rossetti's Dream of Dante, illustrating a passage in the Vita Nuova; the same painter's Blessed Damosel, illustrating his own poem, and Alexander's Pot of Basil, for Keats's poem, may be used, the languorous type of beauty in the pictures corresponding to the character of the verse. Two pictures illustrating the moment of Dante's first seeing Beatrice are by Ary Scheffer, and Holiday. On the whole, the world's great poetry has not been and indeed cannot be adequately illustrated. The pictures which a teacher can best use in literature study are those illuminating in a general way the subject treated. For instance, in studying the origin of the drama, a flood of light is thrown on the old Mysteries and Miracle Plays by the works of the contemporary Italian painters. The story of the Nativity and of the Saviour's Passion, first arranged in scenes in the cathedral and later acted in the public squares, was staged, so to speak, just as in the pictures by Giotto and Duccio. Later painters still adhered to the same traditions and a Nativity by Pinturicchio or Luini or the Crucifixion in the Spanish Chapel, Florence, would be excellent illus- trative material of this kind. Tennyson's Idyls of the King are illuminated, but not directly illustrated, by Abbey's decorations in the Boston Public Library, which follow the Morte a" Arthur more closely than the poet. The statue of King Arthur from Charie- TSE OF riCTTRES IN THE SCHOOLROOM 71 magne'a tomb at Innsbruck fairly puts Tennyson's hero before us. Watts's Sir Galahad is a figure well liked in the schools. Any pictures embodying the spirit of chivalry throws light on the Idyls. I cannot think of anything better than Millais's noble work, Sir Isumbras at the Ford, where the gentle old knight carries the two children safely across the stream. A modern series of pictures by Blair Leighton gives the four stages of knighthood: The Vox Populi, or Accla- mation; the Dedication; the Accolade; the Godspeed. Pupils studying Shakespeare should be encouraged to collect pictorial Shakespeariana, a pursuit which may become so engrossing that they will follow it all their lives. The making of the Shakespeare scrap- book will work both ways, to fix the characters and plots in the memory, and cultivate artistic discrimi- nation. The material consists, first of all, of course, of all the portraits one can find of the dramatist him- self, as well as views of Stratford-on-Avon. Por- traits of great Shakespearian actors are also of prime importance, and such a search offers endless possibili- ties. The list extends from the famous English trage- dienne, Mrs. Siddons, whom Reynolds portrayed so Superbly as the Tragic Muse, to the stars of our own generation, whom latter-day photography has repre- sented in every pose and costume. There are besides many ideal pictures of Shakespearian characters from Reynolds's Puck to Millais's Portia. Ideal illus- trations of Shakespearian scenes are not so easy to find, but should be added when possible. Abbey's series are of this class. The extra-illustrat-.l Shakes- 72 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN peare is a glorified form of Shakespearian collection, bringing text and illustration together — a scrapbook de luxe. One begins by laying in loose pictures here and there in a volume until the binding breaks with the strain. Then the book is taken to pieces, the pages interleaved with illustrations, and the whole collection rebound. It is a worthy ambition to stimu- late in young people to be possessed of an entire set of single-play volumes, each one the basis of a picture collection. Connecting equally well with work in literature or history is the general subject of the evolution of book- making. Alexander's series of six lunettes in the Congressional Library illustrate this theme with remarkable success. Mounted in a single frame this row of photographs (or colored reproductions) is in high favor in schools. There are other pictures, too, of correlated interest showing the book customs of those far-away times before the printing-press. Old pictures of St. Augustine in his cell poring over his books, or of St. Jerome translating the Bible, give an idea of the library accessories in the time of the painters, Botticelli, Ghirlandajo, Bellini, or whoever it happened to be. A very pretty subject by Cabanel, called The Florentine Poet, is a garden scene of Renaissance Florence where a wandering story-teller relates to a group of young listeners a tale of love and adventure. Alma Tadema's Reading from Homer car- ries a similar subject into still more ancient times. The domain of classic mythology is contiguous both to literature and to history. It is a fairyland of (BE OF PICTURES TS TIIE SCHOOLROOM 73 dreams and visions beloved by children of every age. Not all the subjects lend themselves to art, but some have been beautifully illustrated, and such works are of immense interest in the schoolroom. The teach- ers of Greek and Latin need them as much as the teachers of literature and history. One must make the selections carefully, avoiding a certain line of subjects, like the amorous adventures of the gods, which are quite unsuited for use. It is through antique marbles that we get our highest conception of Greek divinities. The great sculpture museums of the Old World contain noble statues of Zeus (Jupiter), the sky father; and Hera (Juno), his spouse; of Athena (Minerva), the Queen of the Air; and Aphro- dite (Venus), the beautiful; of Ceres, the mother of the race; of Apollo and Diana, rulers of sun and moon; of Hermes (Mercury), the messenger of the gods; and all the rest. Like the portraits of sovereigns, as a background of history, these sculptured figures form the background of our mythological lore, and should be made familiar to school children of higher grades either in plaster reproductions or in photographs of the originals. A few modern representations may be added to our collection of antiques, like Bologna's Flying Mercury and Vedder's Minerva. Our list of pictures naturally begins with that uni- versal favorite, Guido Reni's Aurora, representing the sun god driving his horses across the sky. Another good picture <>f the same subject is by Guercino. An appropriate rompanion picture is Corregirii>\ Diana, the moon goddess, setting forth for the chase in a 74 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN chariot drawn by a stag. The fluttering veil and wind-blown hair and garments give an effect of breezy motion to the picture. A quiver full of arrows is slung across her shoulder, with the bow. The cres- cent moon gleams above her forehead. A charming picture of the same goddess sporting with her nymphs in a smiling landscape is by Domenichino, in the Bor- ghese Villa, Rome. The fair shepherd Endymion, with whom Diana fell in love as he lay asleep among his flocks, is also treated in art. There is a little circular panel by the old Venetian painter Cima, in the Parma Gallery, and a lunette by Walker in the Congressional Library, both showing the youth asleep. As Diana is attended by nymphs, so Apollo, as patron of the arts, is surrounded by the nine muses. Thus we see them all circling around in a rhythmic dance in the picture by Giulio Romano, in the Pitti, Florence. Another picture of these figures may be had by isolat- ing the central group in Raphael's famous fresco of Parnassus. Apollo's pursuit of Daphne is a subject painted by Giorgione (Seminario, Venice), but the figures are rather inconspicuous in a landscape. A graceful group by the late Italian sculptor Bernini is in the Borghese, at Rome. The Marriage of Bacchus and Ariadne is not an especially important incident in mythology, but it happens to be the subject of one of the finest works of the Venetian Renaissance. The picture is by Tintoretto, in the Venice Academy. Venus hovering in the air joins the hands of the lovers and marries them with a ring. Grace and poetry of motion, flow .:-':..:■ . . : : • J I. 'j .\o If* 4 S», So* DIANA rr/// arrass- ment of riches which are available for this purpose 98 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN the classified descriptive list at the close of this chap- ter will help mothers and teachers to make wise selec- tions. The pictures referred to have been tested by much practical experience and found attractive and interesting to children. Technically the picture of a child is a far more diffi- cult achievement than that of an adult. When the Italian primitives were struggling with the problems of the human figure they represented children as min- iature grown-ups. The Christ-child in the arms of his mother, as old Cimabue and Giotto painted him, is a good deal like a doll. The real live baby was not born into the world of art till a much later date. Indeed, the very young baby has never been a common art subject, for the painter has naturally preferred the more attractive stages of childhood. An inexhaustible storehouse of child pictures, as all the world knows, is that vast body of works to which we apply the Italian name "Madonna," because it was in Italy that the subject had complete historical development. It represents Mary, the mother of Jesus, with the Christ-child in her arms, and was the first artistic effort of the Christian era to portray childhood. The theme makes an instantaneous ap- peal to children of all ages, and will never outgrow popular favor. In making selections for our children, we do well to avoid the archaic paintings of the early centuries and all the more formal altar pieces, looking first for the elements of human interest and childish affection. The simplest compositions are best. From the great Renaissance Italians the best beloved mas- PICTURES OF CHILDREN 99 ters are Andrea del Sarto, Raphael, Correggio, Luini, Bellini, and Titian. The German Holbein's Meyer Ma.lonna also belongs in this period. From the seventeenth-century names I would add those of Carlo Dolce (with discrimination), Murillo (Spanish), and the two great Flemings, Rubens and Van Dyck. All these men understood well the representation of innocent, happy childhood. There are also many excellent modern Madonna pictures in the art stores by Gabriel Max, Bodenhausen, Dagnan-Bouveret, Sichel, Ferrari, and others. The children's special favorites among Raphael's works are the Madonna of the Chair and the Sistine Madonna. In innumerable schoolrooms all over the land hangs one or the other of these two pictures. Many stories are told by the teachers of the benefi- cent influence of these noble ideals of motherhood and childhood upon pupils of every race and creed. Such subjects may be considered entirely apart from their original ecclesiastical significance as a universal type of the tenderest of human relations. I heard of a young high-school girl, obliged to give up her course because of tuberculosis, who talked constantly of the beautiful picture which hung in the schoolroom. The mother found upon inquiry that it was the Sistine Madonna, a copy was procured, and the girl's last days were made happier by the gracious presence in her sick-room. The two great Raphaels illustrate a contrast in motive which a child is quick to grasp. The child of the Chair Madonna nestles in his mother's protecting 100 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN arms, seeking shelter from danger, but the Sistine boy is like a little prince who is thinking of his people, and is setting forth to help the world. In the chil- dren's phrase one is "babyish," and the other "manly." I call the Chair Madonna the "Madonna of Love," and the Sistine, the "Madonna of Service." The central portion of the Sistine Madonna makes a picture complete in itself. In fact many of the most attractive Madonna subjects are made in this way, by photographing the central detail in a separate print. A subject closely akin to the Madonna and Child is Charity, a symbolic expression of that all-embracing spirit of love which gathers the children of the world in its care. A noble group by Andrea del Sarto treats this subject as a motherly woman seated, with a child at her breast, another on her knee, and another at her feet. Burne-Jones made a tall, narrow panel of Char- ity standing with a baby on each arm and four chil- dren at her feet. Abbot Thayer's painting in the Bos- ton Art Museum is a third well-known example. Here Charity extends both arms as if to shelter all children beneath them, and two little ones stand at her feet nestling against her sides. Such pictures are admirably adapted to the nursery and the lower grade schoolroom. And perhaps here, better than anywhere else, should be mentioned that beautiful picture of kindred theme, Murillo's Guardian Angel. The Holy Family is an enlargement of the Ma' donna subject by the introduction of other figures. A pleasant fancy of the old masters was to represent PICTURES OF CH II. I 101 the little St. John Baptist, cousin of Jesus, as a play- mate of the holy child. Here are endless possibilities of story interest for a child's delight. An effective contrast is made between the swarthy, skin-clad Baptist and the fair-haired Christ-child. The sturdy St. John is the most affectionate slave of his cousin, bringing offerings of fruit and flowers or kneeling in adoration. Raphael was particularly felicitous in this subject, and examples are numerous also among his contemporaries. Single ideal portraits of either of the two boys are not very common, but are treasures worth picking up when they are to be found. Andrea del Sarto's St. John Baptist, the boy, is an excep- tional picture, and a great favorite. Murillo's so- called Children of the Shell is a delicately conceived subject of the relation between the two cousins. They have been playing together with the lamb, when St. John becomes thirsty , and the Christ-child offers him to drink from a shell. The several striking incidents of the infancy of Jesus have all been very often illustrated, and form a series of delightful pictures of child life. The birth in the Bethlehem manger, the visit of the shepherds to the newborn babe, the coming of the wise men with their Oriental gifts, the presentation of the babe in the Temple, the flight into Egypt, and the visit of the twelve-year-old boy in the Temple, have been made vivid by the art of many centuries. In choosing such pictures we must be careful to see that artistic beauty is united with good illustrative quality. It must be understood that none of the great painters of 102 HOW TO SUOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN the past made any attempt to represent Bible scenes with historical accuracy. They knew and cared nothing about the customs and topography of Pales- tine in the first century. Happily, however, our chil- dren have no archaeological prejudices. Their interest centers upon the babe, who lies serenely on his bed of straw in the company of the ox and the ass, who receives his first gifts with eager delight, who is borne in his mother's arms on their long donkey ride into a far country, and who later discusses gravely with the gray-beards of the Temple the great volume of the Scriptures. Another class of attractive child pictures emanat- ing from the old masters is the joyous company of angels who figure so conspicuously in religious com- positions. They fill the heavenly spaces with their choirs and make music before the Madonna's throne. They sport playfully in the clouds or make themselves useful on the earth, companions and playmates of the Christ-child, or attendants upon sacred person- ages. And always, whether praying, adoring, singing, serving, they are the perfect embodiment of the eternal child spirit. Correggio is easily first in this peculiar field, as the creator of the most fascinating elflike sprites, bubbling over with mischief. The same elfin creature is by turns angel or cupid, playing with the helmet and sword of St. George, or sharpening an arrow by the couch of Danae. The child angel as a musician belongs especially to the Venetian art, placed at the bottom of a formal altar piece. Some of the best-loved figures of painting PICTURES OF CHILDREN 103 are these artless little creatures, bending over lute or violin with complete absorption. Bellini, Palma, and (arpaccio contributed some winsome examples. A few of the Florentines — notably Raphael and Barto- lommeo — and the Bolognese Francia adopted the Venetian idea with characteristic variations. Other baby figures, or "putti," for all sorts of decorative purposes, are scattered freely through Italian Renais- sance painting, carrying banderoles or cartouches, supporting pedestals or medallions. In the limited repertory of subjects in this period, these child ideals formed a sort of outlet for the artist's playful fancy. Turning from these ideal child subjects of past cen- turies to the field of portrait painting, we find that real portraits of real children constitute a very inter- esting and attractive class of pictures for the little ones in our schools and homes. They make the home life of historic periods more vivid to us, they teach us how the boys and girls of olden times dressed, and, most of all, they show us that child nature is the same in all ages. With what wonder and curiosity do we gaze upon the monstrous skirts, the long, stiff corsets, and the elaborate finery which burdened little royalty of long ago. But that babies of four hundred years back played with rattles as they do now, and that children frolicked with pet dogs and clung to their mothers' knees, unites the past and the present very closely. Sometimes we come unexpectedly upon a style of dress which seems quite familiar — a plumed hat, a jaunty cap, a broad lace collar, a "Dutch cut " of hair, a "Russian blouse." The picture of a child 104 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN elicits the prompt demand for information about the original — where does he live, what is his name, etc. We must take pains to answer such questions intel- ligently and consistently. If we cannot learn much of the pictured child's real story, we may at least place definitely the nationality, the period, and the social class, so to speak, while the face tells us something of the particular temperament. A little experience makes us adept in the art of inference and teaches us to note every detail which may give the clue to the child's character. When a historical personage is represented, we have plenty of interesting material to connect with the portrait. Child portraits were rare articles in the Italian Renaissance, but of course we all know that there is no rule without exception. Now and again some painter — Ghirlandajo, Botticelli, Pinturicchio — pleased himself by turning off the portrait of a boy or girl whose face had caught his fancy. Occasionally a fond parent, like the great Duchess Isabella d'Este or a Medici prince, gave an order for the likeness of a beloved child. We can count these exceptional pic- tures on the ringers, but they are precious enough to cherish both for their artistic and historic value. With the great portrait schools of the seventeenth century the child came into his rightful art place. From this time forward children's pictures occupy their proper proportion in the total product of any period and school of art. But with all this abundance of material one can never choose a child's picture at random. It is not given to all in equal measure to PICTURES OF CHILDREN 105 understand the heart of a child. There is a certain touchstone of sympathetic imagination by which \v«- must test the essential quality of the pictures. To begin with, lot us look for something better than mere doll-like superficial prettiness. The child need not be pretty to be interesting or attractive. Just a plain little everyday kind of girl who looks like a nice play- mate, or a jolly good-natured sort of boy who is ready for any fun, makes the most delightful picture. A self-conscious, artificial child is as undesirable in a picture as in real life, and that artist is most success- ful whose work is most simple and natural. This is why Velasquez is so great, and Greuze often so weak, and Van Dyck so uneven. Where in the world of art can you match the simple babyish gravity of the in- fant Baltasar (Boston Art Museum), the pathetic timidity of Maria Theresa, or the sweet shyness of the Princess Margaret? Velasquez was free from the common fault of overmodeling the child's face, paint- ing only what he saw. Never straining after effects, his perfect self-restraint was an element of his suc- cess. All their absurd and gorgeous court costumes cannot hide the true child nature of the little Spanish royalties. Now the young girls of Greuze, with all their pret- tiness, are not really natural. They are consciously posing for your admiration. And as you come to look at them the second time, you see that they are not so young as they seem to be. Some of them are only make-believe little girls, with arch smiles. Even the charming maiden of the Broken Pitcher, so carefully 106 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN made up with a rose in her hair and a nosegay in her corsage, is not quite convincing. While the picture has some fine qualities, the motive lacks sincerity and spontaneity, and I for one would give a good deal more for the wistful child with the apple in the Lon- don Gallery. Associated in our thoughts with the name of Greuze is that of Madame Le Brun, who began her art career by copying Greuze' s heads. She was, however, more sincere, if less gifted, than he, and she added something to the treasures of child por- traiture in the charming pictures of her little daugh- ter. The Mother and Daughter in the Louvre is a fine and deservedly popular work. The child portraiture of Van Dyck is always sincere and serious, but the posing and grouping are not uniformly natural. The oft-repeated children of Charles I stand in rather stiff and uncompromising rows, but any such faults are forgotten for the splen- did artistic qualities of the work. The heads are beautifully done and make complete separate pic- tures, particularly Prince Charles, and the inimitable "Baby James," the Duke of York, in his little bonnet. Princess Mary is a bit too prim to be really childlike. My own favorites among Van Dyck's child figures belong to the earlier periods when his inspiration had not lost its freshness, like the White Boy of the Dur- azzo Palace in Genoa, souvenir of his youthful Italian journey, and Richardot and his son, 1 from the Flemish groups. The child portraits of Cornelis de Vos should 1 An illustration in the volume on Van Dyck in the Riverside Art Series. ! X* D% (II u:l.I S, PRINI l "l W \l I - /' /'unit PICTURES OF CHILDREN 107 be classed with those of Van Dyck, whose contem- porary he was, and whose skill he closely rivaled. They represent his own engaging little daughters. The Dutch schools of the same day furnish us many valuable examples of the subtle art of child portrait- ure. It was a fashion there for well-to-do merchants to have group pictures painted of the entire family. From this custom we see in the galleries a wonderful array of these pictures showing well the solidarity of the Dutch home life. It goes without saying that Dutch children are always chubby and rosy, and the soberness of their costume gives them an air of quaint gravity. Besides the more common or typical works, we have a few priceless gems which every child-lover values. It was the glory of the English eighteenth-century art to develop the beauty of womanhood and child- hood, and from this school came forth a host of pic- ture children to delight the world. A characteristic quality is their animation. Contrasted with the staid and quiet figures of the little Italians, Spaniards, and Flemings of the previous centuries these English young folk are sparkling with life and gayety. In attitude, gesture, and expression we get the whole story of the child's individual temperament. Sir Joshua Reynolds was the head of the School. He was one of those rare spirits who win the complete con- fidence of a child. He was their boon companion, and while he romped with them as a playmate, his keen artist's eye noted their qualities as models. Delightful stories are told of that great octagonal room in Lei- 108 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN cester Square from which proceeded such shouts of laughter that none could have dreamed it was a painter's studio. From this enchanted castle were sent many masterpieces which have made the youth- ful originals household names, like Penelope Boothby and Miss Bowles. Not content with filling a multi- tude of orders, the painter seized every opportunity to make ideal or "fancy" subjects of children for his own amusement, using his little niece and grandniece as models. It is thus that we have the Strawberry Girl, the Age of Innocence, Simplicity, and Little Samuel. Gainsborough, like Van Dyck, inclined to the more poetic and serious aspects of child life, and therefore does not so readily win a child's attention. But the Blue Boy should be introduced to all our children as a notable work of art, and no one can fail to respond to the intimate charm of his expression. The works of the lesser painters of the English school, Romney, Opie, Hoppner, and Sir Thomas Lawrence, have not been widely enough reproduced to become familiar to the general public. But little by little, as they find their way to large collections, we may hope to add to our knowledge of this marvelous setting- f orth of child life in its happiest and most wholesome vein. When we come down to our own period in our art study, our troubles increase, as we try to collect reproductions of some modern masterpieces of child portraiture. Costly copyrighted photographs we cannot all possess, but we derive such satisfaction as we may from poring over chance cuts in magazines PICTURES OF CHILDREN 109 and expensive illustrated books. Through these sources we learn how many children's pictures were made by the French Bouguereau and Boutet de Monvel, the English Sir John Millais and Burne- Jones. A few good contemporary pictures, like Shan- non's Miss Kitty and Mr. Chase's Alice, are scattered through our American public collections, and are rapidly becoming known through the efforts of art dealers. And now for our lists : — List of Pictures of Children Madonna subjects. Raphael. Madonna of the Diadem. Louvre, Paris. (Baby asleep.) Granduca Madonna. Pitti Gallery, Florence. Tempi Madonna. Munich. Chair Madonna. Pitti Gallery, Florence. Sistine Madonna, Dresden Gallery. Correggio. Madonna with Angels. Uffizi Gallery, Florence. Kneeling Madonna. Uffizi Gallery, Florence. Andrea del Sarto. Madonna of the Harpies. (So called from decoration of pedestal.) U^ffizi Gallery, Flor- ence. (Detail of mother and child.) Botticelli. Madonna. Louvre, Paris. Filippo Lippi. Madonna. Uffizi. (Mother seated, and angels holding babe.) Perugino. Kneeling Madonna. National Gallery, London. (Central panel of triptych.) Luini. Madonna of the Rose Hedge. Brera, Milan. Madonna at Lugano. (Lunette, Christ-child playing with lamb, little St. John on other side.) Bellini. Madonna of Two Trees. Venire Academy. Madonna and Child. National Gallery. Titian. Pesaro Madonna. Church of Frari. Venice. (Detail of mother and child.) Madonna of Babbit. National Gallery. Giorgione. Madonna. Castelfranco, near Venice. 110 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN Palma. Madonna and Saints. Dresden. Moretto. Madonna and St. Nicholas. Brescia. (Unique and charming. The old saint introduces two little boys to the Christ-child, two others follow- ing him.) Carlo Dolce. Madonna. Dresden. (Child asleep.) Madonna. Pitti Gallery, Florence. (Child standing on mother's knee.) Holbein. Meyer Madonna. Dresden Gallery. Murillo. Madonna. Pitti Gallery, Florence. Madonna. Corsini Gallery, Rome. Van Dyck. Presepio. Corsini, Rome. The Holy Family. Raphael. Cardellino Madonna (Madonna of Goldfinch). Uffizi, Florence. (Mother with two children in landscape; St. John bringing goldfinch.) Madonna of the Meadow. Vienna. (Mother and the two children in landscape.) Belle Jardiniere. Louvre. (Mother with two children in landscape.) Madonna dell' Impannata. Pitti. (Two mothers, Mary and Elizabeth, with the two children.) Madonna of the Pearl. Madrid. (Four figures as above. Full of joyous domestic feeling.) Pinturicchio. Holy Family. Siena Gallery. (Landscape. Mary and Joseph seated. The two children running across meadow to draw water from fountain. The children's figures are photo- graphed separately.) Titian. Madonna of the Cherries. Vienna. (Mother with the two children. St. John bringing fruit.) Madonna with St. Anthony. Uffizi. (Mother with two children. St. John bringing flowers.) Luini. Holy Family. Ambrosian Gallery. Milan. (Two mothers, Mary and Elizabeth, with the children.) Andrea del Sarto. Holy Family. Two pictures in the Pitti, Florence. Knaus. Holy Family. Metropolitan, New York. (Little angel peeping at babe in mother's lap. Joseph on donkey in rear.) Rubens. Holy Family. Pitti, Florence. PICTURES OF CHILDREN 111 Van Dyck. Holy Family. Turin. (Two mothers and St. Joseph. Christ-child eagerly springing toward St. John.) Nativity. Correggio. Holy Night. Dresden. Luini. Nativity. Louvre Nativity. Como Cathedral. Lorenzo di Credi. Adoration of Shepherds. Uffizi, Florence. Lorenzo Lotto. Adoration of Shepherds. Brescia. Murillo. Adoration of Shepherds. Madrid Gallery. LeRolle. Arrival (if Slu-plierds. Burne-Jones. Nativity. Torquay. Adoration of Kings (or Magi.) Ghirlandajo. Foundling Hospital, Florence. Gentile da Fahriano. Florence Academy. Burne-Jones. Star of Bethlehem. Oxford, England. Flight into Egypt. Holman Hunt. Triumph of Innocents. (Circle of angels dancing about wayfarers.) Correggio. Madonna della Scodella. Parma Gallery. (Mother dipping water from pool and St. Joseph plucking dates for Christ-child.) Presentation in Temple. Bartolommeo. Vienna. (Group of five figures, the aged Simeon holding the Christ-child.) Christ among Doctors. Holman Hunt. (Interior of Temple with many figures, Mary just discovering the lost child.) Hoffman. (Group of six figures in three-quarter length. Boy Christ pointing to Scriptures.) Child Angcht. As parts of compositions. Botticelli. In the Incoronata, Uffizi, Florence. (Holding crown of stars over Madonna's head, and sup- porting her writing materials for inscribing the Magnificat.) 112 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN Filippino Lippi. In Holy Family, Pitti, Florence. (Adoring and scattering rose petals over child who lies on the ground.) In The Vision of St. Bernard, Church of the Badia, Florence. (Four attendants of Virgin. One with folded hands is photo- graphed separately.) Leonardo da Vinci. In the Baptism by Verrochio, Florence Academy. (Two kneeling attend- ants. Photographed separately.) Titian. In the Assumption. Venice Academy. (Angelic throng upbearing ascending Virgin. Some groups photographed separately.) Correggio. In frescoes in dome of Church of St. John Evan- gelist, Parma. In ceiling decoration in Convent of S. Paolo, Parma. (Bearing implements of chase, to accompany Diana. Each figure in a medallion, photographed as separate picture.) Murillo. In Immaculate Conception, Louvre, Paris. (An- gelic throng upbearing Virgin.) Van Dyck. Repose in Egypt. Pitti, Florence. (Circle of baby angels dancing to entertain Christ- child.) Raphael. In Sistine Madonna, Dresden. (Two cherub heads at bottom of picture.) In Foligno Madonna. Vatican Gallery. (Cherub holding cartouche at bottom of picture.) In Jurisprudence fresco, Vatican, Rome. (Cherub in right corner.) In Fresco of Sibyls, S. Maria della Pace, Rome. (Cherub.) As separate pictures. Rubens. Vienna Gallery. (Angels playing with Christ-child and lamb.) Munich Gallery. (Angels playing with garland of flowers.) Rosso Fiorentino. Uffizi, Florence. (Angel with guitar.) Andrea del Sarto. Florence Academy. (Two angels with scroll.) PICTURES OF CHILDREN 113 Musical child angels in altar pieces, photographed as separate figures. 1 Bellini. In Frari Madonna, Venice. (Lute-player. Flute- player.) Yivarini. In Redcntore Madonna, Venice. (Two baby lute- players.) Carpaccio. In Presentation. Venice Academy. (Lute- player.) Palma. In Madonna enthroned. Vicenza. (Violinist.) Raphael. In Baldacchino Madonna, Pitti, Florence. (Two choristers.) Bartolommeo. In Marriage of St. Catherine. Florence. (Guitar-player and violinist.) Francia. In Madonna of S. Giacomo, Bologna. (Two girl musicians.) Child portraits. Italian Renaissance. Pinturicchio. Dresden Gallery. (Boy. Bust.) Ghirlandajo. Louvre. (Old man and little child.) Francia. Federigo Gonzaga. Bust. Altman Collection, New York. (The boy was son of Isabella d'Este and the Duke of Mantua.) Morone. Bergamo Gallery. (Little girl. Bust.) Paris Bordone. Uffizi Gallery. (Bust of boy with plumed hat.) Baroccio. Prince of Urbino. Pitti, Florence. (Baby in cradle.) Tiberio Titi. Prince Leopold de' Medici. Pitti. (A baby.) Bronzino. Don Garcia. Uffizi. (Fat baby boy with bird.) Princess Mary. Uffizi. (Prim little girl.) Titian. Lavinia. Berlin Gallery. Flemish. Seventeenth century. Rubens. Two sons. Vienna Gallery. (Full-length figures in rich costumes.) Van Dyck. Children of Charles I. Group of three (full length). Turin Gallery. (The group from which the separate heads 1 La PWrge'l Suonatore in the Worcester Art Musoum is a beautiful picture inspired by the musical angeU of the old Italian altar piece*. . 114 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN are taken, Charles, Mary, and Baby James.) Group of three (full length) . Dresden Gallery. Group of five. Berlin Gallery. Princess Mary and Prince William (her fiance). Amsterdam. Prince William of Nassau. St. Petersburg. Cornelis de Vos. Baby. Antwerp. (In high chair with toys.) Two little daughters. Berlin Gallery. (Children richly dressed seated on floor. Bewitching.) Dutch. Seventeenth century. Cuyp. Boy's head. (Wearing broad-brimmed hat.) Maes. Boy with hawk. Wallace Collection, London. Frans Hals. Upenstein Baby. Berlin Gallery. (Richly dressed baby bubbling over with laughter. In arms of nurse.) Moreelse. Princess. Amsterdam. (Half-length; dressed in stiff corset.) Terburg. Helen van Schalke. Amsterdam. (Cabinet pic- ture. Full-length figure. Dressed like a Quaker lady with reticule over arm. Very quaint.) Ver Meer. Girl's head. Hague. (Wearing turban. Wonder- ful light on face.) Lirens. Portrait of Boy. Berlin. Spanish, Seventeenth century. Velasquez. Princess Margaret. Louvre. (Bust.) Las Meninas. Madrid Gallery. (Interior with little Princess Margaret in center, surrounded by attendants.) Princess Margaret. Vienna Gallery. (Full- length figure similar to that in Las Meninas.) Princess Maria Theresa. Madrid Gallery. Prince Baltasar Carlos on his Pony. Madrid Gallery. Prince Baltasar Carlos (with hunting dog). Mad- rid Gallery. Prince Baltasar Carlos (with dwarf). Boston Art Museum. Murillo. Boy at window. National Gallery, London. PICTURES OF CHILDREN 115 French. Greuze. Broken Pitcher. Louvre, Paris. Child with apple. National Gallery, London, (iirl with lamb. National Gallery, London. Innocence. Wallace Collection, London. (Girl with lamb.) Mme. Le Bnin. Madame Le Brun and her Daughter. Louvre. Girl with muff. Louvre. Head of daughter. Bologna Gallery. Fragonard. Head of child. Wallace Collection, London. English, Eighteenth century. Reynolds. Angel heads. National Gallery. Age of Innocence. National Gallery. Infant Samuel. National Gallery. Lady Cockburn and children. National Gallery. Duchess of Devonshire and baby. Lady Spencer and son. Simplicity. Miss Bowles. Wallace Collection, London. Strawberry Girl. Wallace Collection, London. Penelope Boothby. Gainsborough. Blue Boy. (Two versions. One at Grosve- nor House, London. The other in collec- tion of Mr. Hearn, from which reproduc- tions have been made. Full-length figure in landscape. Dressed in blue satin.) Eliza Linley and brother. Morgan Collec- tion, New York. Romney. Gower children. (Four little girls dancing in a circle. Tall girl striking tambourine.) Sir Thomas Laurence. Calmady children. (Two children's heads in circular composition, sometimes called "Nature.") Miscellaneous. Manet. Hoy with sword. Metropolitan Museum. (Full- length.) Sully. Boy with torn hat. Boston Art Museum. (Bust.) Whistler. Rose of Lyme. Boston Art Museum. (Half- length of little girl.) 116 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN Sargent. Bolt children. Boston Art Museum. (Interior with three children.) Carnation Lily, Lily Rose. (Two little girls in garden lighting Japanese lanterns.) Burne-Jones. Dorothy Drew. (Full-length figure of little girl seated.) Shannon. Miss Kitty. Pittsburg. (Full length.) William M. Chase. Alice. Chicago Art Institute. Frank Benson. My Daughter. (Bust portrait.) Bouguereau. Sister and brother. The Broken Pitcher. George de Forest Brush. Mother and child. Boston Art Museum. Reference Books: — Alice Meynell: Children of the Old Masters: Italian Schools. London, 1903. A quarto volume with fifty-six beautiful plates. An essay in nine sections, covering about seventy pages and discussing the old Italian interpretation of child life, with some emphasis on the work of the Tuscan sculptors. Lorinda Munsen Bryant. Famous, Pictures of Real Boys and Girls. London, 1912. Arranged by countries: Italy, Spain, Germany, Holland, Belgium, France, England, and America. STORY PICTURES A child's love of stories is well-nigh universal, and no argument is needed to prove the value of gratify- ing this taste. Whether it is regarded from an educa- tional standpoint, as a training for the mind, or merely taken for pure amusement, the story is the child's natural pabulum. How pictures may facili- tate and enrich the story-telling process I have tried to explain in a previous chapter. It remains to make some suggestions in regard to story-picture material. For as there are stories and stories, some good for children, and some not, so there are pictures and pictures, from which to choose. Some subjects at- tract a child at once, and others make no impression on him. Some which appeal to him with an obvious story interest may be wretched specimens on the artistic or mechanical side. Some which interest an older person very much, deal with themes which a child is incapable of grasping. Worst of all, some have an unwholesome or artificial, sentimental or silly, story to tell. On the whole, it is much better to have a few good tilings than many inferior prints. In one sense any and every picture is a story pic- ture. An active imagination may weave a drama out of the most meager material. The figure of an animal, Landseer's Newfoundland Dog, let us say, may sug- 118 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN gest all sorts of exploits to form an endless tale. A portrait, like the head of Van Dyck's Prince Charles, may be the starting-point of the life-story of the Merry Monarch. This story use of the picture is perfectly legitimate, but it is not the original inten- tion of the artist. A real story picture differs from one upon which a story may be based as the Adora- tion of the Shepherds differs from a simple Madonna, or Boughton's Pilgrims going to Church from Stuart's portrait of George Washington. The real story pic- ture is dramatic in character and contains a story by implication, the story the artist meant to tell, and to draw this out is quite another matter than building one of our own upon a picture not designed for the purpose. The line cannot be rigidly drawn, but it seems to me well to keep the distinction clearly in mind. We do not want to fix the "literary habit" upon a child so that every picture necessarily means a story to him. In a real story or anecdotic picture, the position or action of the figures and the acces- sories of the composition all point out a story, and if the artist has done his part, we ought to read it easily. The first story subjects we give our children are naturally those dealing with child life. We begin by looking for pictures illustrating the doings of the average boy and girl in the home, with his playmates* and in the great outdoor world. Few artists have in any sense specialized in these lines, and we pick up our material among scattered examples from many countries and many periods. The most satisfactory THE FRUIT VI ND1 Munich Gallery STORY PICTURES 110 pictures of this sort are general and typical in char- acter rather than local in interest. The pood old stories which have been retold from time immemorial retain their hold upon us because they deal with the typical elements of human nature and child life. They have no local color to fix the time and place. So with story pictures. If they reach the heart of child life, they last forever, but if they depend too much upon transient elements, the next generation will not understand them. I can best explain my meaning by illustrations. About three hundred years ago the Spanish artist Murillo painted some groups of beggar boys playing in the street. They were ragged and unkempt, not particularly pretty and not over-clean, but they were full of the joy of life. Happy-go-lucky as the birds of the air, they are feast- ing on melons and grapes, and kings of the earth might envy them. There are at least eight of these subjects, the best-known being the group in the Munich Gallery, and they are among the most popu- lar and delightful pictures in the world. Though painted three centuries ago in Seville, you can find their counterparts to-day in the streets of New York, or Boston, or Chicago. To the end of time boys will flock together to loaf in the sun, devour stolen fruit, and play games on the ground. Murillo's pictures will never ueed explanation and will never go by. Now many story pictures wliieli seem very funny and clever at firsl sight lose their interesl as time passes, because the details are t<><> definitely localized. In the latter part of the nineteenth century there were vari- 120 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN" ous painters whose works had great vogue, but which are already going out of fashion. Meyer von Bre- men's pictures of Swiss child life and J. G. Brown's of New York newsboys and bootblacks are of this class. They deal with local customs which are already passing. We speak of them as "old-fashioned"; but it never occurs to anybody to call the Spanish Beggar Boys old-fashioned. Fashion has nothing to do with them. Nor does the seventeenth-century setting prevent our enjoyment of the merrymaking in some of Jan Steen's Dutch pictures. This painter did more children's subjects than seems to be generally known. We debar, of course, any which are coarse in vein, but scenes of simple hilarity, even if it is of a boisterous kind, are good to have. Steen's contemporary, Peter de Hooch, is at opposite poles in his choice of sub- jects, gentle, quiet, refined, and poetic. His demure little girls helping their mothers about the housework are the pattern of dutifulness. One can scarcely imagine them doing anything naughty, but they are not too prim to be thoroughly childlike and lovable. Among modern painters the French Millet and the Dutch Israels seem to me the most natural and spon- taneous in their delineations of children's occupations and amusements. In fact, the doings of country children seem to make a wider appeal than city sub- jects. It would be foolish to insist that a child's pic- tures should be only those which have stood the test of years. As well give up all magazines and news- papers. It is well, however, to keep in mind the differ- ence between the permanent and the transient. The STORY nCTDBES 121 pictures which we select as birthday and Christmas gifts for our little ones, pictures to keep as special treasures, should be of the higher order. For the rest we hail gladly any child pictures with pood drawing, good story interest, and a natural rather than an arti- ficial or forced situation. To limit a child's story pictures to subjects of child life would be a mistake which no wise educator is likely to make. It would be like shutting him up in a Lilliputian kingdom. We must help our children to grow up, and pictures are an invaluable means to this end. They should open to the young mind many avenues of thought and enjoyment. They may reflect the life of the workaday world about us, make the past vivid, or awaken visions of the fairyland of fancy. Sometimes they arouse an interest in some- thing we should not otherwise care for by investing the subject with the glamour of art. It was the pecu- liar charm of the seventeenth-century Dutch school to interpret homely domestic themes. These painters were wonderful realists and clever story-tellers, with good dramatic sense and much humor. Their pic- tures suggest to the quick imagination endless stories of everyday life — the goldsmith weighing his gold, the old market-woman haggling over her fruit and vegetables, the lady at her piano, or the cavalier with his lute. We look into the parlor, the kitchen, the chamber, the banquet-hall, the tailor's shop, the market, and the inn, and imagine all sorts of pleasant things about the occupants. With Gerald Dow and Maes we see touching scenes among the poor, the old 122 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN woman saying grace over her frugal meal, or working at her spinning-wheel. With Terburg we get a glimpse of fashionable life, peeping into the homes of the wealthy, where slender ladies, in satin gowns, are completing their toilets, playing on musical instru- ments, or engaged in polite conversation. A French genre painter of the eighteenth century, whose do- mestic subjects are closely akin to those of the Dutch school, was Chardin. There is, however, a delicacy and sentiment about his work which distinguishes it from the Dutch. Even his cooks and housekeepers, with their coquettish frilled caps, have a vein of the poetic in their make-up. It is because the occupations of daily life appeal so strongly to children that Millet is a great favorite with them. They are much interested in the simple French peasant-folk pursuing their common tasks in the house and field. The sense of strength and effi- ciency in these figures is an important element in their attractiveness, and there is usually a placid content in labor which is good to see. They take their tasks seri- ously, almost solemnly sometimes, as if performing a religious rite. The Potato Planters (man and woman) , the Sheep-shearer, the Sower, and the Gleaners illus- trate these qualities. The Angelus, the best-known, but by no means the greatest, of Millet's works, rep- resents a man and woman in the field at the close of the day's labor, bowing in prayer at the sound of the Angelus bell. When the laborers lack facial beauty, their pose is as majestic as Greek sculpture. The Man with the Hoe, notwithstanding his stupid vacant STORY PICTURES 123 expression, has a monumental dignity and the plain- faced Milkmaid is as graceful as a caryatid. The Churner's beauty is in her vigorous handling of the dasher, and her satisfaction in the results of her work. Even the eat who rubs up against her feels the cheer- ful atmosphere of content which pervades the room. The Little Shepherdess and the Woman Feeding Hens are really pretty and are the children's special favor- ites. A wide horizon and a long vista are other fea- tures of Millet's pictures which make them restful and uplifting. One does not weary of such subjects. 1 Jules Breton is another French painter of peasant labor whom the children love. The Song of the Lark is a picture of a young woman at work in the field, pausing scythe in hand to listen to the wondrous bird at which she gazes transfixed. As in Millet's Angelus there is here a suggestion of the idealism which light- ens toil. Companion figures to the girl of the Lark Song is the Gleaner, with a sheaf of wlieat on her shoulder, and the Shepherd's Star, who carries a big bundle on her head. Other subjects relate to the close of the day's labor, like the End of Labor, and the Close of Day, and the Return of the Gleaners. It will be noticed that not one of these subjects shows the actual process of labor as in Millet's works. Some other French pictures to include in this group have to do with haymaking. In Bastien-Lepage's Haymaker a woman sits in the foreground at rest, with a man stretched full length behind her. Dupre's Before the 1 All the pictures here referred to are illustrations in the volume on Millet in the Riverside Art Series. 124 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN Storm shows the haymakers hastening to load the wagon under a cloudy sky. Adan's End of Day shows a solitary haymaker tramping across the field, and in L'Hermitte's La Famille the entire family group sits in the hayfield in which the father is at work. With this class of pictures belongs Ridgway Knight's Calling the Ferry, a representation of French country life which shows the splendid physical development of the women who live and work out of doors. Horatio Walker is an American painter whose works are naturally compared with those of Millet as interpretations of farm labors. Such subjects as ploughing, wood-cutting, ice-cutting, feeding sheep, pigs, and turkeys have been treated very vigorously. These pictures are mostly in private collections, but a few are available as reproductions. For the most part we must go to the art of distant lands to show our children the primitive tasks of life. In our own coun- try the use of modern machinery and the life of the factories have for the time being removed the sub- jects of labor from the field of art. It is for the artists of the future to interpret American industrial life in its modern form. The story of the whaling industry, now rapidly becoming a thing of the past, was the special subject of the American painter, William Bradford, some of whose works have been reproduced in prints for schoolroom decoration. The Arctic Whaler and Homeward Bound are of this class. In more recent times Winslow Homer has done more than any other artist, perhaps, to show us the lives of the toilers of STORY PICTURES U5 the sea. In the Boston Art Museum are two of his famous pictures. In one we see the sailor at the look- out calling, "All's well," as the bell behind him swings out its measure of the hour. In the Fog Warn- ing a fisherman in a dory pulls a strong oar to race With the fog which is just rising above the horizon. The Gulf Stream in the Metropolitan Museum is in a more tragic vein, where a wrecked fishing-boat is rolling in the trough of a heavy sea. Another very thrilling and more cheerful subject is the Life Line. Across the surging waters the rescuer carries his human burden, swinging from the cable on which they are both drawn to safety. Nearly all boys like pictures of ships which suggest romantic adventure. Turner's Fighting Temeraire is a great historic masterpiece which, rightly read, tells a thrilling tale of naval prowess. A stately old battle- ship, no longer fit for service, is towed to its last anchorage by a steaming little tug. A glorious sky gives dignity and distinction to the event, like a triumphal funeral march. The frigate Constitution, "Old Ironsides," corresponds to the Temeraire in our own American history, and this has been painted by a contemporary artist, Marshall Johnson, in two subjects, one showing the ship in full sail alone, and the other showing the victorious frigate in contrast to the dismantled Guerriere. A few other sea subjects are in our list. A fascinating class of story pictures, and one which is very conspicuous in the art of the old masters, is that dealing with the lives of the saints, heroes, and 126 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN martyrs of Christianity. Here are some thrilling dra- matic situations, and incidentally a "moral" which is plain enough to need no pointing out. I have pre- viously spoken of the group of legends symbolizing the triumph of good over evil, the most important subjects being St. Michael and St. George. St Margaret is the maiden counterpart of St. George. A wicked king had cast her into a dungeon where a dragon appeared and devoured her. Whereupon he burst open and she stepped forth unharmed and radiant, just as we see her in Raphael's charming picture in the Louvre. The gentle St. Francis, who preached to the birds, called all the beasts his brethren, and went about doing good, is a character whom children should be taught to love. The church at Assisi is full of quaint decorations by Giotto and other early Italians illus- trating the life of the Saint. Some of these are very acceptable to children, but we need not go so far afield for the material, since Boutet de Monvel has given us the whole story in the series of designs for "Everybody's St. Francis." The story of St. Anthony of Padua, to whom a vision of the Christ-child was vouchsafed, makes a very tender picture which touches a child's heart readily. This was a favorite subject with Murillo, and in many schools and homes prints are to be seen from the Spanish painter's works, showing the good man kneeling with the precious babe in his arms. St. Christopher wading through the stream with the Christ-child on his shoulder is another favorite picture subject with the lit, an !)•[<' i Pa. . SAINT I'HRIs lol'HER STORY PICTURES 127 children. They love to hear how the giant buffeted with the storm-tossed waters, as his burden grew heavier and heavier, till lie set the child safely on the farther bank and Karned that he had been carrying the Maker of the world. Of St. Cecilia, whose music drew the angels down from heaven to listen, of St. Ursula, who voyaged to distant shrines with ten thousand maiden attendants, and of St. Genevieve, the little French shepherdess whose name is revered in Paris, we also have many attractive story pictures. From legend to allegory is but a step, and allegory is very common as a subject of mural decoration in public buildings. Such pictures are often very inter- esting and suggestive to children if properly ex- plained, and possess a certain kind of story quality. The works of Puvis de Chavannes in the Boston Public Library are particularly appropriate for school, as they illustrate various branches of learning. The subjects in the Congressional Library, at Wash- ington, are widely circulated and extremely popular for schoolroom. I refer to these more particularly in making recommendations for "The Use of Pictures in the Schoolroom." In that chapter, too, are included the story pictures which illustrate subjects of chiv- alry, classic mythology, and history. Of all the world stories none is so important reli- giously or educationally as the story of the life of Jesus. The subject has been the inspiration of the noblest art of past centuries, so that no one can in any measure understand the history of painting without 128 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN studying this class of pictures. Happily all this material is available in many forms of prints illus- trating the complete life from the promise of the angel to the ascension from Mount Olivet. List of Story Pictures Stories of child life. Murillo. Beggar Boys. Munich. (Two ragged urchins seated by ruined wall, eating grapes and melons.) Beggar Boys. Munich. (Two boys seated on a stone, eating, with dog.) Fruit- Venders. (Boy and girl with fruit baskets seated on ground counting earnings.) Dice-players. Munich. (Two urchins playing dice on flat stone. Child and dog watching.) Chardin. Grace before Meat. Louvre. (Two little girls at table. Mother standing over them directing them to give thanks.) i Jan Steen. Feast of St. Nicholas. Amsterdam. (Dutch interior with family group on Christmas Eve, the children discovering the gifts in their shoes. Boy crying to find switch instead of gift. Very merry scene.) The Cat's Dancing-Lesson. Amsterdam. (Dutch interior. Merry group about a table on which a boy holds the cat upright on hind legs. A girl plays accompaniment on flute and dog barks. Homely, simple amusement.) Christening Feast. (Dutch interior, with many figures. Baby in cradle at left; little boy and girl dancing at right.) Millet. Feeding her Birds. (Doorway of cottage with three children seated on sill, fed by mother from bowl.) The First Step. (Dooryard. Mother steadying baby who tries to toddle toward father kneeling at a distance with outstretched arms.) Knitting-Lesson. (Old woman teaching tiny girl how to manage knitting-needles.) Millais. For the Squire. (Little girl in quaint quilted sun- bonnet carrying letter.) STORY PICTURES 1*9 Millais. Princes in Tower. (Illustrating historical incident of murder of sons of Edward IV. Two hoys nling iw g together on stairway, hearing approach of murderer.) Sir Lsumbras at the Ford. (A noble presentation of an aged knight riding ;i splendid horse, with two little children, a girl and a hoy, whom he is carrying across the stream.) Boyhood of Raleigh. (Two children sitting near the beach, one, the boy Raleigh, listening to the tales of a tramp sailor who points across the sea.) Israels. Little Brother. (At the seashore. Boy wading ashore carrying small child pickaback.) Interior of a cottage. (Mother sitting by cradle watching baby.) Little seamstress. (Little girl sewing.) Boy sailing a boat. Blommers. Little Shrimp Fishermen. (Group of children in shallow water dragging for fish.) Curran. Children catching minnows. Meyer von Bremen. Little Brother. (Cottage interior. Mother standing with young babe in her arms stooping to show him to children.) The Pet Bird. (Swiss interior. Four children gathered about table on which is open cage. Bird perched on boy's finger.) Renouf. The Helping Hand. (Open boat with old sailor at oars, a little girl putting her hand over his to help.) Leighton. The Music-Lesson. (Young mother and daughter seated side by side playing lute.) T. C. Gotch. Pageant of Childhood. Liverpool Museum. (Procession of boys and girls in costume, marching by twos, graded in size.) T. Couture. Day-Dreams. Metropolitan Museum, (Boy seated at table, leaning back in reverie, holding pipe from which he has been blowing bubbles.) P. A. Cot. Paul and Virginia (also called the "Storm") Metropolitan Mnsnuin (Illustrating the story by Bernardin de Saint-Pierre. Youth and maiden fleeing before the storm.) 130 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN Kever. Sewing-School. (Two rows of little girls in chairs out- side cottage, bending assiduously to their sewing tasks.) Kaulbach. The Pied Piper. Illustration of Browning's poem. (Courtyard with flight of stone steps up which a crowd of merry children are rushing in pursuit of the piper.) Elizabeth Gardner. Two Mothers. (Young mother and child, hen and chicks.) Three Friends. (Two little girls and calf.) Peter de Hooch. Interior, Metropolitan Museum. (Little girl bringing jug into house from outer door. Mother seated within. Dog.) Storeroom. Amsterdam. (Little girl and mother.) Courtyard. National. Gallery, London. (Mother and little girl hand in hand.) Plockhorst. Christ Blessing Little Children. (The Saviour seated with group of children pressing about him.) Titian. Tobias and the Angel. S. Marziale, Venice. (Illus- trating story in Apocrypha. Boy led by angel and accompanied by dog. Child carries fish for his father.) Presentation of Virgin in Temple. Venice Academy. (Child Mary walking up long flight of Temple steps, at top of which High Priest is standing. Many spectators.) Tintoretto. Presentation of Virgin in Temple. S. Maria dell' Orto, Venice. Same subject as above in different composition. Miscellaneous story subjects of home and outdoor life. Gerard Dou. Poulterer's Shop. National Gallery, London. (Young lady bargaining with market- woman for hare.) Spinner's Dream. Munich. (Old woman say- ing grace at meal.) Maes. Old woman spinning. Amsterdam. Old woman paring apples. Berlin. Terburg. Lady washing her hands. Dresden Gallery. STORY PICTTTIES 131 Terburg. The Concert. Berlin. (Two ladies, at violin and 'cello. ) Woman peeling apples. Vienna Gallery. (A pert- looking little girl stands behind table, with very modern wide-brimmed hat.) Venneer. Woman at Casement. Metropolitan Museum. Woman jKturing milk from jug. Amsterdam. Lacemaker. Louvre. Chardin. The Cook. Lichtenstein Gallery. Vienna. (Young woman seated, with vegetables on floor and in dish beside her.) The Housekeeper, or "Home from the Market." Louvre. (Young woman leaning against heaped-up serving-table, and carrying a large sack of provisions.) Millet. Potato-Planters. Woman churning. Sheep-Shearer. The Sower. The Gleaners. The Angelus. The Shepherdess. Woman feeding Hens. Goinp to Work. Breton. Song of the Lark. Chicago Art Institute. The Gleaner. Luxembourg, Paris. The Return of the Gleaners. Luxembourg. (Full of life and action.) Horatio Walker. Spring Ploughing. The Wdcutters. St. Louis Art Museum. Bastien-Lepage. Haymakers. Dupre. Before the Storm. Adan. End of Day. L'Hermitte. La Famine. Buffalo. (Hayfield, father at work, mother and babe, little girl and grandmother seated on ground.) Ridgway Knight. Calling the Kerry. Sea Subject*. William Bradford. Winslow Homer. Arctic Whaler. Homeward Bound. Lookout. Boston Art Museum. 132 HOW TO SHOW PICTURES TO CHILDREN Winslow Homer. Fog Warning. Boston Art Museum. Gulf Stream. Metropolitan Museum. Life Line. Turner. The Fighting Temeraire. National Gallery, Lon- don. Marshall Johnson. The Constitution. The Constitution and Guerriere. Mauve. By the Sea. (Hull of a dismantled ship drawn on the shore by horses.) Sadee. Portion of the Poor. (Women and children in shal- low water picking up small fish cast away from the newly arrived fishing-vessel near by.) Illustrations of legends. Raphael. St. George and the Dragon. National Gallery, London. Tintoretto. St. George and the Dragon. National Gallery, London. Carpaccio. St. George and the Dragon. Church of S. Giorgio, Venice. Raphael. St. Margaret and the Dragon. Louvre, Paris. Raphael. St. Michael and the Dragon. Louvre, Paris. Guido Reni. St. Michael and the Dragon. Church of Cappuccini, Rome. Van Dyck. St. Martin dividing his cloak with a beggar. (Illustration in Van Dyck, Riverside Art Series.) Murillo. Vision of St. Anthony. Berlin Gallery. Vision of St. Anthony. Seville Cathedral. Vision of St. Anthony. St. Petersburg. Van Dyck. Vision of St. Anthony. (Illustration in Van Dyck, Riverside Art Series.) Titian. St. Christopher. Doge's Palace, Venice. Raphael. St. Cecilia. Bologna Gallery. Carpaccio. Story of St. Ursula in series of paintings in Venice Academy. Special favorite: The Dream of St. Ursula. Puvis de Chavannes and others. Life of St. Genevieve, in decorations of the Pantheon, Paris. APPENDIX APPENDIX LISTS OF BOOKS FOR A WORKING LIBRARY IN ART STUDY Note: A collection of books for art study should contain: (1) a general handbook of the art of every country; (2) separate monographs devoted to the work of those individual artists selected for study. Both classes of books are of two kinds: (l) the brief outline which simplifies and popularizes the subject, (2) the exhaustive special treatise, representing a study of original sources. The following two lists are made up with these distinctions in mind. List I — For General Readers GENERAL HISTORIES Mrs. Jameson. Early Italian Painters. Revised and in part rewritten by Estelle M. Hurll. H. II. Powers. Mornings with the Masters. Symonds. Renaissance in Italy. Volume on the Fine Arts. Julia Cartwright. The Painters of Florence. Sir Walter Armstrong. Art in Great Britain and Ireland. Sir Gaston Maspero. Art in Egypt. Louis Hourticq. Art in France. Comm. Ricci. Art in Xorthern Italy. Marcel Dieulafoy. Art in Spain and Portugal. Max Rooses. Art in Flanders. Tin- last seven books are issued in the "General His- tory of Art " M-ries. Eugene Fromentin. Old Masters <>f Belgium and Holland. Translated by Mary C. Bobbins. Charles EL Caffin. Story qf Spanish Painting. Charles II. Caffin. Story of French Painting. 136 APPENDIX John La Farge. The Higher Life in Art. (Treating the French painters of Barbizon school.) Charles H. Caffin. Story of Dutch Painting. Charles H. Caffin. Story of American Painting. Isham. History of American Painting. G. H. Marius. Dutch Painters of the Nineteenth Century. Translated by Alexander de Matteo. POPULAR ILLUSTRATED BOOKS John La Farge. Hundred Masterpieces. Esther Singleton's compilations: Great Pictures, and Famous Paintings. Charles Barstow. Famous Pictures. Henry T. Bailey. Twelve Great Paintings. The Children s Book of Art, by Agnes Ethel Conway and Sir Martin Conway. London, 1909. (The selections are chiefly from the National Gallery and from private col- lections in England.) BOOKS ON SEPARATE ARTISTS Series: The Great Masters in Painting and Sculpture. Edited by G. C. Williamson. (Short biographical and critical monographs by reliable critics, carefully worked out, and made especially valuable by complete descrip- tive lists of the artists' works. Well illustrated.) Riverside Art Series. By Estelle M. Hurll. Twelve volumes. (Each volume contains sixteen selected illus- trations of an individual artist with simple descriptive commentary. A biographical outline and an essay sum- ming up the artist's character and place in art history are special features.) List II — For Serious Students GENERAL HISTORIES Vasari. Lives of the Painters (Italian). In four volumes. Edited by E. H. and E. W. Blashfield and A. A. Hopkins. The original source of all our information about the APPENDIX 137 old Italian masters. Broughl up to date with corrections and valuable critical commentary. Crowe and Cavalcaselle. History of Painting in Italy. Edited by Bdward Hutton. In three volumes. Kugler. Handbook of the Italian Schools. Revised by A. II. Layard. In two volumes. Sir William Stirling-Maxwell. Annals of the Artists of Spain. Kugler. Handbook of the German, Flemish, and Dutch Schools. Revised by J. A. Crowe. In two volumes. Clara Cornelia Stranahan. History of French Painting. W. C. Brownell. French Art. Allan Cunningham. Lives of the Most Eminent British Painters. Revised by Mrs. Charles Heaton. BOOKS ON SEPARATE ARTISTS Symonds. Michelangelo Buonarotti. Eugene Miintz. Leonardo da Vinci. Eugene Miintz. Raphael. Corrado Ricci. Correggio. Claude Phillips. Titian. Char', s B. Curtis. \ clasquez and Murillo. C "1 Justi. Velasquez. R. A. M. Stevenson. Velasquez. (In series, "Great Mas- ters of Painting and Sculpture." Very original and remarkable.) Lionel Cust. Albert DUrer, A Study <>f His Life and Work. Emile Michel. Rembrandt; His Life, His Work, His Time. Translated by Florence Simmonds. Gerald Stanley Davies. Frans Hals. Emile Michel. Rubens; His Life, His Work, His Time. Lionel Cust. Van Dyck. Sir Walter Armstrong. Reynolds, Thomas Humphrey and William Roberts. Romney. Sir Walter Armstrong. Gainsborough. Julia ( 'artwrL'ht. Millet. Rene Peyrol. /»'- i 8 "//'■?/ r. John Guille Millais. Sir J (din MUlais's Life and Letter--. 138 APPENDIX Malcolm Bell. Burne-Jones: A Record and a Review. Emilie Isabel Barrington. Sir Frederick Leighton: The Life, Letters, and Work. Mary S. Watts. George Frederick Watts. The Annals of an Artist's Life. His Writings. 12 volumes. Each, Library Binding, 75 cents, net, postage extra. School I ■ Jitiott, 50 cents, net, postpaid. RA1 O^AlLL edited by estelle m. hurll Introduction I. On Raphael's Character as an IV. Collateral Reading from Liter- Artist, ature. II. On Books of Reference. V. Outline Table of the Principal III. Historical Directory of the Events in Raphael's Life. Pictures of this Collection. VI. Raphael's Contemporaries. Pictures with Interpretative Text The Madonna of the Chair. St. Cecilia. Abraham and the Three Angels. The Transfiguration. The Miraculous Draught of Fishes. Parnassus. The Sacrifice at Lystra. Socrates and Alcibiades. Heliodorus Driven from theTemple. The Flight of .(Eneas. The Liberation of Peter. St. Michael Slaying the Dragon. The Holy Family of Francis I. The Sistine Madonna. St. Catherine of Alexandria. Portrait of Raphael (frontispiece). Pronouncing Vocabulary of Proper Names and Foreign Words IVLLiMiilxA IN D 1 BY ESTELLE M. HURLL Introduction I. On Rembrandt's Character as IV. Outline Table of the Principal an Artist. Events in Rembrandt's Life. II. On Books of Reference. V. Some of Rembrandt's Famous III. Historical Directory of the Pic- Contemporaries in Holland, tures of this Collection. VI. Foreign Contemporary Paint- ers. Pictures with Interpretative Text Jacob Wrestling with the Angel. Christ at Emmaus. Israel Blea ling the Sons of Joseph. Portrait of Sa.skia. Angel Raphael leaving the Family Sortie of the Civic Guard. of Tobit. Portrait of Jan Six (etching). The Rat Killer (etchinq). Portrait of an Old Woman. The Philosopher in Meditation. The Syndics of the Cloth Guild. The Good Samaritan (etching). The Three Trees (etchin The Presentation in the Temple. Portrait of Rembrandt (frontl* Christ Preaching (etching). piece). Pronouncing Vocarulary of Proper Names and Foreign Words ** Contents anU Illustrations oe MICHELANGELO £?^ b r y l e l stelle Introduction I. On Michelangelo's Character V. Outline Table of the Principal as an Artist. Events in Michelangelo's II. On Books of Reference. Life. III. Historical Directory of the VI. Some of Michelangelo's Fa- Works of Art in this Collec- mous Italian Contempora- tion. ries. IV. Collateral Readings from Lit- erature. Pictures with Interpretative Text Madonna and Child. Daniel. David. The Delphic Sibyl. Cupid. The Cuma^an Sibyl. Moses. Lorenzo De' Medici. The Holy Family. Tomb of Giuliano De' Medici. The Pieta. Central Figures from The Last Christ Triumphant. Judgment. The Creation of Man. Portrait of Michelangelo (frontis- Jeremiah. piece). Pronouncing Vocabulary of Proper Names and Foreign Words JEAN FRANCOIS MILLET no. 4. by estelle m. hurll Introduction I. On Millet's Character as an IV. Outline Tables of the Principal Artist. Events in Millet's Life. II. On Books of Reference. V. Some of Millet's Associates. III. Historical Directory of the Pictures of this Collection. Pictures with Interpretative Text Going to Work. Feeding her Birds. The Knitting Lesson. The Church at Greville. The Potato Planters. The Sower. The Woman Sewing by Lamplight. The Gleaners. The Shepherdess. The Milkmaid. The Woman feeding Hens. The Woman Churning. The Angelus. The Man with the Hoe. Filling the Water-Bottles. Portrait of Millet (frontispiece). Pronouncing Vocabulary of Proper Names and Foreign Words *» Contents ant> Illustrations <* SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS No. 5. BY ESTELLE M. HURLL Introduction I. On the Art of Reynolds. IV. Outline Table of the Principal II. < >n Books of Reference. Events in Reynolds's Life. III. Historical Directory of the V. Contemporaries. Pictures of this Collection. Pictures with Interpretative Text Penelope Boothby. Lord Heathficld. Master Crewe as Henry VIII. Mrs. Payne-Galhvey and Child — Lady Cockburn and her Children. (" Pickaback "). Miss Howies. Cupid as Link Boy. Master liunbury. Lavinia, Lady Spencer. Mrs. Siddons as The Tragic Muse. The Strawberry CirL Angels' Heads. Dr. Samuel Johnson. The Duchess of Devonshire and her Portrait of Sir Joshua Reynolds Child. (frontispiece). Hope. jVlL IvILL/O NO. 6. BY ESTELLE M. HURLL Introduction I. On Murillo's Character as an IV. Outline Table of the Princi- Artist. pal Events in Murillo's II. On Books of Reference. Life. III. Historical Directory of the V. Contemporary Painters. Pictures of this Collection. Pictures with Interpretative Text The Immaculate Conception. The Holy Family. The Angels' Kitchen. The Fruit Venders. Boy at the Wind The Vision of St. Anthony. The Adoration of the Shepherds. St. Roderick. The Madonna and Child. Y.uth's Head. Rebekah and I.lie/er at the Well. St. Elizabeth of Hungary ("The The Dice ['layers. Leper"). The Education of the Virgin. Portrait of Murillo (frontispiece). Jesus and John ("The Children of the Shell "). Pronouncing Vocabulary of Proper Names and Foreign Words. g Contents anti Illustrations g GREEK SCULPTURE No. 7. BY ESTELLE M. HURLL Introduction I. On some Characteristics of III. Historical Directory of the Greek Sculpture. marbles reproduced in this II. On Books of Reference. Collection. Pictures with Interpretative Text Bust of Zeus Otricoli. Sophocles. Athena Giustiniana (Minerva Med- Ares seated. ica). Head of the Olympian Hermes. Horsemen from the Parthenon The Discobolus (The D i s k * Frieze. Thrower). Bust of Hera (Juno). Aphrodite of Melos (The Venus of The Apoxyomenos. Milo). Head of the Apollo Belvedere. Orpheus and Eurydice. Demeter (Ceres). Nike (The Winged Victory). The Faun of Praxiteles. Pericles (frontispiece). Pronouncing Vocabulary of Proper Names and Foreign Words 1 1 1 1 A JN No. 8. BY ESTELLE M. HURLL In troduction I. On Titian's Character as an IV. Outline Table of the Principal Artist. Events in Titian's Life. II. On Books of Reference. V. Some of Titian's Contempo- III. Historical Directory of the raries. Pictures of this Collection. Pictures with Interpretative Text The Physician Parma. The Bella. The Presentation of the Virgin Medea and Venus. (detail). The Man with the Glove. Empress Isabella. The Assumption of the Virgin Madonna and Child with Saints. (detail). Philip II. Flora. St. Christopher. The Pesaro Madonna. Lavinia. St. John the Baptist. Christ of the Tribute Money. Portrait of Titian (frontispiece). Pronouncing Vocabulary of Proper Names and Foreign Words & Contents anti Illustrations ^ ~ JL/AJN JDolLlLiV NO. 9. BY ESTELLE M. HURLL. Introduction I. On Landseer's Character as IV. Outline Table of the Principal an Artist. Events in Landseer's Life. II. On Books of Reference. V. Some of Landseer's Contem- III. Historical Directory of the poraries. Pictures of this Collection. Pictures with Interpretative Text King Charles Spaniels. A Naughty Child. Shoeing. The Sleeping Bloodhound. Suspense. The Hunted Stag. The Monarch of the Glen. Jack in Office. The Twa Dogs. The Highland Shepherd's Chief ity and Impudence. Mourner. Peace. A Lion of the Nelson Monument. War. The Connoisseurs (frontispiece). A Distinguished Member of the Humane Society. CORREGGIO NO. 10. BY ESTELLE M.HURLI. Introduction I. On Correggio's Character as IV. Outline Table of the Principal an Artist. Events in Correggio's Life. II. On Books of Reference. V. List of Contemporary Paint- III. Historical Directory of the ers. Pictures of this Collection. Pictures with Interpretative Text The Holv Night (detail). Ecce Homo. St. Catherine Reading. -. and Genii. The Marriage of St. Catherine. lohn the Baptist. Ceiling Decoration in the Sala del Christ Appearing to Mary Magda- Pergolato. lenc in the Garden. Diana. The Madonna of St. Jerome. St. John the Evangelist. Cupid Sharpening his Arrows St. John and St. Augustine. 1). St. Matthew and St. Jerome. A Supposed Portrait of Correggio The Rest on the Return from Egypt. (frontispiece). Pronouncing Vocabulary of Proper Names and Foreign Words v Contents anti Illustrations & TUSCAN SCULPTURE NO. ii. BY ESTELLE M. HURLL Introduction I. On some Characteristics of II. On Books of Reference. Tuscan Sculpture of the III. Historical Directory of the Fifteenth Century. Works in this Collection. Pictures with Interpretative Text Musical Angels. St. George. St. Philip. Bambino. St. John the Baptist The Annunciation. The Infant Jesus and St. John. The Ascension. Boys with Cymbals. Tomb of the Cardinal of Portugal. Tomb of Ilaria del Carretto (detail). Equestrian Statue of Gattamelata. Madonna and Child (detail). Shrine, Church of Santa Croce. The Meeting of St. Francis and St. II Marzocco. Dominick. Pronouncing Vocabulary of Proper Names and Foreign Words VAN L) I CiJV NO. 12. BY ESTELLE M. HURLL Introduction I. On Van Dyck's Character as IV. Outline Table of the Principal an Artist. Events in Van Dyck's Life. II. On Books of Reference. V. List of Contemporary Paint- III. Historical Directory of the ers. Pictures of this Collection. VI. Notable English Persons of the Reign of Charles I. Pictures with Interpretative Text Portrait of Anne Wake. Charles, Prince of Wales. The Rest in Egypt. St. Martin Dividing his Cloak with The So-called Portrait of Richardot a Beggar. and his Son. The Crucifixion. The Vision of St. Anthony. James Stuart, Duke of Lennox and Madame Colyns de Nole and her Richmond. Daughter. Christ and the Paralytic. Daedalus and Icarus. Philip, Lord Wharton. Portrait of Charles I. The Lamentation over Christ. The Madonna of St. Rosalia. Portrait of Van Dyck (frontispiece). vronouncing vocabulary of proper names and Foreign Words THIS BOOK IS DUE ON THE LAST DATE STAMPED BELOW AN INITIAL FINE OF 25 CENTS WILL BE ASSESSED FOR FAILURE TO RETURN THIS BOOK ON THE DATE DUE. THE PENALTY WILL INCREASE TO 50 CENTS ON THE FOURTH DAY AND TO $1.00 ON THE SEVENTH DAY OVERDUE. — HI 12 1946 APR 30 1947 — J94L l6Mr'5QP2 ^h^j ^ 21JS52W* WPC. CT?. m 3 o T6 JUN ^r r ' — ~ L LD 21-100m-7,'40(6936s) 4rl 8773 A/\. h UNIVERSITY OF CAUFORN1A LIBRARY