Winnetka-Northfield Public Library District

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 22 Jan 1927, p. 24

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WINNETKA TALK January 22, 1927 L First Church of Christ, Scientist OF GLENCOE, ILLINOIS Announces FREE LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE by JUDGE FREDERICK C. HILL, C.S. of Clinton, Illinois Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts. In the Masonic Hall, Corner of Vernon and Hazel Aves. GLENCOE Monday Evening, Jan. 24, 1927 at 8 o'clock THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND Kappas Are to Celebrate Anniversary of Founding The Chicago and Evanston alumni chapters, in co-operation with Tau chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta at Northwestern university, will hold a joint Founders' day luncheon celebrat- ing the fifty-seventh anniversary of the founding of the sorority, at the Union League club, Saturday, January 29, at 12:30 o'clock. Among the north shore members of the alumnae chapters who will be present at the luncheon, are Mrs. Fritz Wagner, Jr., of 384 Hawthorn lane, Winnetka, chairman of the Ev- anston group; Mrs. Walter Steele of Evanston; Mrs. Herbert Bartling of 116 Fuller lane, Winnetka; Mrs. Par- ker Miller of FEvanston; and Miss Dorothy Schultz of Tau chapter at Northwestern university. Andrew M. Taylor of Indianapolis spent Sunday with his mother, Mrs. Ww J. Taylor, 310 Cumnor road, Kenil- worth. Mrs. Andrew M. Taylor who has been visiting in Crlver, Ind. re- turned to Indianapolis with Mr. Taylor. I a oh a a ah Ch Sh SS SS Sd Vv vv ve www w ddd SR ---- vv vv vw SR SA I VV VV PPP VV VV PY VP YP YY VY YY VY YT YT YT YY YY Yy yy yvyvyyyy yr Gowns Shad Sh Sh SS sweeping clearaway. Prompt Participation ak is urged, for in the majority of cases the values are one-of-a- kind and cannot be duplicated! A Clearancing Without Parallel--Unsurpassed for Out -and-Out Values Your every apparel need-- way underpriced in this Smart tailored dresses for afternoon wear--gorgeous creations for formal parties--beautiful coats, sumptuously fur-trimmed --every one carries a substantial reduction! dari POOP OOOO IOPTIITT TTY Y YE" hha a a dada. TP TIP T PION Included in This Sale 43 FROCKS at $10.75 each Eva Karon Schur Wraps 1605 Chicago Avenue ehhh hhh hhh AA Sportswear hhh cheshire AO a pT TTY ym a A hh uiiimmississthutiuti hihi di dh Evanston | pw wm habe: bia hihi dh hihi dh cette No Art Originated in America States Speaker at College "America has originated no art," said Percy Eckhart, vice president of the board of trustees of the National Kin- dergarten and Elementary college, in speaking before the students of the college last Thursday, January 13, on "The Development of American Art." "America is too young to have an art of its own, for art develops slowly and it takes centuries to bring it into definite form so that it can be recog- nized from other arts. The art history of a race follows the life history of the people. - At first the people in Ameri- ca were busy digging in the soil and conquering hardships. They had re- ligion and shelter and food and safety from the Indians to think about, and they had no time for the fine arts." "Tater, when they had time for art,' said Mr. Eckhart--remarking that in this lecture he would consider only the art of painting--"they took what they could understand, and like children, they enjoyed pictures that represented things they knew." In explaining this statement Mr. Eckhart said that people learn first by seeing things--not from what they hear, smell or taste, but from what they see. "That is why movies are so popu- lar. They appeal to the lowest level of intelligence in the community. A story can be told through pictures more easily and quickly to the infantile intelligence than in any other way." "The first pictures in America, there- fore. were story-telling pictures, giving facts and episodes in the daily life of the people or scenes from their his- tory," said Mr. Eckhart. "These early manifestations of art in America were transplanted by the colonists from their homes in England and on the Continent, and in America we find at first an imitative art. There were landscape painters and portrait paint- ers who imitated the English and Dutch schools, but their work was very crude." The first art to develop in America with any indication of originality was the art of oratory, and this has had a direct influence on the art of painting." he continued. "The oratory would not be considered good today, It was too florid, but it- was American and its impression on landscape painters re- sulted in large, panoramic landscapes, overburdened with detail. They were extremely minute and photographic and contained everything that a man might see in a long lifetime out-of- doors." "Following the historic panoramic landscape in America there gradually developed the Hudson River school of painters," said Mr. Eckhart, who ex- plained that although these artists still represented American scenes, they be- gan to cut down from the panorama and give isolated bits which reflect back to the beholder the spirit of the landscape as it appeared to the artist. "In its later developments," he said, "America grew to be dependent on the rest of the world. There is no longer a development of isolated movements of art. What is done in Paris is im- mediately reflected in New York." Mr. Eckhart spoke briefly: of the revolt of the European artists against the perfection of painting as a repre- sentative art, and of the modern school of painters which has arisen from the ashes of the old--artists who say, "Subject matter, reality, are gone. We will express ourselves in our own way and vou can try to find out what we are saying." ' "Art has styles, and styles change," said Mr. Eckhart in conclusion. "Whether the new art will last or not no one can tell."

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