S LIBRARY M. KNOEDLER & CO. 556-8 FIFTH AVE. NEW YORK rt props 2 is is 4 vate. ae, ‘Ebscrbea. in es - » Hughes Pai $2 »300 for. “Hiarvgst” 4 ‘Hyening | eile * Bring — ‘$30,800 at Amerie Galleries, Thirty paintings by the late William | ~ Keith, of California, brought $30,800 | awit yesterday at\ their sale in the Anderson! - Galleries.. The sale was attended by | many collectors, and the bidding was brisk, fs ' “Golden Heritage,” a midsummer. landscape showing a shallow stream | amid a grove of “great, limped trees, | _ brought the top price of the day. H, M. Kittredge paid $4,900 for the canvas. | ~ The next best price was $3,200, paid by E. J. Sherman for “The Oaks,” an- | other landscape. R. H.c Hughes gave! $2,500 for “Harvest,” and for $2,300 R. Griswold obtained “Carniel Bay,” a typical California landséape. “April Showers” and “The Shepherd and His Flock” werebought by R. C, Hughes for $1,450 and $1,200, respectively. Richardson _ gave $1,450 for” i tion,” another landscape. ; EP ‘T a = a = a fe i c “tor 44.900, ‘he Ay a mid- sd, painted in was a shallow e, with drowsy cows ‘o ' Coisrlegla of 2? MoDougall Ch alt.os¢ 8 $210 be,” R. Grant. 435 a G. Keene... 435 : aad - c. Hughes. . ; , 1,200 ge of the Woods,” g pean ie 285 i 8, anew Pn 4 ote SP LS by es 4s 400 LOR OES 400 ‘fn IRS CS 226 uric ti sya 1,450 ie aS 550 Aiea 400 yi HARE iiiveacrhida ss. 1200, Pere. Lil “oo anne aie me 4 eae eene < 960: Dee Gamer As 9s tts “Near San Rafael,” " a eae ish ocmint 1. 8/288 iden rite,” H. M.. Kitt- ener renee? $ ea. ‘Hikins.. 1,100 re bene ots Mi. iceoler. <<. "700 ek ee eet ¥ own in other spring : a ee 4 i wt 2 ; 4 } << ove Dal Via —— ee APR 24 1916 Ne A. Vanes 499-46 There will be sold this afternoon at. the Anderson Galleries a group of thir-| ‘Reith andscapes by the late William eith, who was born in Seotland, but ais bis chai was saentined with Cal- -ifornia. It was a long career that he sere ed in that part of the world, ie he became a kind of local classic. Rather late in life he made his work better known in.the Hast. It was good work, Bee because it was based on a. close. stp dy of nature, and, even pen Panes iniagingtive conception of art. Bont was a romanticist who fe are between the fervid glamours Diaz and the solider ideal of our own George Inness. Without the genius of either | of those masters, he missed one great. virtue characteristic of them both—' that instinet for the definition of form which will give to a tree, for example, all its individual character. On the other hand, he had something of their gift fer color, and, above all, their feel- Ing for landscape as a world of rich, | romantic beauty. The pictures in the) “present exhibition just fall short of the weight, the distinction, of work of the high est rank, but they are neverthe- ' ss full of ae full of a _ kindling | emotion. A painting like “The Mead- | ow” (No. 22) is delightfully significant of his best traits—his pictorial faculty, | his breadth and his sentiment. It is al little more beguiling, perhaps, than any } ef its companions, yet there is not one , of the latter which is lacking in the | ‘note of sylvan intimacy which it so tri-. umphantly sounds. Keith’s pictures are ‘good to live with, happy interpreta- | tions, sympathetically personal impres- | sions. We are glad this collection of | them has been brought to New York aad. hepe it will stay here. | . (fees tr frsg +z) i re f a ’ 4 ia er 1 ght 4 ‘ J } y mn vi ; - ; - “a y | ' ** - ; 4 oS “4 ¥, : : ie ‘ wa ns s _ roe ; THIRTY PAINTINGS | | BY THE LATE 3 WILLIAM KEITH _ wands po BY THE ARTIST’S SON _ a er MR. CHARLES W. KEITH a of California : ; Important Landscapes i in ane Best Style 3 — = vi this distinguished Artist