anxa 87-B 22804 International Exhibition of Modern Art Under the Auspices of the ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN PAINTERS AND SCULPTORS, Incorporated COPLEY SOCIETY OF BOSTON COPLEY HALL April Twenty-eighth to May Nineteenth 1913 Bigelow Kennard CS, Co., Inc. Rare Antiques We extend a most cordial invitation to The Copley Society and their friends to visit our ANTIQUE DEPARTMENT where our salesmen will take pleasure in showing a collection of Rare Old Pieces of Furniture Porcelains, China Embroideries and Carvings Fine Old Lustres, Lanterns Bohemian Side Pieces with Crystal Pendants Spanish Jewelry and many other interesting objects of ART 511 Washington Street Boston, Mass, * Holland Coast, Mesdag \ S THE EMERY SCHOOL ART \ COMPANY S I 372 Boylston Street, Boston > \ Pictures for schools , homes and libraries \ \ CLASS MEMORIALS l DOLL ca, RICHARDS Fme Arts 71 NEWBURY STREET BOSTON Brooks Reed Gallery IMPRESSIONIST PAINTINGS l 19 ARLINGTON STREET ) ; BOSTON \ \ ■ S 5 W. J. GARDNER CO Successors to Dunton 8c Gardner Picture Shop PAINTINGS, ENGRAVINGS, ETCHINGS, WATER COLORS, MEZZOTINTS, CARBONS, GRAVURES, PHOTOGRAPHS, ARTISTIC PICTURE FRAMING 498 Boylston Street, Boston New York London YAMANAKA CS, CO. Dealers in Eastern Art Objects, respectfully ; invite your inspection ; 456 BOYLSTON STREET BOSTON ar^d their summer shops, Bar Harbor, Me. i and Magnolia, Mass. "The world is so full of beautiful things. We all ought to be as happy as kings." — Louis Stephenson We have three specialties: Beautiful things Reasonable prices A desire to serve you acceptably Embroideries, Hangings, Rare Lamps, Teakwood, Bronzes, Old Rugs, Mandarin Coats Let us show you Walter M. Hatch CS, Co. 148 Tremont Corner West St. Did you ever look over the Boston Transcript and fail to find more interesting and instructive matter than in any other daily paper? Those who take it regularly testify that it is one of the country's great dailies. If you appreciate all the News that is Real News not scare heads, together with many features as interesting as any magazine, give the Evening Transcript a trial. International Exhibition of Modern Art BOSTON 1913 International Exhibition of Modern Art Under the Auspices of the Association of American Painters and Sculptors, Inc. COPLEY SOCIETY OF BOSTON Copley Hall April Twenty-eighth to May Nineteenth 1913 Copyright, 1913 Atsociation of American Painters and Sculptors, Inc. Vreeland Advertising Press New York Many of the works in this exhibition are for sale. Information as to prices and location of works, may be obtained at the desk. No works may be re- moved during the exhibition. K.axd)^ ^f)v xpslaaov tj xaXti)<^ Occvetv. From the IphigeneJa at Aulis PREFACE Mr. Arthur B. Da vies, President of the Association of American Painters and Sculptors, gave out the following state- ment on the last day of December 1912: "On behalf of the Executive Committee, I desire to explain the general attitude of the As- sociation and especially in regard to the Interna- tional Exhibition to be held in this city in February and March. *'This is not an institution but an association. It is composed of persons of varying tastes and predilections, who are agreed on one thing, that the time has arrived for giving the public here the opportunity to see for themselves the results of new influences at work in other countries in an art way. ''In getting together the works of the European Moderns, the Society has embarked on no propa- ganda. It proposes to enter on no controversy with any institution. Its sole object is to put the paintings, sculptures, and so on, on exhibition so that the intelligent may judge for themselves by themselves. **Of course controversies will arise, just as they have arisen under similar circumstances in France, Italy, Germany and England. But they will not be the result of any stand taken by this Association as such; on the other hand we are perfectly willing i to assume full responsibility for providing the opportunity to those who may take one side or the other. '*Any individual expression of opinion contrary to the above is at variance with the official resolu- tions of this Association.*' The wide publicity given to the above in the public press all over the country showed to what an extent it was accepted as a definite and precise expression of the policy and the aims of the As- sociation in its relation to the art of Europe and to the American public. That policy and those aims remain unchanged. Anything that can be said further must be but an amplification of the statement. The foreign paintings and sculptures here shown are regarded by the committee of the Association as expressive of the forces which have been at work abroad of late, forces which cannot be ignored because they have had results. The American artists responsible for bringing the works of the foreigners to this country consider the exhibition as of equal importance for them- selves as for the lay public. The less they find their work showing signs of the developments indicated in the Europeans, the more reason they will have to consider whether or not painters and sculptors here have fallen behind through escaping the incidence through distance and for other rea- sons of the forces that have manifested themselves on the other side of the Atlantic. Art is a sign of life. There can be no life without change, as there can be no development without change. To be afraid of what is different or un- familiar, is to be afraid of life. And to be afraid of life is to be afraid of truth, and to be a champion of superstition. This exhibition is an indication that the Association of American Painters and Sculptors is against cowardice even when it takes the form of amiable self satisfaction. No works by Americans are shown in the Boston Exhibition because of lack of space. The members of the Association preferred to withdraw all of their own paintings and sculptures rather than make a choice, or have themselves represented when other American exhibitors were not. They considered that the most important thing of all was to dis- play the European section of the International Exhibition to the greatest possible advantage. FREDERICK JAMES GREGG ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN PAINTERS AND SCULPTORS President . . . Arthur B. Da vies Vice President J. Mowbray-Clarke Treasurer . . . Elmer L. MacRae Secretary Walt Kuhn Members Karl Anderson Ernest Lawson George Bellows Jonas Lie D. Putnam Brinley George B. Luks J. Mowbray-Clarke Elmer L. MacRae Leon Dabo Jerome Myers Jo Davidson Frank A. Nankivell Arthur B. Davies Bruce Porter Guy Pene Du Bois Maurice Prendergast Sherry E. Fry John Sloan William J. Glackens Henry Fitch Taylor Robert Henri Allen Tucker E. A. Kramer Mahonri Young Walt Kuhn Honorary Vice Presidents Mrs. John Lowell Gardner M. Claude Monet Mrs. Edwin Sherrill Dodge M. Auguste Renoir Mrs. Henry Fitch Taylor M. Odilon Redon Archer M. Huntington, Esq. Augustus John, Esq. Sir Hugh Lane Alfred Stieglitz, Esq. Newell Dwight Hillis, D.D. Joel Elias Spingarn, Esq. Honorary Members John Quinn Frederick James Gregg List of Artists and Their Works Unless otherwise stated, the work is an oil painting ARCHIPENKO, ALEXANDRE 1 Negress (Sculpture) 2 Family Life (Sculpture) BERNARD, JOSEPH 3 Girl with Pitcher (Sculpture) BLANCHET, ALEXANDRE 4 The Two Friends BOURDELLE, E. A. 5 Heracles (Sculpture) BRANCUSI, CONSTANTIN 6 The Kiss (Sculpture) 7 Sleeping Muse (Sculpture) 8 A Muse (Sculpture) 9 Mile. Pogany (Sculpture) BRAQUE, GEORGES 10 The Violin 1 1 Antwerp 12 The Forest Lent by M. Henry Kahnweiler CEZANNE, PAUL 13 Lithographs Lent by M. Ambroise VoUard 14 Woman with Rosary Lent by M. E. Druet 15 Portrait of Cezanne 16 Bathers 17 Auvers 18 Portrait 19 Melun Lent by M. Ambroise VoUard 20 Water Color (Lent) 21 Portrait, Mme. Cezanne Lent by Mr. John Quinn 22 Flowers Lent by Mrs. Montgomery Sears Cezanne (Portrait) 23 Harvesters Lent by Prof. J. O. Sumner 24 Landscape Lent r 25 Portrait, Cezanne Lent by M. Stephan Bourgeois CHABAUD, AUGUSTE 26 The Flock After the Rain Lent by Mr. John Quinn CONDER, CHARLES 27 The Beautiful Antonia 28 ^Tantasia'' (Silk Panel) 29 Casino of Paris (Silk Painting) 30 The Toilet (Pastel) Lent by Mr. John Quinn 31 The Crinolines CROSS, HENRI E. 32 Water Color 33 Water Color Lent by M. E. Druet GAUGUIN, PAUL Flowers Against a Yellow Background DENIS, MAURICE 34 Angelica 35 The Forest 36 Nausicaa Lent by M. E. Druet DERAIN, ANDRE 37 The Blue Pot 38 The Window Overlooking the Park Lent by M. Henry Kahnweiler DUCHAMP, MARCEL 39 Nude Figure Descending a Staircase 40 Sketch of a Nude DUCHAMP-VILLON, RAYMOND 41 Torso (Plaster) 42 Girl of the Woods (Bronze) 43 Baudelaire (Terra-cotta) DUFY, RAOUL 44 Leopold Str., Munich 45 Regatta on the English Channel REDON. ODILON Silence DUNOYER DE SEGONZAC, ANDRE 46 Landscape 47 Pastoral FRESNAYE, ROGER A. DE LA 48 Portrait Lent by Mme. D. 49 Landscape FRIESZ, OTHON 50 Bathers 51 Exotic Vegetation Lent by M. E. Druet GAUGUIN, PAUL 52 Wood Sculpture Lent by M. E. Druet 53 Faa Iheihe 54 Under the Palms 55 The Spirit of Evil 56 Flowers Lent by Ambroise VoUard 57 Head of a Man (Drawing) 58 Woman Stooping (Water Color) 59 Woman and Child (Water Color) 60 At the Spring (Water Color) Lent by Mrs. Chadbourne VAN GOGH, VINCENT Hills at Aries 61 Still Life 62 The Studio Lent by M. E. Druet 63 Landscape, Tahiti Lent by Mrs. Alexander Tison 64 Tahitian Scene Lent by Mr. John Quinn 65 Lithographs GIRIEUD, PIERRE 66 Stained Glass 67 Homage to Gauguin Lent by M. E. Druet GLEIZES, ALBERT 68 Woman and Phlox HODLER, FERDINAND 69 The Niessen Mountain Lent by M. Heinrich Thannhauser HONE, NATHANIEL 70 Hastings Lent by Mr. John Quinn INGRES, J. A. D. 71 Drawing 72 Drawing Lent by Egisto Fabbri PICABIA, FRANCIS The Procession, Seville INNES, J. D. 73 Evening Near Arenig, North Wales 74 The Cactus 75 Palm Trees at CoUioure Lent by Mr. John Quinn JOHN, AUGUSTUS E. • 76 Woman Reading (Provencal Study) 77 Loving Companions (Tempera) 78 Strange Company (Tempera) 79 Gipsy and Child (Tempera) 80 Woman Standing Against Sky 81 Woman in a Garden 82 Three Little Boys (Dorset Study) 83 Caspar and Pyramus (Dorset Study) 84 ^^Rhyd-y-Fin'' (Welsh Study) 85 A Girl's Head 86 A Girl's Head 87 Nude Woman Reclining 88 Nude Girl Seated 89 Two Girls and a Boy 90 Woman's Head and Shoulders Lent by Mr. John Quinn 90A The Desert 90B Pines 90C The Orange Frock 90D The Coast of Clare 90E The Yellow Dress 90F The Red Shawl MAILLOL ARISTIDE . . _ Bas Relief JOHN, GWEN 91 Girl Reading at a Window Lent by Mr. John Quinn KANDINSKY, WASSILY 92 Improvisation Lent by Mr. Hans Goltz KIRCHNER, T. L. 93 The Inn Garden Lent by Mr. Hans Goltz KIRSTEIN, ALFRED 94 Landscape (Water Color) 95 Landscape (Water Color) 96 Landscape (Water Color) LAURENCIN, MARIE 97 Portrait (Water Color) 98 Desdemona (Water Color) 99 Girl With Fan (Drawing) 100 Still Life 101 The Toilet of the Young Girls 102 The Poetess 103 Young Girl VILLON Girl at Piano LEES, DERWENT 104 Lowering Clouds 105 Evening Lent by Mr. John Quinn LEGER, FERNAND 106 Study 107 Study LEHMBRUCK, WILHELM 108 Woman Kneeling MAILLOL, ARISTIDE 109 Woman Standing (Terra Cotta) 110 Bas Relief (Terra Cotta) 111 Drawings Lent by M. E. Druet MANGUIN, HENRI 112 The Rock Lent by M. E. Druet ARCHIPENKO, ALEXANDRE Negress MANOLO, MANUEL H. 113 Woman Kneeling Lent by M. Henry Kahnweiler MARQUET, ALBERT 114 Inundation 115 Hamburg 116 Drawings Lent by M. E. Druet MATISSE, HENRI 117 Drawings Lent by M. E. Druet 118 Red Madras Lent by M. Michael Stein 119 Joaquina Lent by M. Bernheim Jeune and Co. 120 The Hairdresser Lent by M. Michael Stein 121 Gold Fish 122 Young Sailor 123 Red Panel 124 A Back (Sculpture) 125 Luxury 126 Portrait of Marguerite 127 Nasturtiums 128 Still Life JOHN, AUGUSTUS E. Caspar and Pyramus 129 The Blue Woman Lent by M. Leo Stein 130 Flowers Lent by Mrs. Howard Gans 131 Study Lent by Mr. George F. Of MAYRSHOFER, MAX 132 Drawings MUNCH, EDWARD 133 Lithographs and Woodcuts OPPENHEIMER, OLGA 134 Woodcuts PASCIN, JULES 135 Venus 136 Three Girls 137 A Visit 138 At the Antiquarians 139 The Music Lesson 140 Interior MANOLO Kneeling Woman PICABIA, FRANCIS 141 The Procession, Seville 142 Paris 143 Souvenir of Grimaldi, Italy PICASSO, PAUL 144 Drawing (Lent) 145 Still Life 146 Still Life Lent by M. Leo. Stein 147 Trees 148 Mme. Soler 149 Head of a Man 150 The Woman and the Pot of Mustard Lent by M. Henry Kahnweiler REDON, ODILON 151 Geranium 152 The Bouquet with Red Leaves 153 Flowers (Red background) 154 Pegasus on a Rock 155 Fecundity (Study) Lent by M. Marcel Kapferer 156 Vase of Flowers with Geranium 157 Butterflies 158 Roses 159 Butterflies 160 Profile Against Gold Background 161 Flowers 162 Phaeton Lent by M. Joseph Hessel CHABAUD, AUGUST E Flock After Rain 163 Two Heads Among Flowers Lent by M. Marcel Kapferer 164 Old Man 165 Muse on Pegasus 166 Lithographs 167 Boat 168 The Chariot of Apollo 169 Flowers in Porcelaine Vase Lent by M. Joseph Hessel 170 Initiation to Study 171 Flowers (Pastel) Lent by M. Wilhelm Uhde 172 Mystic Profile (Pastel) 173 Dream of the Orient (Pastel) 174 Basket of Flowers 175 Poppies 176 Ships 177 Two Sublunary Beings Winging Through Space 178 Prometheus 179 Head Among Flowers 180 Silence 181 Oannes Lent by M. Artz and De Bois 182 Ophelia 183 The Red Boat m Lent by M. Wilhelm Uhde 184 Woman's Head (Pastel) Lent by Mrs. Chadbourne 185 Wildflowers in a Vase 186 Head of Orpheus BRANCUSI, CONSTANTIN Mile. Pogany RENOIR, PIERRE A. 187 Lithographs ROUAULT, GEORGES 188 189 The Parade Drawings 190 Nude Lent by M. E. Druet ROUSSEAU, HENRI J. 191 The Centennial of the Revolution Lent by M. Alfred Flechtheim 192 Horse Attacked by a Jaguar Lent by M. Ambroise Vollard ROUSSEL, K. X. 193 Maenads With the Head of Orpheus Lent by M. Bernheim Jeune and Co. RUSSELL, GEORGE W. 194 The Bather Lent by Mr. John Quinn 195 The Waders Lent by Mr. Frederick J. Gregg BLANCHET, ALEXANDRE The Two Friends SERRET, CHARLES 196 Drawings Lent SEURAT, GEORGES 197 Honfleur Lent by M. E. Druet 198 Models Lent by M. Alphonse Kann SHANNON, CHARLES H. 199 Toilet of Venus Lent by Mr. William Macbeth SICKERT, WALTER 200 San Remy, Dieppe SIGNAC, PAUL 201 Marseilles, Calm Sea Lent by M. Bernheim Jeune and Co. 202 Water Colors Lent by M. E. Druet SLEVOGT, MAX 203 The Worker in the Vineyard Lent by M. Heinrich Thannhauser BERNARD, JOSEPH Girl With Pitcher SOUSA CARDOZO, AMADEO DE 204 Marine 205 The Prince and the Hounds 206 Before the Bull Fight 207 Fisherman STEER, WILSON 208 Landscape Lent by Mrs. Guinness TOBEEN, FELIX E. 209 The Circus Rider 210 The Pelota Players (Sketch) 211 Ciboure TOULOUSE-LAUTREC, HENRI DE 212 The Tress of Hair Lent by M. Bernheim Jeune and Co. VAN GOGH, VINCENT 213 Hills at Aries 214 Ball at Aries 215 The Zouave Lent by M. E. Druet DERAIN, ANDRE The Window Overlooking the Park 216 Montmartre 217 The Olive Tree 218 In the Woods 219 The Big OHve Tree 220 Wooden Shoes 221 Shrimps 222 Mill, Montmartre 223 Landscape, Aries 224 Apples 225 Pewter Pots Lent by M. Artz and De Bois 226 Woman Reading Lent by M. Stephan Bourgeois 227 Self-Portrait Lent by Mr. John Quinn 228 Head and Shoulders of Young Woman Lent by Miss K. S. Dreier 229 Red Flowers 230 Lilies Lent by M. Stephan Bourgeois VILLON, JACQUES 231 Flowering Trees, Puteaux 232 Girl at the Piano 233 Puteaux (Study) 234 Puteaux (Study) 235 Puteaux (Study) 236 Study of Girl at the Piano VLAMINCK, MAURICE DE 237 Branch of the Seine 238 Figs Lent by M. Henry Kahnweiler VUILLARD, EDOUARD 239 The Newspapers Lent by M. Bernheim Jeune and Co. 240 Lithographs WEINZHEIMER, F. A. 241 Inferno (Drawing) 242 Women Bathing (Drawing YEATS, JACK B. 243 The Political Meeting (Water Color) Lent by Mr. John Quinn ZAK, EUGENE 244 In Summer The Davenport Company FURNITURE FABRICS DECORATIONS BOSTON, 96-98 Washington Street NEW YORK, 150 Madison Avenue State Street Trust Co. \ • m m m IS AN \ ■ m m m m m Independent Trust Co. | Main Office Back Bay Branch i 33 State Street 130 Massachusetts Ave. l Established 1872 Incorporated 1912 5 T. W. 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