nIstI
As an addition to the number of .
t and all of works of art which he 'has already
given to the University, four paintings
f the early have very recently been received from
even Dan- Mr. Jean A. Wetmore, '81, a New York
ar out the business man who, for many years, has
>ftest com- been greatly interested in the collect-
lours, wh> ing and restoring of old canvasses.
>n at the Probably the most valuable of these
"jolly" or four paintings is a small picture of a
e, to corner dog's head by Rosa Bonheur, the well-
This re- known French artist. She became
here, now, famous thr9ugh her skill in painting
0, hour by animals, her greatest work being "The
Horse Fair," now at the Metropolitan
student be museum in New York.
of the Uni- Another of the paintings is a land-
contributed scape by Thomas Cole who, although
but main- English by birth, settled in Ohio and
gular chap became a conspicuous figure in Amer-
ant's com- ican art. "Conversation" is the title
a pipe and of the third picture by Louis Charles
Moeller of the National Academy in
weer. New York. The fourth, another land-
. . scape, was done by T. B. Griffin, ap-
0 parently about the middle of the last
LAN S century. Little is known of the
ANTS artist.
Mr. Wetmore has made a hobby of
better and collecting pictures and has done much
ig Ann Ar- of the work of restoration himself. He
city is en- gas allowed his friends the use of
ry in West many of the works in his collection
iding to it >ut, so far as is known, the University
cost later of Michigan is the only educational
ge gardens institution which has been the recip-
shrubbery ient of his generosity.
into effect. Of the other paintings which he has
y contains given to the. University, probably the
vhich have best is a canvas by Daniel Huntington,
p, superin- N. A., called "Ini the Mountain Fast-
y forester, ness," which hangs opposite the door
ding to se- in the north room on the second floor;
plant this of Alumni Memorial hall, where all
his depart- of these art gifts have been grouped.
purchasing --
es, notablygs
Thiq ~Geology Museum Gets Rare Spedinen
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Among specimens brought back by
the geological expedition which went
to western Texas last summer are the
thoracic plates of a giant amphibian,
an -animal which measured about six
feet in length. These plates are now
mounted in the geological museum in
the Natural Science building and are
the only specimens in the United
States, representing this form of life
that are at all perfect.
I
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