Abstract
NEW YORKERS who have had the bad fortune to spend the months of July and August in the city do well to cast off their art consciousness during the dog days. For the curtains drawn in the dealers' windows serve the double purpose of protecting the plush from sun fade and concealing empty walls. The gallery stupor however, is more apparent than real, for pictures and sculpture are constantly being acquired by the museums—and are making constant demands upon the museums for proper installation and suitable exhibition. One member of the College Art Association returned from a trip to the far and middle West this summer with a report of the liveliest activity. Her visit was limited of course, to a few of the very many western museums. But a survey only of those which she was able to inspect and admire first hand, reveals an encouraging and creditable growth, and a rich array of new acquisitions.
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