Nearly three hundred valuable paintings of the American and foreign schools . Ralph Albert Blakelock, N.A. American : 1847— ^S—EARLY EJEXING Height, 16 Indies; length, 24* inches Fields, a little stream on the left, some trees and a red-roofedhouse, are the elements composing the foreground and middledistance, while beyond, stretching the whole way across thecanvas, is a range of blue hills. The important feature of thepicture, however, is the sky, which rises from grayish-pinktints at the horizon through various gradations of warm whiteto pale qualified blue at the top. The brilliancy of the

Nearly three hundred valuable paintings of the American and foreign schools . Ralph Albert Blakelock, N.A. American : 1847— ^S—EARLY EJEXING Height, 16 Indies; length, 24* inches Fields, a little stream on the left, some trees and a red-roofedhouse, are the elements composing the foreground and middledistance, while beyond, stretching the whole way across thecanvas, is a range of blue hills. The important feature of thepicture, however, is the sky, which rises from grayish-pinktints at the horizon through various gradations of warm whiteto pale qualified blue at the top. The brilliancy of the Stock Photo
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The Reading Room / Alamy Stock Photo

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2AX7W8E

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7.2 MB (260.2 KB Compressed download)

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1144 x 2185 px | 19.4 x 37 cm | 7.6 x 14.6 inches | 150dpi

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Nearly three hundred valuable paintings of the American and foreign schools . Ralph Albert Blakelock, N.A. American : 1847— ^S—EARLY EJEXING Height, 16 Indies; length, 24* inches Fields, a little stream on the left, some trees and a red-roofedhouse, are the elements composing the foreground and middledistance, while beyond, stretching the whole way across thecanvas, is a range of blue hills. The important feature of thepicture, however, is the sky, which rises from grayish-pinktints at the horizon through various gradations of warm whiteto pale qualified blue at the top. The brilliancy of the sky isstrengthened by the warm general tones used in depicting thefields, trees and other elements. Signed at the lower right.Purchased from Mrs. Blakelock, 1901. Property of Mr. E. A. Gurxee.. Will H. LoAV, .A. American: 1853— 4.9—XEATH APPLE BOUGHS Height, 24 inches; xcidth, 12 inches The orchard is oray in its flowering- livery of spring. Throughthe blossoming branches, the ^un dapples the gTound Avithgolden gleams. Fair and delicate in her beauty as the flowersthat embower her. a maiden is about to enter a pool in the fore-ground. Her erect figure is ori-aceful in pose. Signed at the loxcer left. Will H. Low, New York, 1888. Thomas B. Oarke Collection, Catalogue Xo. 312. .Vc. Yorh-, 1899.Emerson McMillin Collection. Catalogue Xo. 12-5. Arzi- York. 1913.Property of a Private Collector. Warren B. Davis American : Coxtemporary50—AT THE FOOL Height, 8 inches; length, 10 inches A FULL-LEXGTH iiude figure of a young woman with aubm-nhair, on a great fiat-topped roclv overhanging a pond witli darlcwaters, below on the right. She is depicted in back view, lialfseated, and the head seen in profile as, supporting herself onthe edge of the rock, she looks over and down into