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  • May 1, 1858
  • Page 94
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 1, 1858: Page 94

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Fine Arts

FIFE ARTS

There is now exhibiting at Mr . - . . Dickinson ' s gallery , in Bond-street , one of the most remarkable pictures of the day—the " Great Fall , Niagara , " by Mr . Frederick W . Church , of New York . There would appear to be no more difficult task than that of reproducing on canvas running water with any appearance of truth ; but how much more difiicult must it be to show the effect upon water hurrying to falls such as are the distinguishing characteristics of Niagara . Yet all these

difficulties , by patient assiduity , artistic genius , and a true painter ' s feeling , Mr . Church has overcome ; so that we can almost imagine we are looking upon the very scene itself , whilst all previous views of Niagara have given us no other idea than that the subject was too grand for the painter to understand or represent . Mr . Church ' s picture is about eight feet long hy four deep , and the view is taken from the Canadian side , a little above Table Bock , so as to include the whole of the Horse Shoe Fall to the corner of Goat Island . One of the

remarkable characteristics of this picture is , that there is no shore visible in the foreground , the spectator looking at once upon the expanse of mighty waters as they rush , eddying onward , to the fall . The appearance of the trunk of a shattered tree ; as it is thrown about by opposing eddies—the rocks breaking the waters in their fall into numerous and increasing cascades—and the playing of the rainbow—all are wonderfully marked , and renders this , as we have stated , one of the most remarkable pictures of the day . It is about to be reproduced in chromo-lithography by Messrs . Day and Son , of LincohVs-inn Fields , the

lithographers to the Queen , who will publish it at a price which will bring it within the reachof a large body of the patrons of art . To show how closely it may be thus copied , we need only refer to another recent publication in bhromodithography by the Messrs . Day—" Early Days of H . E . H . the Princess Eoyal / ' by Sir Edwin Landseer . The infant princess is represented as playing with a favourite greyhound of her Majesty ; and the truthfulness of the finished lithograph to the original is

certainly wonderful—not a line , not a touch of the artist ' s brush being lost . This is the more extraordinary , when we consider that , in order to produce this picture , U has to be worked upon thirty-four separate stones , each of which produces something towards the general effect , from the faintest outline to the completed work of art . Specimens of the picture , in each of its gradations , are exhibited , which are indeed most curious to trace .

The Week

THE WEEK

Her Majesty gave a grand evening concert at Buckingham Palace on Monday , to which more than 400 members of the nobility and gentry were invited . Her Majesty , with the Prince Consort , attended the performances at Her Majesty ' s Theatre on Tuesday . On Wednesday there was a drawing room , at which upwards of 26 * 0 ladies were presented to the Queen . On Thursday an addition was

made to the royal party by the arrival of the Queen of Portugal and suite on a visit to her Majesty . There was a court and privy council on Friday , when tho Duke of Devonshire was sworn in as lord-lieutenant of the county of Derby . On Saturday the Queen , Prince Consort , Queen of Portugal , Princess Alice , and party , paid an early visit to the Crystal Palace , and appeared much pleased by the singing of the children of the National Bohools , who were rehearsing for the after-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1858-05-01, Page 94” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 20 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01051858/page/94/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE AND FESTIVAL. Article 1
FREEMASONRY AND ARCHITECTURE. Article 4
A MASONIC MARTYR—HYPPOLITO JOSE DA COSTA. Article 7
ODE TO MASONRY. Article 12
OUR ARCHITECTURAL SUMMARY. Article 13
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 16
THE MASONIC MIRRIOR. Article 22
PROVINCIAL Article 31
ROYAL ARCH Article 40
MARK MASONRY Article 41
AMERICA Article 44
MASONIC FESTIVITIES Article 48
THE WEEK. Article 48
Obituary. Article 50
NOTICES. Article 50
MASONIC IMPOSTURESS Article 51
SONGS OF THE CRAFT. Article 54
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. Article 67
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 74
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 78
CHARITY. Article 81
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 82
PROVINCIAL Article 85
EOYAL ARCH Article 91
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR Article 93
FINE ARTS Article 94
THE WEEK Article 94
Obituary Article 97
NOTICES. Article 97
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 98
PEOVINCIAL GRAND LODGES. Article 99
FREEMASONS' GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 102
UNIFORMITY OF WORKING. Article 103
THE CANADAS. Article 108
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 115
THE MASONIC MIRR0R. Article 119
METROPOL ITAN Article 124
PROVINCIAL Article 129
ROYAL ARCH, Article 133
MARKMASONRY Article 135
KNIIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 136
SCOTLAND. Article 141
THE WEEK Article 142
NOTICES. Article 146
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR: Article 147
among their ranks were many learned eccl... Article 149
TIDINGS FROM THE CRAFT IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 161
OUR ARCHITECTURAL OHAPTER. Article 164
CORRESPONDENCE Article 168
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 171
PROVINCIAL Article 179
ROYAL ARCH Article 182
COLONIAL. Article 183
THE WEEK. Article 192
NOTICES. Article 193
TO CGEEESPONDENTS. Article 194
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Page 94

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Fine Arts

FIFE ARTS

There is now exhibiting at Mr . - . . Dickinson ' s gallery , in Bond-street , one of the most remarkable pictures of the day—the " Great Fall , Niagara , " by Mr . Frederick W . Church , of New York . There would appear to be no more difficult task than that of reproducing on canvas running water with any appearance of truth ; but how much more difiicult must it be to show the effect upon water hurrying to falls such as are the distinguishing characteristics of Niagara . Yet all these

difficulties , by patient assiduity , artistic genius , and a true painter ' s feeling , Mr . Church has overcome ; so that we can almost imagine we are looking upon the very scene itself , whilst all previous views of Niagara have given us no other idea than that the subject was too grand for the painter to understand or represent . Mr . Church ' s picture is about eight feet long hy four deep , and the view is taken from the Canadian side , a little above Table Bock , so as to include the whole of the Horse Shoe Fall to the corner of Goat Island . One of the

remarkable characteristics of this picture is , that there is no shore visible in the foreground , the spectator looking at once upon the expanse of mighty waters as they rush , eddying onward , to the fall . The appearance of the trunk of a shattered tree ; as it is thrown about by opposing eddies—the rocks breaking the waters in their fall into numerous and increasing cascades—and the playing of the rainbow—all are wonderfully marked , and renders this , as we have stated , one of the most remarkable pictures of the day . It is about to be reproduced in chromo-lithography by Messrs . Day and Son , of LincohVs-inn Fields , the

lithographers to the Queen , who will publish it at a price which will bring it within the reachof a large body of the patrons of art . To show how closely it may be thus copied , we need only refer to another recent publication in bhromodithography by the Messrs . Day—" Early Days of H . E . H . the Princess Eoyal / ' by Sir Edwin Landseer . The infant princess is represented as playing with a favourite greyhound of her Majesty ; and the truthfulness of the finished lithograph to the original is

certainly wonderful—not a line , not a touch of the artist ' s brush being lost . This is the more extraordinary , when we consider that , in order to produce this picture , U has to be worked upon thirty-four separate stones , each of which produces something towards the general effect , from the faintest outline to the completed work of art . Specimens of the picture , in each of its gradations , are exhibited , which are indeed most curious to trace .

The Week

THE WEEK

Her Majesty gave a grand evening concert at Buckingham Palace on Monday , to which more than 400 members of the nobility and gentry were invited . Her Majesty , with the Prince Consort , attended the performances at Her Majesty ' s Theatre on Tuesday . On Wednesday there was a drawing room , at which upwards of 26 * 0 ladies were presented to the Queen . On Thursday an addition was

made to the royal party by the arrival of the Queen of Portugal and suite on a visit to her Majesty . There was a court and privy council on Friday , when tho Duke of Devonshire was sworn in as lord-lieutenant of the county of Derby . On Saturday the Queen , Prince Consort , Queen of Portugal , Princess Alice , and party , paid an early visit to the Crystal Palace , and appeared much pleased by the singing of the children of the National Bohools , who were rehearsing for the after-

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