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+ Familieberichten 'AD/De Dordtenaar' za 11 mrt 2006 t/m vrij 17 mrt 2006

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Erica

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Mar 25, 2006, 2:51:54 AM3/25/06
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17-3-2006 FLIPS Peter Namens: personenvervoer Drechtsteden BV,
TaxiCentrale Zwijndrecht BV.
11-3-2006 HAM Piet van 3-1-1948 Ursula HOOGMOED
11-3-2006 HARTOG Marrigje den MULLER
11-3-2006 HOOFT VAN HUYSDUYNEN Frits 19-10-1954
14-3-2006 HOORNAAR Hendrika Jannetje 29-6-1923 Petrus KRETÉ
14-3-2006 HUZEN Arjen Namens: Woondrecht.
14-3-2006 JONGENEEL Jacob 84 W. van ALPHEN Overige familienamen: Valk.
14-3-2006 KNAPE Johan 50
15-3-2006 KNAPE Joop Namens: Drinkwaard Motoren BV.
11-3-2006 KOEVOETS Jacobus Franciscus Johannes Josephus Maria 3-9-1944
Overige familienamen: Verbeek, Tanis, Visser, Jonker, Dictus, Todorovski,
v.d. Eijnde, v.d. Broek.
15-3-2006 KOFF Serge André de 10-7-1970
14-3-2006 KOFF Serge de 35 Namens: Coenecoop College.
15-3-2006 LODDER Hendrika Hanna Catharina 86 Jacques van der WALL Overige
familienamen: de Best, van de Graaf.
16-3-2006 NAEREBOUT Mattheus Johannes 91 Heiltje BARENDRECHT
11-3-2006 POL Anita van der Rien BOS Namens: DKSH - Netherlands BV.
11-3-2006 POL Anita van der 46 Rien BOS
17-3-2006 RIJ Hélène Johanna van 56 Ed WAGTERVELD
17-3-2006 RIJ Hélène van Namens: Erasmus MC.
17-3-2006 RITS de heer Henk 6-9-1929 Namens: verpleeghuis Antonius.
16-3-2006 SCHREUDER Anouk Namens: Feyenoord Rotterdam NV.
17-3-2006 SCHREUDER Anouk Namens: Sport-Promotion.
15-3-2006 SINDORF Siem 74 Corry van OIJEN
13-3-2006 SMID Rita v.d. ADEL
11-3-2006 STAM Toon 7-5-1920 Pie de KIEVIT
15-3-2006 STEEN Leonard Antoni van der 23-9-1936 Corien
11-3-2006 VERSTEEG Johanna Hendrika 4-2-1914 Jan Leendert STRUIJK
17-3-2006 VERVELDE Delia Aartje 29-8-1942 NAAKTGEBOREN
16-3-2006 WEIJBURG Henk A. 26-3-1925 Overige familienamen: de Jong.
17-3-2006 WEIJMAN Bartje Hendrika 1-7-1950 Jacques JONKHART Overige
familienamen: Knegjens.
15-3-2006 WIERKS Johanna Maria 8-3-1944 Overige familienamen: Roeland.
11-3-2006 ZAALBERG Hendrikus Paulus 65 Namens: Croon Electrotechniek BV.

+
10-3-2006 enige en algemene kennisgeving Stem van Dordt
Johanna Frederieka van den ELST
* 20-11-1919 + 8-3-2006
NODELIJK
Overige familienamen: van Dam, Kroos, Ponte.

* * *

- * Groupe IV - Classe 31 (pagina 12)
PAYS-BAS.
1. PLANTEYDT [Planteyat] (S.), à Krommenie - Teiles à voilles, baches etc.
(PALAIS);
* Groupe IV - Classe 35 (pagina 29)
PAYS-BAS.
1. JANSEN & ZILANUS, à Oriezenveen [Vriezenveen] - Mérinos naturel, articles
de tricot, hygienique, pure laine. Articles de bonneterie, coton jumel.
(PALAIS);
* Groupe IV - Classe 36 (pagina 37)
PAYS-BAS.
1. BÉRAUD (H.) Fils, à Maestricht - Vetements de béraudine. (PALAIS);
2. HECK (J.L. Van), à Amsterdam - Chaussures en tout genre. (PALAIS);
* Groupe IV - Classe 40 (pagina 11)
PAYS-BAS.
1. BIERMAN (J.A.), à Amsterdam - Jouets d'enfants et instruments mécaniques.
(PALAIS);
2. SCHUSTEROWITZ (Jacob), à Rotterdam - Joujoux en bois russes. (PALAIS);
[bron: Catalogue général officiel de l'exposition universelle de 1889 /
Exposition universelle internationale de 1889, à Paris]
[http://gallica.bnf.fr]

- DE WALCHERSCHE SCHILDERS TE DOMBURG I.
Men schrijft ons: Dat het zoo weelderige, bij uitstek picturale Walcheren,
schilders zou doen ontstaan en schilders tot zich zou roepen, is iets, wat
van zelve spreken moest.
Reeds een vijftiental jaren geleden reproduceerde 'THE STUDIO' 't werk van
Engelsche en belgische schilders, die onder de bekoring van het stadje VEERE
waren geraakt, die het weggekrompen stadje bewonderden, dat in altijd oude
droomen rust, waar ieder voorjaar de natuur krachtig oprijst, onaandoenlijk
en grootsch, overmoedigkomend tusschen de zware keien, victorieus bottend
in de afgeknaagde muren, wreed...etc.
(Toorop, Jan Heyse, mevr. Elout-Drabbe, jonkvr. Jacoba van Heemskerck, F.
Hart Nibbrig, mej. Toorop, L. van Dam van Isselt, Vaarzon Morel, W.J.
Schütz, G. Bergsma, M. Zwart)
[NRC 1911_08_03_2_12]

- Uit Ridderkerk wordt aan de D.Ct. [Dordrechtsche Courant] gemeld: Op den
Hoogerweg onder deze gemeente reed de 51-jarige N.R., huisvrouw van W.B., in
een tilbury, toen een der wielen in een put zakte, waardoor de wagen hevig
schokte. N.R. viel met zulk een kracht tegen het ijzerwerk van de kap aan,
dat haar halswervel brak en zij kort daarop overleed.
[NRC 1910_08_09_1_02]

- Café-Restaurant 'Het Witte Huis'
plaats van vestiging RIJSOORD dossiernummer RO-092178 /3986
[http://www.nationaalarchief.nl/register_zh/index.htm vanaf 1921]

- Getrouwd: J.P. WEPSTER en C. v.d. GIJP die mede namens wederzijdsche
familie, hartelijk dankzeggen voor de vele blijken van belangstelling, bij
hun huwelijk ondervonden.
Ridderkerk, 6 Juli 1911.
[NRC 1911_07_07_1_04]

- BELEMMERING VAN VERKEER. De Commissaris der Koningin in de Provincie
Zuid-Holland, brengt ter kennis van belanghebbenden dat wegens het uitvoeren
van onderhoudsherstellinen aan de ijzeren brug over de WAAL, te RIJSOORD
(gemeente Ridderkerk), in den Rijksweg van Rotterdam naar Zwijndrecht, het
verkeer daarover, vermoedelijk gedurende 6 weken, ingaande 23 October a.s.,
slechts zal kunnen plaats hebben, hetzij over de linker-, hetzij over de
rechter helft van de brug en van het onmiddellijk daaraan sluitend gedeelte
van den weg, aan de zijde van Zwijndrecht, zoodat slechts eene vrije ruimte
van hoogstens 3 M. breedte voor het verkeer beschikbaar zal zijn...etc.
[NRC 1912_10_24_2_18 ]

- Heden overleed na een droevig lijden onze innig, geliefde Echtgenoot,
Vader, Behuwd- en grootvader de Heer ARIE VAN NES Fzn, in den ouderdom van
ruim 75 jaren.
Uit aller naam: Wed. A. VAN NES-van der Hoog
Ridderkerk, 28 December 1912.
Algemeene kennisgeving.
[NRC 1912_12_30_0_11 ]

- Gistermorgen is brand uitgebroken in de vlassersstelling van den heer Jb.
Rudijk [=Rijsdijk?] aan den Waalweg te RIJSOORD. Het woonhuis en de
aangebouwde schuur, gevuld met vlas, zijn geheel afgebrand. Het
machinegebouw en de aangrenzende arbeiderswoningen bleven behouden.
[NRC 1925-02-27-2-10 ]

- Gistermiddag is brand uitgebroken in de vlasfabriek der N.V. Cornelis VAN
NES, staande aan den Pruimendijk te RIJSOORD. De fabriek, waarin een groote
hoeveelheid vlas, brandde geheel uit. Het belendende woonhuis bleef
gespaard.
[NRC 1925-02-07-1-07 ]

- De Landbouwfeesten te Ridderkerk. Het Koninklijk bezoek.
... De vereeniging Sursum Corda uit Rijsoord speelde hier het Wilhelmus en
de 22-jarige mej. G. DE KONING uit dat dorp bood H.M. bloemen aan, bij welke
aanbieding ze een vlot en keurig speechje afstak. Hartelijk dankte de
Koningin juffrouw DE KONING voor deze tweeerlei hulde.
Van RIJSOORD ging het naar het raadhuis in het dorp RIDDERKERK. Hier stond
weer de bevolking voor de drie scholen uit dit deel der gemeente
opgesteld...etc.
[Het Vaderland 1927-09-15-2-05 ]

- WEER EEN FABRIEK GESLOTEN. Hedenmorgen is de vlasfabriek der N.V. C. VAN
NES te RIJSOORD stilgelegd en zijn de 40 arbeiders ontslagen. Deze sluiting
vingt zijn oorsprong hier, dat de subsisieregeling voor de verwerking van
oud vlas nog niet wordt toegepast.
[Het Vaderland1932_11_21_0_02 ]

- Verhuring bij inschrijving voor zeven jaren van de Hofstede BURGHOEVE
staande aan den Pruimendijk, nabij den Rijksstraatweg, te RIJSOORD, met
diverse perceelen Wei- en Bouwland, gelegen in den polder...etc.
[NRC 1920-04-24-2-07 ]

* * *
- WORK IN LOCAL STUDIOS. What the Brooklyn Artists Are Preparing for the
Public.
The visitor to the studio of G. DOUGLASS STEARNS enters it half expecting to
hear the music of a Highland pibroch, and to find the walls decorated with
plaidie and claymore, so suggestive of Scotia and its warlike hero is the
artists name. Instead of all this, hoewever, as the studio door is swung
open a vision of fair women is vouchsafed the visitor, their pictured grace
set off by clusters of roses, branches of chrysanthemums and sprays of
marigolds which appear to blossom out from the atelier walls. Recalling
certain press notices to the effect that 'G. DOUGLASS STEARNS gives promise
of excelling inhis profession' the visitor fills the interim of
waiting../...Mrs. STEARNS was a Packer girl, studying also in its art
department, several years ago. fterward under Professor Whittaker, she
began to apply herself seriously to the work, and from thence onward, she
has
grown steadily in art and popularity, exhibiting in the Academy of Design,
Society of American Artists and the Brooklyn Art club of which she is a
member. On entering her studio one seems to find the keynote to what which
is within it, in a large canvas upon the wall which shows a young girl,
.../...
[Brooklyn Daily Eagle 20 Aug 1893]

- Mrs. J. DOUGLASS STEARNS has been for some weeks settled in her new studio
at 29 Brevoort Place. At the Ovington building her studio was always
occupied by some excellent canvases. A large portrait of a young girl is one
of Mrs. Stearns' most interesting recent works.
[Brooklyn Daily Eagle 11 July 1897]

- IN LOCAL STUDIOS.
Miss KATE DOW has arrived in PARIS and settled down to work under the well
known artist, MERSON. She is to draw under him in the morning and copy at
the LOUVRE in the afternoon. Both Merson and Colin apporve of the work Miss
Dow has done here in this country. The young artist will remain some months
abroad.../...Mrs. J. Douglass STEARNS is preparing for the exhibit of the
Black and White Club, of which she is a member, a figure sketch in oil of a
young HOLLAND GIRL. She wears the lace cap of the country, and on each side
of her head are the metal spirals which are used in HOLLAND to fasten the
cap on. The shoulders have a small lace cape thrown over them. [=omgeving
Rijsoord ???????] .../...
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 19 febr. 1899]

- ...by F. Hopkinson Smith of a scene 'At the Hague, Holland', which is not
so good as he useally paints.../...and pictures by Laura Woodward, H. Bolton
Jones, Benoni Irwin, Charles E. Dana and others.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 15 Mar 1883]

- Among the pictures in the Fall exhibition at the National Academy that
deserve commendation is the
'Heavy Surf' (No. 281) of E.M. Bicknell; Landscape: Afternoon (No. 242);
Fresh Woods and pastures New (No. 249); M.L. Macomber - Ruth (No. 248);
Edgar M. Ward - Sail Maker (No. 279); S.J. Guy - By by, Papa (No 270); Fred
Free - Ready for a Walk (No. 267); A.H. Wyant - Evening (No. 283); T.A.
BROUWERS - Old Timer (No. 291); Louise H. King - portrait (No. 204); Benoni
IRWIN - portrait (No. 307); Leonard OCHTMAN -Moonlight (No. 315)...etc.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 1 Dec 1889]

- Holbein Buildings: George Inness, Benoni IRWIN, Elliott Daingerfield, J.
Scott Hartley, C.C. Cookman, William M. Cary, F.S. LAMB, A.F. Bunner,
...etc.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 11 Mar 1888]

- ...S.R. Koehler was the first lecturer in the course of practical talks
before the GOTHAM ART STUDENTS at 17 Bond street the other night. is talk
was on that he has written about in a huge and gorgeous volume that the
Cassels are publishing. The lecturers to secceed Mr. Koehler are Fred
Juengeling, who will speak on wood engraving; Charles Volkmar, keramics;
Roger Riordan, stained glass; S.C. Wheeler, textiles; and G.G. ROCKWOOD,
photography.
To-Day - a bright and talkative little sheet - says that Thomas B. CLARKE
has added Alfred KAPPES' 'Rent Day' to his collection. It is a thoroughly
American picture and will itself in the best of company. The paper also
states that Mr. KAPPES is teaching the Sunday class of GOTHAM STUDENTS. If
there is a Sunday class, it is a wonder that some virtuous person does not
complain. When all the groggeries and concert saloons are open, and all the
galleries, libraries and museums closed, what right have art students to
assemble for study or training on Sunday?
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 6 dec 1885]

- The GOTHAM ART STUDENTS report progress and request that Alfred Kappes,
instructor of the new Sunday class, be given the credit of teaching without
charge. It is so rare a pleasure to find a man whose consciousness of duty
well done is a sufficient reward for his work that this fact is cheerfully
recorded. The Sunday class is full in n umbers and interest. Walter SHIRLAW,
Frederick FREER, Kenyon COX and Max SCHWARZOTT are other instructors and the
president is John S. Sharp. Fred Juengeling, the wood engraver, who has
done as much as anybody to raise his art above the geeble, commonplace,
characterless methods in vogue before the esthablishment of the American
magazine, will lecture on wood engraving at the quarters of the students, 17
Bond street, NEW YORK, on or about the 0th of January. Messrs. Sutton and
Kirby of the American Art Galley, have offered tot the students the gross
receipts of that gallery on two successive Sundays in April, during the
exhibition of impressionistic works.
Professor EAKINS, of the Art Students' League, is continuing his
demonstrations of synthetical anatomy on Tuesdays, molding the muscles in
clay durectly on the bones of the human skeleton, then tracing them beneath
the skin of the living model. This is now a new way of teaching artistic
anatomy, and one that commends itself to the student more forcibly than the
analytical anatomy of the dissecting room hitherto in vogue.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 27 dec 1885]

- TO LECTURE IN NEW YORK. Mr. Edwin H. Blashfield, of this city, will
lecture on Friday evening, 19th instant, before the GOTHAM ART STUDENTS,
Bond street, New York, on 'Paul Baury, His Life and Work'.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 10 febr 1886]

- .. The GOTHAM ART STUDENTS will benefit by to-day's exhibition of the
paintings by the French impressionists at the American Art Galleries. The
rooms will be open drom 10 A.M. to 5 P.M., and admission will be reduced to
25 cents. If a Phillistine cannot extract a quarter's worth of fun out of
the thing he is hard to please. It is an exhibition that everybody should
see-once ...
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 18 April 1886]

- ...The GOTHAM ART STUDENTS are about to remove from their picturesque
though undeniably dingy quarters, in BOND STREET, to large, airy rooms at
659 Broadway, corner of Fourth street. The cast and life classes will work
on half time during the warm season, for the benefit of the stay at homes,
sessions being hold on Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings. This earnest
little club has a considerable contingent of Brooklyn students.
The Art Students' league grows larger and stronger every year, and is
rapidly advancing to th eplace of foremost art school in this country. The
academies of NEW YORK and Philadelp[hia, the school at Cincinnati, the
normal and museum schools in Boston, have more room and a larger...etc.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 20 June 1886]

- ...A lecture was give last evening before the GOTHAM ART STUDENTS by Henry
O. Avery, member of the American Institute of Architects. His subject was
the government school of arts in PARIS, of which he is a graduate, and the
interest of the discourse was heightened by an exhibition of photographs,
paintings and drawings by pupils of the school. The GOTHAM ART STUDENTS are
now in new quarters at 695 Broadway.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 17 oct 1886]

- THE GOTHAM ART STUDENTS. Brooklyn Well Represented at the Annual Reception
and Exhibition.
Artistic New York and Brooklyn were well represented last evening at the
seventh (7th) anniversary reception and exhibition of the GOTHAM ART
STUDENTS' club. The reception took place in the new rooms of the Gotham,
corner of Broadway and Fourth Street, NEW YORK.
It was thoroughly artistic and informal, the guests and members helping
themselves to long pipes and cigarettes and...The exhibition was largely
made up of on oil studies, a few water color drawings and pencil sketches
giving variety to the display. Vigorously handled studies of landscape,
figures, still life and flowers thickly dotted the walls. Much of the work
was broad enough to be classed under the impressionist style of painting,
and the dash and freedom displayed in the handling of many of the studies
showed Gotham to be fully as progressive in its ideas as the Art Students'
League or the Brooklyn Art Guild.
Effectively arranged along the walls were examples of the brush work of
WIlliam M. CHASE, J. Carroll BECKWITH, Frank FOWLER, Bolton JONES, H.
Sinddon MOWBRAY, M.B. ODDENHEIMER FOWLER, H. DOLPH, C.Y. Turner, J.W.
Maynard, A. Rider, Robert C. Minor, A.H. Thayer, J.G. Brown, FREER, Frank
Currier, A.F. Bunner, Godney Bunce, Alfred Wear, Arthur Quartley, R. Swain
Gifford, Frank Jones, A. DOLPH, Rhoda Holmes Nichols, A.H. Wyant, GEORGE
INNESS, Herbert Denman, Walter Shirlaw, Van Boskirk and TRYON.
William M. CHASE exhibited three or four heads and a sunn little marine, one
of his heads showing a sketchy portrait of his artist friend Charles ULRICH,
painted against dark, broken background.
Gilbert Gaul...
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 29 Dec 1886]

- The GOTHAM ART STUDENTS made an interesting exhibit of life drawings and
compisition sketches by American students weorking in the PARIS schools, at
its rooms, 695 Broadway, last night.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 27 maart 1887]

- ... The GOTHAM ART STUDENTS, who form a prosperous and useful order,will
resume work on the 3rd of October at their quarters, 697 Broadway, NEW YORK.
The instructors for the coming season will be H. Siddons Mowbray, B.R. FITZ,
F.W. Freer and Fred Moyalhan, and the course of study will include drawing
from he cast and life, painting, modelling and sketching in color, with
talks and lectures on technical and industrial art and exhibition of
studies, drawing, paintings and photographs. John S. SHARP is president of
the club and John Faber corresponding secretary...
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 11 sept 1887]

- ....The GOTHAM ART STUDENTS had a pleasant reseption at their rooms on
Thursday night, to commonorate their eight (8th) anniversay. Their cards of
invitation, with a goddess of art standing on hr dals, ready to award palms
to the deserving, were original and neat...
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 1 Jan 1888]

- ...The annual exhibition of the GOTHAM ART STUDENTS' work will be made
next Thursday. The school will remain open until the 1st of June. This is
the second season that is has been opened for day classes, and the result is
satisfactory...
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 6 May 1888]

- The GOTHAM ART STUDENTS have numbered 120 during the past season. Next
Winter the staff of instructors will include Siddons Mowbray, B.R. Firz,
Charles Mente, Edward Dowdall and B. West Clinedinst.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 17 June 1888]

- ...The GOTHAM ART STUDENTS announce that they will conduet a cast class
this season, under direction of B.W. Clinedinst; the life classes will be
taught by Siddons Mowbray and B.R. Fitz; painting classes by Charles MENTE
and Amil Carlsen; preparatory painting class by Edward Dowdall; and there
will be elementary classes, an evening and an afternoon sketch class, a
Sunday painting class, talks on art by prominent painters and lectures on
technical and industrial art subjects. Tere will be a series of exhibitions
during the year...
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 16 sept 1888]

- ....Art never has any superfluity of encouragement in this country, and
artists are sometimes reduced to querr shifts for a living, but probably
most people are not aware of the fact that some of the students of the Union
League and of the GOTHAM ART SOCIETY make a good part of their living by
designing posters. It reminds one of the old tales of impecunious artists
who paid their bill at the inn by painting a new sign for it. The bills of
Palmer's unaugural play in Wallack's old house, 'Held by the Enemy', have
been liberally and very graphically, and blue and redly posted on the fences
and dead walls, and the thrilling tableaux depicted thereon are the work of
a student of the GOTHAM ART SOCIETY, who is earning his living by such
shifts as these while he works at his art. He went down pretty low at one
time and for a few weeks lunched at Mrs. Lamadrid's 1 cent coffee stands,
where the impecunious can obtain quite a substantial little snack for five
cents, but as he was tiring somewhat of the menu.....The GOTHAM ART SOCIETY
started as a social club in the rear of a little lager beer saloon down on
Broome street nine years ago, and the first of last week it gave a house
warming at its comfortable rooms on corner of Broadway and Fourth street. It
has turned into a sort of ART LEAGUE for students who mean business and have
neither time nor money to waste. The rich amateurs are not encouraged to
fill up the classes. WOMEN get as good instruction there as the men and
mingle freely with them in all the classes except the life nude, and for
this they have a separate class of their own.
the fees are so low that the poorest aspirant can share in the advantages
they offer, and it is altogether a practical, businesslike association.
They don't confine themselves to theatrical postrs by any means. The
managers of the Metropolitan Museum were so pleased with the drawings done
by the GOTHAM'S LIFE CLASS that they purchased several to be used in their
own life class as an example and also by way of stimulating the competitive
spirit of their students.
Siddons Mowbray, a pupil of Bonnat, is the instructor, and men like Fitz, Cl
inedinst and Dowdall assist him in various departments. They are to have a
series of lectures this Winter by C. Harriet HOSMER, Edwin BLACKFIELD,
Carroll BECKWITH, Kenyon COX, Mrs. Candace WHEELER, Rockwood, the
photographer, and others of that ..k(?), and there is an effort being made
to raise an endowment fund, so that he school may continue its small fees
and yet not be obliged to always keep trimmed so close up in the mind's eye.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 4 nov 1888]

- W. Lewis FRASER is to lecture to the GOTHAM ART STUDENTS this week on 'The
Nude in Art', and Mr. Fitz will begin lectures on perspective to-morrow
night. Mr. Mowbray's class in painting from the nude will be open onl to
advanced pupils. On the 14th of December the club will have a benefit
concert at Steinway Hall, in which Mme Murlo Celli will take part.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 11 nov 1888]

- The annual exhibition by the GOTHAM ART STUDENTS will be made next
Wednesday afternoon and night, at the students' quarters, 697 Broadway, NEW
YORK.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 8 April 1889]

- Miss S. MARY NORTON, of 518 Greene avenue, who is one of the pupils of the
Art League and has also studied for two years in PARIS under Julien,
Colorossi and Contori will have a genre picture in the SALON this year and
two canvases un the universal exposition.
There was an exhibition of pupils' work at the rooms of the GOTHAM ART
STUDENTS on Wednesday. The association thrives under direction of H. Siddons
Mowbray, Charles Mente and W.B. Clinedinst, whose teachings have prodiced
excellent results. There are several Brooklynites among the students, and
the young ladies have done work that is full of promise....
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 14 April 1889]

- AN ART SCHOOL SOLD OUT.
The GOTHAM ART STUDENTS have closed their school because of insufficcient
support, and their books, photographs, etchings, casts and studio furniture
will be sold to-night at auction in their rooms, 697 Broadway, NEW YORK.
[bron: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 27 April 1889]

* * *
Erica


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