POTTERY AND PORCELAVA

Exposition for the first time. It measures twenty-eight
inches in height and twenty-six in width, including the
handles, which are in the resemblance of winged female
figures terminating at the base in a richly foliated orna-
ment. The lid or cover of the vase is surmounted by a
well executed flame-point, which emphasizes the Renais-
sance treatment of the
entire piece.  Bands
of rich relief orna-
mentation around the
neck, on the shoulder,
and about the foot
and lower portion, en-
hance the beauty of
the fine lines in the
form. This vase was
designed by Mr.
Haynes, and the
handles were modelled
after ideas of his and
jq           under his direction by
Nl \  LMr. Fred E. Mayer,
FANNIE HAYNES. COLLECTION OF TIHE
PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM 01' ART, PHILA-  a young man of con-
DEI.I'IIA.                   siderable talent, who
studied under Prof. L. W. Miller in the Pennsylvania
Museum and School of Industrial Art, Philadelphia.
Several copies of the " Calvert" vase have been made,
and decorated in widely divergent styles. One of these
shows a delicate tinting of the handles and all the relief
work in a pale marine or turquoise green of mat or satin

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