Kw, by Emission, from M: Or Ummm 23M, 1905 H

Kw, by Emission, from M: Or Ummm 23M, 1905 H

K B ! ! E MISSION ! R OM W, , ! or u m 2 m 1 0 m: mm 3 , 9 5 h J OSE PH P E NN E LL R ! RA O R A! HO R TCHE , ILL ST T , T B ! ! R E DE R ICK KE RP E L ‘ ! D IC K K RE E R EPPEL a: co . AST TH STR EE T NEW! OR E 3 9 , K ' 1 907 R EP mNTE D B ! P E R M ISSION ! R OM , , ” THE O ! TLO OK o r S E PT E M B E R 2 m 1 0 3 , 9 5 J O SE P H P E N N E LL E C HE R ILL! S RA O R A! H R T , T T , T O B ! ! R E D E R IC K K E P P E L ! RE D E RIC K K E PPEL 8: C O . E AST TH ST R E E T N E W! O R 4 3 9 , K I 90 7 J O SE P H P E NN E LL TC HER ILL! STR ATO R A! THOR E , , , B ! E K P E ! R ED R IC K E P L. M O NG producers of fine pictures of vari ous kinds it is the able and original illus trator who m ost quickly wins recognition and fame , and of all artists it is he who is the m ost necessary and m ost beneficial to civilization . Li terature is certainly the m ost enormous power f r m o good that we know , but any books and peri odi cals would be maimed and incomplete if unaided by an i llustrator of the right sort . For example , what a loss it would have been if that ’ r familiar little masterpiece , Lewis Ca roll s ” Alice in Wonderland , had been originally printed and published without the admi rable il lustrations o f Sir John Ten niel ! nfortunately , this happy unity between n author and artist is one too general , and many n ece s contemporary illustrations , although not s aril ! r om y bad as pictures , are nevertheless f l u l the purpose , as Ham et says , and act a ly fight against and weaken the text wh ich they attempt to elucidate and em phasize . Next after the illustrator it is probably the really able original etcher to whom fame comes quickly ; and after him , in a descending scale , come the portrait pain ter , then the painter of i other subjects , and , last of all in order of qu ck promotion , the sculptor . His statue or group f cannot easily be multiplied , is di ficult to move fo r from pl ace to place , and these reasons must long remain comparatively unknown , while , on the contrary , the picture of the illustrator is ex amine d by thousands o f people in thousands of f di ferent places from the very day of its birth . Of the many famous painters who thus won early recognition by means of e tching or illustrating , or through both , I may mention Whistler , Sir John Everett Millais (late Presi o f dent the Royal Academy , London) , the Fren chmen Meissonier and Charles Jacque , and one of our famous Philadelphians , Edwin A . R A. Abbey , . In com pany with these emi nent names we may place the name of Mr . Pennell . If, unlike the others , he is not yet ub famous as a painter , it is solely because the p lis hers and the public have not hitherto allowed him the time necessary for the making of oil - paintings , water colors , and pastels ; but he has produced a fe w beautiful pictures in these he mediums , although has not yet exhibited them . Moreover , he is still a young m an . 4 — Joseph Pennell like Whistler , Abbey , and other famous artists of American birth—has won name and fame i n Europe before American recognition came to him . He comes of good old ! uaker stock , and was born at Philadelphia o f ul 1 86 0 . o f on the fourth J y , He is the son the late Larki n Pennell , who was an eminent member of the Society of Friends , and whose first American ancestor came to our shores in company with William Penn when the latter made his second voyage from England to the province of Pennsylvania . — I think that pi ctorial art l ike m usic , ri ch dress , and certai n other artistic but worldly vanities—was disallowed by the sternly con s cie ntio us first followers of George Fox ; but , be that as i t may , Joseph Pennell from h is early boyhood was resolved to becom e an artist , and ! ” that indomitable backbone which distin ! . guis hes him as a man must have made di ffi cult things easy to h im as a boy . His training began at the Philadelphia Indus trial Art School , and was continued and com pleted at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts . Th is was during the years when that admirable man , the late James L . Claghorn , was its President . Mr . Claghorn belonged to the very best type of American citizenship ; 9 one of those essentially ! big and forceful — men presiden t of this , chairman of that , trustee of the other public institution , but withal thoroughly democratic and quite devoid - of all pretense or self importance . Thi s was the man who fi rst made me acquainted with the work of Joseph Pennell , who was not then twenty years old , and I well remember the ’ Cla ho rn s glow of pride on Mr . g handsome face as he showed me certain etchings repre senting street scenes in Philadelphia , and his remark , Thi s is original work by one of our own boys ; n ow what do you s ay to tha t ! These first essays of the ’ prentice hand were little more than the prophecy of what the master hand was to do later , and yet they were full of good augury . Some of the essential qualities were al ready manifest— such as the unerri ng eye for the picturesque , and also that instinct for good d rawing which we may com ! pare to the delicate natural ear for music which renders it almost impossible for its happy pos s es s o r o f un to sing a note out t e . In both cases competen t instructors can— and indeed must develop and educate the gift which is inborn i n f a true artist ; but i f this gi t is not there , the teachers can never create it . In the vi tal quality of appropriateness as t o At L b a V . y nch urg , irgini ’ contrasted with irrelevancy , Mr . Pennell s illus tra tio ns are certainly unsurpassed and it would be as diffi cult to find among them a picture which does not materially aid the text as it fi would be to nd one which , in itself, is not a f ar a ckno wl veritable work o t. But besides his edged power as a draughtsman for illustration , his technical knowledge of reproductive pro cesses gives him a distinct advantage over m ost e of his confr res , so that his drawing is pretty ” sure to ! prin t w ell in the page of a mag azine or a book , because he knows so well how to m ake his picture wi th th at particular end in view . Another rare endowment is his peculiar faculty for giving to each one of hi s pictures its own true local aspect , so that there is no mistaking an American for an English scene or a Spanish for an Italian view . Very few artists possess this facul ty o f discarding their own particular national point of view and of absorbing the changed — character o f di fferent foreign countries n o tw o O of which are ali ke . The pposite condition is strongly fel t i n the case of the portrai ts o f Americans whom we know , and which are painted here by visiting foreign artists o f co ns id crable reputation ; such pictures may display all the brilliant cleverness of the m odern French I 3 school , and may even be good as likenesses , yet ” flwe are sure to suff er from the ! Frenchy avor which th e foreign artist has unconsciously superadded . But all this while we are leaving Joseph Pennell as a promising young art student in peaceful Philadelphia , whereas his fame was to ' be won a thousand leagues from his native city . We must follow him to Europe , whither he 1 8 8 went in the year 4 ; but , if we let him go inco m there alone , this chronicle would be so plete as to be quite worthless . Another good Philadelphian must go with him , so inseparable fo r the last twenty years is the work of the two , although the one never does the particular work of the other . I well remember hearing that man of genius , Henry Ward Beecher, say i n a sermon , When God gives a m an a good wife , that man will thereafter have little need to pray to his Creator ” fo r other blessings . We all know of the beautiful union between Robert Browning and his wife Elizabeth ; but this historic intellectual partnership was not m ore com plete than that between Joseph an d Elizabeth Robins Pennell .

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    68 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us