Page:Women in the Fine Arts From the Seventh Century B.C. to the Twentiet.djvu/239

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WOMEN IN THE FINE ARTS


attracts the attention it merits. It is a sweet little girl’s face, modest and sensible. She is holding the arm of her seat with a sort of determination to sit that way and be looked at so long as she must, but her expression shows that she is thinking hard of something that she intends to do so soon a^ she can jump down and run away to her more interesting occupations."

Hinman, Leana McLennan.

[No reply to circular.]

Hitz, Dora. Born at Altdorf, near Nuremberg, 1856. During eight years she worked under the direction of Lindenschmit, 1870-1878. She was then invited to Bucharest by the Queen of Roumania, "Carmen Sylva." Here the artist illustrated the Queen's poem, "Ada," with a series of water-color sketches, and painted two landscapes from Roumanian scenery. Between 1883 and 1886 she made sketches for the mural decoration of the music-room at the castle of Sinoia. Later, in Brittany and Normandy, she made illustrations for the fisher-romances of Pierre Loti. At Berlin, in 1891-1892, she painted portraits, and then retired to Charlottenburg. Her exhibition of two beautiful pictures in gouache, at Dresden, in 1892, brought her into notice, and her grasp of her subjects and her method of execution were much commended.

Fraulein Hitz could not stem the "classic" art creed of Berlin, where the "new idealism" is spumed. She ventured to exhibit some portraits and studies there in 1894, and was most unfavorably criticised. At Munich,