97th Annual Report for the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

Item

Title

97th Annual Report for the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

Identifier

1903-AR.pdf

Date

1903

Creator

Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

Subject

annual report
finance report
school report
exhibition
history

Publisher

The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts' Dorothy and Kenneth Woodcock Archives

Medium

paper

Format

PDF

Source

The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts' Dorothy and Kenneth Woodcock Archives

Language

eng

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extracted text

','

NINETY SEVENTH
, ANNUAL REPORT

FEBRUARY

2,

1903 '

FEBRUARY

I,

1904

TH E
PEN NSYL 'V AN IA
ACADEMY OF T·HE FINE
ARTS PHILADELPHIA

THE 'PENNSYLVANIA
ACADEMY OF THE FINE ARTS
FOUNDED i805

THE NINETY-SEVENTH ANNUAL
REP 0 R T,

FEB R U A R Y

1903, TO FEBRUARY

PHILADELPHIA
,
MDCCCCIV

I,

2,

1904

MANAGEMENT OF THE PENNSYLVANIA
ACADEMY OF THE FINE ARTS.
PRESIDENT',
EDWARD H . COATES.
VICE-PRESIDENT,.
CLARENCE H. CLARK.
DIRECTORS,
CHARLES C. HARRISON,
CLARENCE H. CLARK,
HERBERT M. HOWE, M. D.,
E. BURGESS WARREN,
GEORGE H. McFADDEN,
JOHN H. PACKARD, M.D.,
CLEMENT B . NEWBOLD,
HENRY WHELEN, JR.,
EDWARD T . STOTESBURY,
JOHN H. CONVERSE, .
THEOPHILUS P. CHANDLER,
ROBERT C. H . BROCK,
HENRY Z. ZIEGLER.
TREASURER,
HENRY WHELEN, J -!l-.
SECRETARY AND MANAGING DIRECTOR,
HARRISON S. MORRIS.
ASSISTANT MANAGING DIRECTOR AND ASSISTANT TREASURER,
JOHN E. D. TRASK.
HONORARY CURATOR OF PRINTS,
JOH N F. LEWIS.
SOLICITOR,
JOHN G. JOHNSON.
COMMITTEE ON PROPERTY,
JOHN H . CONVERSE, CHAIRMAN,
THEOPHILUS P CHANDLER,
CHARLES C. HARRISON.
COMMITTEE ON FINANCE,
CLARENCE H. CLARK, CHAIRMAN,
GEORGE H. McFADDEN,
HENRY WHELEN, JR.
COMMITTEE ON INSTRUCTION,
JOHN H. PACKARD, M.D., CHAIRMAN,
THEOPHILUS P. CHANDLER,
HENRY Z. ZIEGLER,
HERBERT M. HOWE, M. D. ,
~OBERT C. H. BROCK.
COMMITTEE ON EXHIBITIONS,
E. BURGESS WARREN, CHAIRMAN,
JOHN H. PACKARD, M.D.,
CLEMENT B. NEWBOLD,
GEORGE H. McFADDEN,
EDWARD T. STOTESBURY .
. FACULTY OF THE SCHOOLS,
THOMAS P. ANSHUTZ,
GEORGE McCLELLAN, M.D.,
WILLIAM M. CHASE,
HUGH H. BRECKENRIDGE,
CECILIA BEAUX,
HENR Y McCARTER,
HENRY J. THOU RON,
FRANK MILES DAY,
CHARLES GRAFLY,
WILSON EYRE,
HENRY R . POORE,
EDGAR V. SEELER.
2

THE PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY OF THE FINE ARTS

190 4

..

LIFE MEMBERS

Louis A. Biddle
Mrs. J. Campbell Harris
Miss Mariamne Biddle
Frederick Hemsley
Mrs. Andrew Alexander Blair Mrs. Charles Wolcott Henry
Mrs. Henry P. Borie
Miss Margaretta Hutchinson
Mrs. Robert C. H. Brock
R. Winder Johnson
Mrs. Arthur A . Burt
William W. Justice
Theophilus P. Chandler
Mrs. William W. Justice
Mrs. Theophilus P. Chandler William H. Lambert
Henry T. Coates
Edward Clinton Lee
Miss Mary Coates
Miss Sarah Lewis
Miss Sarah H. Coates
Theodore J. Lewis
Mrs. Rebecca Colfelt
Henry P. McKean
C. Howard Colket
Miss Fannie S. Magee
Henry H. Collins
Mrs. John Markoe
Mrs.· George M. Conarroe
Mrs. E. Clarence Miller
John H. Converse
Clarence B. Moore
Miss Anette Cope
Fred'erick W. Morris
Miss Caroline E. Cope
M. Richards M uckh~
. Charles Norris ·
Eckley Brinton Coxe, Jr.
·Miss Rebecca Coxe
Arthur Peterson
Mrs. Lucy Wharton Drexel Thomas Harris Powers
Hon. J osephM. Gazzam
Mrs. Charles Roberts
Miss Mary K. Gibson
Miss Elizabeth C. Roberts
Miss Rebecca Gibson
Miss Frances A. Roberts
J. Horace Harding
Edgar Scott
Alan C. Harris
C. Morton Smith
Henry Frazer Harris
Mrs. Caroline G. Taitt

3

LIFE MEMBERS.

CONTINUED

Mrs. Imre Teuber
Samuel Price Wetherill
Charles Hermon Thomas, M. D. Mrs. W. Beaumont Whitney
George C. Thomas
David Evans Williams
Mrs . . Samuel Swayne
, Mrs. William D. Winsor
Thompson
George Wood
John W . Townsend
George Woodward, M.D.
. Mrs. George Woodward
Mrs. Charles P. Turner
Alexander Van Rensselaer
John Wyeth
Francis Ralston Welsh
Mrs. Charles Morris Young

ANNUAL MEMBERS
Finley Acker
Francis Olcott Allen, Jr., M. D.
Mrs. Harrison Allen .
Mrs. Sarah G. Altemus
W. W; Atterbury
Mrs. George F. Baer
John E. Baird
Miss M. Loui$e Baird
Miss F lorence Baldwin
William P. Baltz
Mrs. Richard D. Barclay
Mrs. E. J. Bartol
Mrs. Horace A. Beale
Miss Laura Bell
Rev. Louis F. Benson
Alexander W. Biddle, M. D.
William W. Birdsall
Miss Emma Blakiston
Samuel T. Bodine
Edward W. Bok
Joseph H . Brazier
George P. Brock
Mrs. George Brooke

George Burnham, J 1'.
Charles H. Burr, J 1'.
Edward Hand Burr
Charles E. Bushnell
Miss F. F. Caldwell
Mrs. St. George Tucker
Campbell
John G. Carruth
Mrs. James Carstairs
John E. Carter
Mrs. William T. Carter
Francis Taylor Chambers
Charles Chauncey
,
Arth ur L. Church
Clarence H. Clark
C. Howard Clark, Jr.
Mrs. C. Howard Clark, J 1'.
Edward W. Clark
Miss Frances Clark
Ludovic C. Cleeman
William M. Coates
Charles J. Cohen
Edward Coles
4

ANNUAL MEMBERS . . CONTINUED
Maurice Fels
Mrs. John W. Coles
Miss Mary Coles
Mrs. Samuel 1. Fels
. James Logan Fisher
Mrs. Thomas K . Conrad
Mrs. James Logan F ish er
Jay Cooke
B. W. Fleisher
Mrs. Edgar Cope
Mrs. Charles B. Coxe
Samuel S. Fleisher
Mrs . . Molton Forrest
Mrs. James S. Cox
Florence Fox
John L. Cox
Charles H. Cramp
Miss 'Hannah Fox
Mrs. Louis R. Fox
John J. R. Craven
Andrew Vhight Crawford
Charles W. Freedley
A. L. E. Crouter, M. D.
Mrs. Charles W. Freedley
Mrs. G. lVI. Freeman
Thomas De\:Vitt Cuyler
Charles E . Dana
Herbert Friedenwald
Horace H, Fritz
Mrs. Charles E. Dana
Henry L. Davis
Greville E. Fryer
Howard Fuguet
John B. Deaver, M. D.
Philip C. Garrett
Mrs. E. E. Denniston
Samuel Dickson
Miss Ernestine Abercrombie
Thomas Harvey Dougherty
Goodman
Mrs. E. D .. Douglas
Mrs. William Ernest Goodman
J. Walter Douglass
William Gorman
George W. Childs Drexel
Mrs. Samuel Grant
Mrs. George W. Childs Drexel Mrs. William S. Grant
John R. Drexel'
Benjamin W. Greer
Mrs. John R. Drexel
John Gribbel
Henry S: Drinker
Clement A. Griscom
Charles B. Dunn
Mrs. Clement A . Griscom
Theodore N. Ely
Henry B. Gross
Miss Helen Erben
Mrs. Henry S. Grove .
Miss Rebecca Erben
Mrs. Francis B. Gummere
Mrs. Spencer Ervin
Miss Beulah Morris Hacker
Arthur F. Estabrook
Granville B. Haines
Mrs. Granville B. Haines
Samuel S. Eveland
Mrs. William W. Farr
H. Warren K. Hale
5

ANNUAL MEMBERS.

CONTINUED

Mrs. Lyman B. Hall
R. W. Lesley
George L. Harrison
Miss Josephine Lewis
Mrs. George L. Harrison
Miss Caroline Lippincott
Mrs. W. Joseph Hearn
Miss Mary W. Lippincott
Dilworth P. Hibberd
Max Livingston
William S. Hilles
Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd
Mrs. Herman V. Hilprecht
Mrs. Morris Longstreth
Harry S. Hopper
Mrs. Joseph S. Lovering
Mrs. 'Harry S. Hopper
Albert Lucas
Austin S. Horn
Mrs. Charles Lukens
Edward I. H. Howell
J awood Lukens
Henry Howson
Mrs. Jawood Lukens
James E. McClees .
David W. Hunt
Joseph M. Huston
Rt. Rev. Alexander MackaySmith
Mrs. Edward B. Jacobs
Mrs. florence Foster Jenkins Mrs. Thomas McKean
Wiliiam L. McLean
John Story Jenks
Mrs. William L. McLean
Mrs. John Story Jenks
William H. Jenks
Mrs. Walter McMichael
Mrs. Alba B. Johnson
. Mrs .. Harry Markoe
Mrs. Lawrence Johnson
Alfred C. Mason
Miss Mary Cooper Johnson
J. P.. MathielJ
Miss Mary F. Mellon
Andrew J. Jones
Edward S. Miles
Henry Justice
W. W. Keen, M.D.
E. Clarence Miller
Mrs. Elias D~ Kennedy
Mrs. Frands Forbes Milne
Mrs. Wylie Mitchell
Mrs. W.S. W. Kirby
Samuel Kohn
Mrs. MacGregor J. Mitcheson
Simon I. Kohn .
Charles Mohr, M.D.
Frank D. LaLanne
Randal Morgan
Isidor Langsdorf
Mrs. Randal Morgan
W. ·Moylan Lansdale
Mrs. CharlesE. Morris
Mrs. Alexander Lardner
Edwin F. Morse
Henry G. Morse
Mrs. James· Large_
Mrs. William J., Latta ·
John H. Musser, M. IJ.'
6

ANNUAL MEMBERS.
Mrs. Samuel A. Mutchmore
George M. Newhall
Charles P. Noble, M.D.
George W. Ochs
Robert C. Ogden
S. Davis Page
Mrs. John H. Parsons .
T. H. Hoge Patterson
William A. Patton
J ames Paul, M. D.
Miss Lilla Sellers Pechin
Miss Mary B. Peirce
Mrs. Charles P. Perkins
George Philler
Mrs. George Philler
Mrs. Charles Platt
Miss Laura N. Platt
Will~am Camp~ell P~sey, M. D.
Mrs. Charles Adams Potter
Mrs. Joseph M. P. Price
J. Sergeant Price, Jr.
G. Colesberry Purves
Mrs. Evan Randolph
Mrs. W. F. Reed
Garrett L. Reilly
Prof. Joseph P. Remington
M. Riebenack
Charles P. Ring
Craig D. Ritchie ·
Mrs. Emily Lewis Roberts
Mrs. George B. Roberts
Edward Moore Robinson
Mrs. Lewis Rodman
Miss Fanny Rosengarten
Mrs. Frank H. Rosengarten

CONTINUED.

Joseph G. Rosengarten
Rev. Henry J. Rowland
Mrs. L. .Lewis Sagendorph
Lilian V. Sampson
Frank Samuel
John Samuel
Winthrop Sargent
William Lyttleton Savage
Mrs. William Lyttleton Savage
Peter A. Schemm
Mrs. Edward A. Schmidt
Frederick W. Schmidt
Justus H. Schwacke
Horace Wells Sellers
William J. Serrill
William B. Sheppard
Rufus E. Shapley
Mrs. William Simpson; Jr.
Mrs. Charles A. ' Sims
Mrs. Caroline C. Sinclair
Miss Mary F. Small
Alfred Percival Smith
Mrs. J. Frailey Smith
Col. Joseph R. Smith
W. Hinckle Smith
Samuel Spackman
Charles A. Spiegel
S. P. Stambach
Mrs. A. M. Starr
Louis Starr, M.D .
Miss Dorothy Swain Steel
Henry M. Steel
Master Karl Henri Steel
Edward Stern
John B. Stetson

7

ANNUAL MEMBERS.

CONTINUED.

Mrs. William Bacon Stevens Ralph Milbourne Townsend
Miss Elizabeth W. Stevenson Frederick Turnbull
.Miss Gertrude Van Pelt
Miss Susan Stevenson
Edward T. Stotesbury
Miss Frances C. Wayne
Frederic H. Strawbridge
Charles J . Webb .
Mrs. William C. Stroud
Mrs. Herbert Welsh
Harry _F. West
Mrs. John Struthers
Adam A. Stull
Mrs. J osephWharton
Mrs. Charles Wheeler
James F . Sullivan
Mrs. C. M. Swain
Richard P. White
Mrs. Earl W . Taylor"
Ellis D. Williams
Nathan A. Taylor
Herbert Wilmerding""
Mrs. William H. Tenbrook
Joseph Lapsley .W ilson
A.ugustus Thomas
' Mrs. W . W. Wiltbank
Mrs. George C. Thomas
Rev. Charles Wood
Joseph H. Thomas
Howard Wood
Miss Anne Thomson
John C. Y orston
Mrs. Charles Newbold Thorpe Henry Z. ~iegler
Frank R. Tobey
Mason W. Zimmerman, M.D.

LIFE MEMBERSHIP. ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS
ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP. TEN D,OLLARS

THE NINETY-SEVENTH ANNUAL REPORT.
THE PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY OF THE FINE ARTS,
FEBRUARY

2,

1903, TO FEBRUAR¥

I,

1904.

Ninety-seventh Annual R~port ot
the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts is herein presented to the Stockholders, and to those interested in the
work of the Institution.
c

The approaching centenalY of the Academy denotes
a vigorous . age accompanied by no lack of energy in
the pursuit of those ideals toward which such an organization should strive. The past year has demonstrated
this in the value of the exhibitions held in the Galleries
and in the advancement of the Schools, testimony to
which will be found in the follo~ing pages.
In celebration of the approaching One-Hundredth
year of the Academy it is proposed to form an ex- _
hibition of the work, from the earliest years to the
present day, of'students who have reached distinction.
Together with this, efforts will be ·made for an enlargement of the Endowment Fund and for the formation
of a National Gallery of Portraiture, of which the
. Academy already possesses a nucleus in its brilllant
group of portraits by the older American Masters, and
especially by Gilbert Stuart.
In furtherance of the latter design a circular fully
setting forth the project will now be issued.

9

1o

Ninety-seventh Annual Report

During the year I903-4 the Gibson Galleries have
been provided with new oak flooring, through the
liberality of Mrs. Robert C. H. Brock and Miss Mary
K . Gibson, daughters of the honored founder of 'the
Gibson Collection; and a spacious Entrance Hall has
been formed at the door of the Academy by the removal of the enclosed offices.
The continued aid offered by Life and Annual Members is a source not only of support but of encouragement and it is greatly desired that these may increase
in number year by year. The growth of such cooperation for similar institutions in other cities lends
color to the hope that all interested in art and in its
wider influence in the community will in this way join
in th~ work of the Academy.
To the press of the City of Philadelphia, and ot
the country, . the Management is grateful for intelligent diffusion of news concerning its efforts and for
criticism both stimulating and commendatory. To this
source may be traced in large degree the increased
attendance at home and from other cities, especially
during the Annual Exhibition, and for the enlarged
patronage of intelligent collectors of American works
of art.
The Permanent Collections of the Academy have
received the following additions during the year
I9 0 3-4 "

Chez He/leu, oil painting by Walter Gay. Purchased for the Temple Collection from the Seventysecond Annual Exhibition, I903.

The Academy of the Fine Arts

11

La Console, oil painting by Walter Gay. . Purchased for the Temple Collection from the Seventysecond Annual Exhibition, 1903.

,

A Hill,. Early Twilight, oil painting by Ben Foster.
Purchased for the Temple Collection frorn the
Seventy-second Annual Exhibition, 1903.
i

June, oil painting by Violet Oakley. Purchased
from the Seventy .second Annual Exhibition, 1903,
out of the Gilpin Fund.
Turtle and Lizards,bronze by Albert Laessle.
Purchased from the Seventy-second Annual Exhibition, 1903, out of the Gilpin Fund.
Portrait of Dr. John Fothergill, oil painting by
Gilbert Stuart. Purchased by Academy from the
Annual Membership Fund .
. The following works have been deposited during the
year for general exhibition:

Portrait of · A. J. Cassatt; Esq., oil painting by
John S. Sargent. Deposited by the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company.
.Head, oil painting attributed to Ribera. Deposited
by Admiral French E. Chadwick, U. S.N.
The followi~g addition~ to the Library have been
'received during the year 1903-1904 :
From John F. Lewis:

Etching in America, by J . R. W .. Hitchcock. .
Albert Durer, by William R Scott.
Catalogue of Prin(s, after Martin Heemskerck, by
Martin Kerrick. London, 1829.

1-2

Ninety-seventh Annual Report
Drawing and Engraving, by Philip G. Hamerton.
Handbook to the Department of Prints and Draw,ings in the British Museum. by Louis Fagan.
Memoirs and Recollections of Abraham Raimbach,
by M. T. S. Raimbach.
Valentine Green, by Alfred Whitman.
Anecdotes of Painters who have Resided or been
Born in England " with Critical Remarks on their
Productions, by Edward Edwards.
Sculptura,-Historica,-Technica " or, The History
and Art of Engraving. London, 1747.
Instructz'olls in the Art of Lithography, by C.
Straker. London, 1867.
The Art of Illustration, by Henry Blackburn_
Edinburgh, 1901.
History of Wood Engraving, by George E. Woodberry. London, 1883.
The Wood-cutters of the Netherlands in the Fifteenth Cent'l':ry, by William Martin Conway.
Cambridge, 1884.
Idee Generale d'une Collection -Complette d'Estampes avec une Dissertation sur l' origine de la
Gravure et sur les premiers livres d'Images,
Leipsic et Vienne chez Jean Paul Kraus, 1771.
Die Deutsehen Maler-Radirer. Five volumes. By
Andreas Andresen. Leipzig, 1878.
Treatise on Wood Eng1'aving.
John Jackson. 1839.

Illustrated.

By

The Academy of the · Fine Arts
I

13

Thomas Bewick and His Pup£ls, by Austin Dobson.
.
188 4.
lVotizie de' Profess01'-t" del Disegno da Cimabue, by
Filippo B~ldinucci Fiorentino. Florence, 1681.
A Catalogue Raisonne of the Engraved Works of
Richard Cosway, Jif.A.. , by Frederick B. Daniell.
18 9 0 .
Grammar of Painting and Engraving, by Kate
N ewell Doggett. 1874.
The Print Collector's Handbook, by Alfred Whitman. London, 1901.
Kunst in l~upfer zu Stechen, by Johann Conrad
Glitle. Niirnberg, 1795.
Catalogue de l' CEuvre de Jean Georges Wille,
Graveur, par M. Charles Le ·Blanc. 1847.
A Complete Course of Lithograph)" by Alois Senefelder. 1819.
The Authors of England; by Achille Collas. 1838.
Archiv fur die zeichnenden Kunste, by Dr. Robert
Naumann.
Volumes one to sixteen, inclusive.
Leipzig, 1855.

I

~

The Arts and A~t£sts ,. or, Anecdotes and Relics of
the Schools of Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture, by James Elmes, M.R.I.A. Three volumes.
London, 1825.
Life and Letters of Wilham Bewick. Two volumes.
Edited by Thomas Landseer. 187 I.

.;·~4

Ninety-seventh Annua'l Report

From Alan C. Harris:

Maud, by Alfred Tennyson.
A Message to . Garcia, by Fra Elbertus.
The Craftsm.an. . Two volumes.
The Roycroft Books.

A catalogue with remarks.

Scottish Portraits. Five volumes. Edinburgh,

1902.

Richard Wagner, by H. S. Chamberlain, London,
1900.

Little Journeys, by Elbert Hubbard.
to eleven, inclusive.

Volumes six

Self Reliance, by Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Die Ausstellung de1/ Dannstaiidter
···· Kolonie, by Alexander Koch ..

Ki'tnstler-

. Deutsche 1(ztnst und Dek07;ation, for Octobet:,
1904, by Alexander Koch.
Edouard Manet, by Hugo v. Tschudi.

Berlin,

- 1902 .

Raphael's Houn Twelve pantographic prints in
colors.
Royal Academ_y Pictures.
.

1903 .

I

Representative Art of Our
. Holme. 1902 .

T£711e.

Edited by Charles

. From William L. Elkins ·:

Catalo.gue of Paintings m the Private Collection
iJf W. L. Elkins.

The Academy of the Fine Arts

IS

From the I.;ibrary of Congress :.

A Calendar of John Paul Jon e..s Manuscripts in the
Library of Congress. Washington, I903.
From Mrs. Dora Johnston, through Frank P. Prich, ard:

Two v olumes of Sulphu1' Casts,
Purchased by the Academy:

Fragments d' Architecture Antique, by H. D'Espouy.
Fragments d' Arclzitectzwe du Moy en age e t de la
Renaissance, by H. D'Espouy.
Edifices de Rome Moderne.
text. By Letarouilly.

Three volumes and

Monog1'aphie du · Palais de Fontainebleau.
volumes. By M. Rodolphe Pfnor.
Palast-Architektur, Toscana.
and R. "Reinhardt.

Two

By J. C Raschdorff

Palast-Architektur, Genua,by Robert Reinhardt.
A Treatise on Title Pages, by Theodore Low De
Vinne, A.M.
Illustratz"ons of the Book of Job, by William Blake.
The Shtdy and Criticism, of Italian Art, by Bernard
Berenson.
Die illustrierten Historienbucher des I5 Jaltrhun-,
derts, by Leo Baer.
Dictz"onary of National Biography, by Sidney Lee.
Bryan's Dictionary of Pai'iters and Engrav ers, by
G. C Williamson; . I903.

]6

Ninety-seventh Annual Report'

The Work of jotm S. Sargent. Charles 'Scribner's
Sons. 1903.
American Masters of Sculpture, by Charles H.
Caffin. J 903.
The History of American Sculpture, by Lorado
Taft. 1903.
The Seventy-second Annual Exhibition was in proSeventy-secgress
when the last Annual Report was presented. The
ond Annual
Exhibition, attendance , during the forty days of this Exhibition
aggregated 55,226.
0

19 3.

The sales of works of art from this Exhibition numbered sixty-six, at a total value of $10,892.00.
\

Honors and
The Academy Gold Medal of Honor was awarded
Prizes.
by the Board of Directors ~o John Singer Sargent, in
view of his distinguished work in the current Exhibition.
The Gold Medal of the Temple F und was awarded
by the Philadelphia Jury of Painters to Edward W.
Redfield, for his landscape entitled Winter Evening.
The Walter Lippincott Prize of $300 was awarded
for ' this Exhibition to Frank W . Benson, for his figure
painting entitled Sunlight.
The Mary Smith Prize of $ I 00 was awarded by the
Committee on Exhibition to Jessie Willcox Smith, for
her group entitled A Mother's Day.
The Jennie Sesnan Gold Medal was awarded by the
Jury. of Philadelphia Artists to W. Elmer Schofield, for
his landscape entitled Breezy Day: Ea.rly Autumn . .

The Academy of the Fine Arts

17

From March 18 to April I, the Second Annual Ex- Other
hibition of the Philadelphia Water Color Club was held Exhibitions
in Gallery F, opening with an . evening reception.
Eleven works were sold.
From March 18 to April I, Gatleries. G and H were.
devoted to a collection of the work of Charles P.
Gruppe, an American artist living in Holland. From
this exhibition there were sold eighteen works.
From April 4 to 19, the Fourth Annual Exhibition
of Sketches, founded by the Academy Fellowship, was
held in Galleries G and H.
From April I I to 22, the North Corridor and Gallery
I were occupied by a collection of work done' by the
Dutch artist, Henrik Willem Mesdag. From this collection were sold two large canvases.
At the end of April, an exhibition of photographs
and sculpture from noted Masters, with other appropriate designs, collected by the Civic Club for distribution to the Public Schools of Philadelphia, was exhibited
in Galleries G, H, and I and the intervening C.orridor.
From August to the end of the year, Galleries G, H,
and I ~ith the intervening Corridor were occupied by
works of various schools lent through the liberality of
Mr. Peter A. Schemm, to ' ,,,hom thanks are returned
for the privilege.
From October 4 to 27, Galleries G and H with the
North Transept and the North Corridor, were occupied
by a collection formed by the International Society of
Sculptors,Painters, and Gravers, of London, through
the efforts of the Academy.- . The exhibition averaged

18

Ninety-seventh Annual Report

an attendance of 500 on week days and 1500 on Sundays.
In securing this admirable collection from Great
Britain and the Continent, the Academy joined its
efforts with the following institutions, to each of which
in turn it will pass during the current season: The
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh; The Cincinnati Museum
Association; The Art Institute of Chicago; The Boston
Art Club; The Buffalo fine Arts Academy; The St.
Louis School and Museum of Fine Arts. The enterprise is one involving considerable cost and much detail,
which have seemed justified by the uncommon oppor:..
tunity afforded the people ' for seeing the work of artists
little known in this country, and by the eagerness with
which the collection was desired for exhibition by many
institutions beside those named.
The Seventy-third Annual Exhibition opened with an
Seventythird Annual evening reception on Saturday, January 23, 1904. The
Exhibition. guests were received in the Rotunda by the President
and Directors, assisted by the , following hostesses" to
whom the thanks of the Academy are due:
MRS, ALEXANDER

J,

CASSATT,

MRS. HENRY WHITMAN,

of Boston,
MRS. GEORGE H . McFADDEN,

MRS. CLEMENT B. NEWBOLD,
MRS. ROBERT W. LESLEY,
MRS.

J.

BERTRAM LIPPINCOTT,

MRS. SERGEANT KENDALL,

MRS. GEORGE BIDDLE,

of New York,

MISS VIOLET OAKLEY.

The leading features of this exhibition are the group
of nine portraits by John Singer Sargent and the group
of four works by the late J ames A. MacNeill Whistlel",
whose ~mented death gives particular significance to
this, the first exhibit of his work since , that unfol:tunate
event. The centre of the group of Mr. Sargent's work

The Academy of the Fine Arts

19

is ' the large triple portrait of the Misses Hunter, now
for the first time seen in this country, and especial thanks
are due to Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Hunter for the international courtesy which has enabled the Academy to
present to the Arrierican public this noble ~'anvas by our
greatest contemporary American artist. The Academy
is under obligations to a large number of collectors and
owners of American works who have generously lent
them for this exhibition, and while th~nks have been
returned for these favors, it is gratifying thus to make
fuller acknowledgment of their service to the public and
to American art. To the American artists at l{ome and
abroad who have liberally cooperated in the formation
and arrangement of the exhibition thanl~s are also due.
I

.The works included in the Catalogue of the Seventythird Annual Exhib.ition number 537; of these the oil
paintings are 407, the miniatures 24 and the sculptures

106.
The Exhibition will remain open to the public until
March 5, I904· It occupies . the entire north side of
the Galleries, with ~ the Rotunda and the Central Corridor.
The Juries of Selection for the Seventy-third Annual
Exhibition a'r e as follows:
CHARLES MORRIS YO U NG,

Clzai7'man.

CECILIA BEAUX ,

BEN FOSTER,

EDWARD W . REDFIELD,

A.

HENRY O . TANNER,

EDM.)JND C. TARBELL ,

CLIFFORD P. GRAYSON,
SAMUEL MURRAY,

'

WILLIAM M. CHASE,

PHIMISTER PROCTOR ,

C. H. VVOODBURY ,
L H. CALIGA,
H. ,A. MACNEIL,

HENRY OLIVER WALKER ,

WALTER MACEWEN,

IRVING R . . WILES,

CHARLES SPRAGUE PEARC E ,
GARI MELCHERS .

20

Ninety-seventh Annual Report

Attendance.

The attendance during the year 19°2- 19°3 at exhibitions, lectures, etc., was 164,041.

The
Schools.

The Schools of the Academy have kept pace with the
advancement of the Institution during the year just
closed.
The teaching Faculty consists ot the following In:.
structors :
WILLIAM M . CHASE,

HENRY MCCARTER,

R.

THOMAS P . ANSHUTZ,

HENRY

CECILIA BEAUX,

GEORGE MCCLELLAN, M.D.,

POORE,

CHARLES GRAFLY,

FRA1'\K MILES DAY ,

HUGH H. BRECKENRIDGE,

VVILSON EYRE,

EDGAR

V.

SEELER .

The temporalY withdrawal 01 Henry] . Thouron from
the position of Instructor in Composition, which he has
so 10hg and faithfully held, has caused regret, tempered
by the expectation that he will resume his duties in the
Schoo~s with the term beginning in October, 1904.
Henry R. Poore, a former student of the Schools,
distinctively known for his pictures of animals anp for
his recent volume on Composition, has been engaged to
take the place made vacant by Mr. Thouron.
Exhibitions of work by the students were held as
announced in the spring and fall.
Included in the
spring exhibit was the work offered in competition
for the Toppan Prizes, the subjects being The News
or A Song. These prizes were awarded by the Committee on Instruction as follows:

First Prize, $ 500, to Daniel Garber.
Second Prize, $200, to Alice V. Corson.
Honorable Mention and Scholarship to Daisy Osnis.

The Academy of the Fine Arts

2]

The first awards under the · foundation known as the
William Emlen Cresson Prize Memorial Fund were ,
made at the end .o f the School term in May, 1903,
carrying with them a fund of ,$ 1000 a year each,
for- a period of two years, with a possible extension
to three. These Travelling Scholarships were awarded
as follows:
In the department

Of

Painting:

Louis Betts,
Martha Walter,
Emilie Zeckwer.
In the department of Sculpture:
Guiseppe Donato.
\

In the department of Architecture :
Gilbert L. Hindermyer.
In the department of Painting:
Honorable Mention with an Academy Scholarship to :
Morris Molarsky,
Alice V. Corson.



In the department of Sculpture:
Honorable Mention with an Academy Scholarship to :
J. E. Burdick.
In the department ot Architecture:
Honorable Mention with an Academy Scholarship to:
Phineas E. Paist.

22

Ninety..seventh Annual Report

In recognition of the talents of the following students
abroad, Cresson Scholarships for one year were also
awarded them:
Harry R. Rittenberg,
Ella S. Hergesheimer.
The fourth award of the Edmund Stewardson Prize of
$ IOO in Sculpture was made by a Jury consisting of

Messrs. Samuel Murray, Charles H . . Niehaus, and
Adolph A. Weinman, to whom acknowledgments are
due, to :
V. H. Zollo
Honorable Mention to D. C. Muller.
The prizes founded through the generolls action of
Henry J. Thouron, Instructor in Composition, were
awarded as follows:
I

For the best group of compositions on subjects given
to the class during the current season. Prize of $50,
awarded by the Faculty to :
,..

Morris Molarsky. .

For a group of compositions on subjects given to the
class during the season.
Prize of $25, awarded by
vbte of the stlldents in the Schools to :
John R. Boyd.
For general progress in Composition Class , work
during the current season. Prize of $50, awarded by
the Instrllctor of the class to :
Arth ur B. Carles.

The Academy of the Fine Arts

23

, Through the generous action of Dr. John H. Packard,
Chairman of the Committee on Instr~ction, the Academy
will be enabled to resume, for the ensuing seaso~s, the
Zoological Prizes for the best work of drawing in that
branch, which were among the awards of the School
~ntil a recent date.
Thanks are due to John H. Caswell, Manager ot
Bostock's Animal Show, for the advantage given the
students in modelling from animals belonging to that
organization.
The sixty free scholarships granted by the Academy
Schools to the City of Philadelphia, under an appropriation of $5000, received through the joint ~ction of City
Councils and of the Board of Public Education, to whom
thanks are returned, have been continued through the
past year with favorable results.
The educational
advantages of this arrangement are made evident by
the fact that many of the students have subsequently
become teachers of drawing in the Public Schools and
elsewhere.
The uses OI the Academy to the City Schools were
urther enhanced by the invitation of the pupils of the
entire district to visit the Seventy-second Annual Exhibition, a privilege which was embraced by many
thousands of pupils with their teachers and families.
The usual Annual Excursion ot students ot · the
Academy Schools to the exhibitions and studios of New
York was repeated on Friday, May 8, under . the
guidance of Mr. William M. Chase. In this connection
Mr. John V. Sears and Mr. W. A. Patton extended
assistance which calls for grateful ac:knowledgment.

I

24,
Catalogues,
Reports,
etc.

Ninety-seventh 'Annual Report

Catalogues, reports, and pamphlets have been added
to the Academy's valuable collection from the following
donors, who have received thanks for the same:

c

American Park . and Outdoor Art Association,
Boston.
American Water Color Society, N ew York
Art Association, Iridianapolis.
Art Association, Montreal.
Art Cluq, Philadelphia.
Art Club, Erie, Penna.
Art Institute, Chicago.
Art Students' League, Buffalo, N . Y.
Art Students' League, N ew York City.
Art Worker.s' Club for Women, New York City.
Boston Art Club.
Bridgeport Public Library, Bridgeport, Conn.
Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences.
California Camera Club.
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburg.
Central Ontario School of Art and Industrial Design.
Chicago Architectural Club.
Cincinnati 1\1: useum Association.
City Library Association, Springfield, Mass. '
City Parks Association, Philadelphia. '
Cleveland School of Art.
Commissioners of Fairmount Park, Philadelphia.
Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C.
Messrs. Davis & Harvey, Philadelphia.
Detroit Museum of Art.
Drexel Institute, Philadelphia.
Eric Pape School of Art, Boston.
Fairmount Park Art Association.

The Academy of the Fine Arts

I

25

Fine Arts Federation ofN ew York.
Free Library of Philadelphia.
Koniglichen Akademie del" Kunst, Berlin.
Library Company, Philadelphia.
Los Angeles Public Library.
Manufacturers' Club, Philadelphia.
Mark Hopkins Institute ot Art: Maryland Institute, Baltimore.
Massachusetts Normal Art School, Boston.
Minne'apolis School of Fine Arts.
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,
Nebraska Art Association, Lincoln, Neb.
New York Water Color Club.
Norwich Art School.
North-East Manual Training School, Philadelphia . .
Ontario Society of Artists.
Peabody Institute, Baltimore.
Pennsylvania Museum and School ot Industrial
Art, Philadelphia.
Philadelphia City Institute.
Philadelphia School of Design for Women.
Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, N. H .
Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, R. 1.
Rochester Athemeum and Mechanics Institute,
Rochester, N. Y.
San Francisco Art Association . .
School of Decorative and Applied Art.
Society of A,m erican Artists, N ew York.
. Spring Garden Institute, Philadelphia.
Stadder's Art Galleries, Springfield, Mass.
Universal Exposition, St. Louis.
University Club, Philadelphia.
Ursinus College, Collegeville, Penna.

26

Ninety-seventh Annual Report
Water Color ,Club, Boston.
Women's Art Association, Canada.
- W orchester Art Museum.

Lectures &
Receptions,
Etc.

On January 19, 1903, a reading of the "Merchant
of Venice" was generously given by Dr. Horace Howard
Furness, in Gallery F, under ~he auspices of the Academy
Fellowship.
On January 23, 1903, the Civic Club of Philadelphia
joined with the Academy in giving an evening reception
to those unable to attend during the day. A vote was
taken for the best and second best pictures in the
Seventy-second Annual Exhibition. Thei-e were 1856
present. A second evening reception of the same order
was given by the Civic Club and the Academy on
February 13th, when there were 2120 in attendance.
On February 6, 1903, Dr. Denman W. Ross, of
Boston, le~tured under the auspices of the Academy
Fellowship on "P~inting and the Principles of Design."
On March 24 and 3 I, I903, lectures ~ere given on
Armor by Charles E. Dana, President of the Academy
F~llowship.

On January 27, 1904, Mr. Arthur J. Eddy, of Chicago,
\spoke in GaJlery F on "Whistler as a Colorist."
The death of Henry C. Whipple on May 20, 1903,
deprived the institution of its oldest employe. He had
been Curator of - Prints for twenty-five years and had
come to the Academy when Mr. John S. -Phi-llips bequeathed his collection ot engravings to the Institution.

The Academy of the Fine Arts

27

He was always a faithful and willing servant and deserves to be remembered in the annals ot the Academy.
Since the death of Mr. Whipple, the Academy has
responded to a generous offer made by Mr. John F.
Lewis and has invited him to become Honorary
Curator of Prints, a post for which his wide knowledge
of that subject eminently fits him.
On November 7, 1903, WiIliam L. Elkins, who was
elected to the Bo~rd of Directors on December 1 I,
1899, died after serving for four years, and on January .
1 I, 19°4, Mr. Robert- C. H. Brock was elected to fill the
vacancy thus made.
The Endowmen~ Fund has been increased by the sum Finances.
of $2750, received additionally from the Estate of
George S. Pepper, deceased.
By the statement of the Treasurer the net receipts
are shown to be $29,°77.84, and the net expenses,
$28,576.77, leaving a credit balance of $501.07.
In concluding this Report the Board of Directors
would again call the attention of the Stockholders, the
subscribing Members and all friends of the Academy, to
the urgent need of space in the present or in additional
buildings for galleries, . for the Library and fo'r the
Schools. This can be had only by a considerable"
increase in the Endowment and Building Funds of the
Institution. The subject should now be given earnest
\
consideration with a view to early action, and the present
time, as the Academy enters upon its one-hundredth
year, would seem auspicious and most fitting for the
undertaking.

28

Ninety-seventh Annual Report

To the Mayor of the City and to the City Councils are
due appreciatjon and thanks for their co-operation In
the work. of the Academy during the year 1903.
On behalf of the Board of Directors,
EDWARD H. COATES,
President.


8 .A LANCE

SHEET

BALANCE SHEET, PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY
ASSETS.
Real Estate Broad and Cherry Streets, General
Fund .. , . .. ...... . .. . .. .. ... ... .. . . . ... $478, 009.18
Real Estate Broad and Cherry Streets, Gilpin
Gallery Fund .................... . ..... ,. 32,902.22
Real Estate Broad and Cherry Streets, Special
Fund........... . . ........ ... ... .. ... 26,87 6 . 2 5 $537,7 8 7. 6 5
Art Property..................................... . .. .
Library and School Property .. .. .. ... .. .... . . . ..... ... .
Endowment Fund:
Peerless Brick Co. Bonds .. . ....... .. .... $20,000.00
Philadelphia & Reading R. R. General
Mortgage 4 per cent. Bonds. . . . . . . . . . . 10,000.00
Mortgage, E. D. & Rosa M. Smith, St.
Davids. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12,000.00
Baltimore & Ohio R. R. First Mortgage 4
per cent. Bonds.. . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. 10,000.00
Mortgage, J. H. Sands, Roanoke.. . . . . . . .
5,500.00
Presbyterian Board of Publication Building
Bonds . ....... ....... ... . ...... . ... .
5,000.00
Norfolk & Western R. R. 4 per cent. Con sols JO,ooo.OQ
United Traction Co., of Pittsburg, 5 per '
cent. Bonds .... . .... .. . ... ........ . 10,000.00
Pittsburg Consolidated Gas Co. 5 per cent.
Bonds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 10,000.00
Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co. 4Yz per cent.
1,000.00
Bonds ......... ..... . ...... ...... .. .
Brooklyn Ferry Co. 5 .per cent. Bonds .. ". .
5,000.00
South Bound R. R. 5 per cent. Bonds .....
5,000.00
Iron Mountain Car Trust 5 per cent. Bonds
7,000.00
Part of $31,000 Mortgage, F. J. Kimball,
2,000.00
Radnor ...... ..... ................ .
Temporary Loan ...................... .
1,975. 00
Temple Trust Fund:
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Bonds
Charles Toppan Prize Fund:
Lehigh Valley R. R: Second Mortgage 7 per
cent. Bonds .. .. ... ......• .... ..... . $8,000.60
Sharpless Mortgage 4 Yz per cent. Bonds ..
7,000.00
Charles Toppan Prize F und, Income Account:
Iron Mountain Car Trust 5 per cent. Bonds
Academy Medal Endowment Fund:
Clearfield & Jefferson R. R. 6 per cent. Bonds
Gilpin Gallery Fund:
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Bonds $23,000.00
New England Loan and Trust Co. 6 per cent.
Debentures ........... ...... . ...... .
1,35 0 .00
Sharpless Mortgage 4 Yz per cent. Bonds ..
3,000.00
- -- Pepper Trust Fund:
Mortgage, Fort Scott, Kansas ...... ..... . $10,000.00
Mortgage, No. 10 N . 8th St., Philadelphia. 50,000.00
Syracuse Rapid Transit R. R. 5 per cent.
5,000.00
Bonds . . ... .. . ..... . ........... ... . .
Part of $31,000 Mortgage, F. J. Kimball,
10,000.00
Radnor .... . .................. . , ..
Edmund Stewardson Prize Fund:
Erie & Pittsburg R. R. 3Yz per cent. Bonds.
City of Philadelphia 3 per cent. Bonds . ...
Blair County Bridge Loan 4 per cent. Bonds.
<;ibson Fund: •
Part of $3[,000 Mortgage, F. J. Kimb~ll,
Radnor. . . ........... .. .. ... ....... .
Mary Smith Prize Fund:
Part of $3 1,000 Mortgage, F. J. Kimball,
Radnor. ....... .. " ............. .. .. .

$2,000.00
500 . 00
500 . 00

2II,55 1.94
3, 01 7. 20

60,000.00

15,000.00

1,000.00

27,35°. 00

75,000.00

3,000.00
10,000.00

2,000.00

Carried forward .... . ...... . ........ $ 1,061,201.68

OF THE FINE ARTS, DECEMBER 31, 1903.
Brought forward ........... ... ... _., .$1,06 1,201.68
Phillips Bequest:
Part of $31,000 Mortgage, F. J . Kimball,
Radnor........... ... . ... ....... ... . $7,000.00
Iron Mountain Car Trust 5 per ' cent.
Bonds. . . .. . . ..... ........... _. . . .
5,000.00
12,000.00
Jennie Sesnan Medal Fund :
Detroit United Railways 4~ per cent. Bonds
1,000.00
Life Membership Fund :
Iron Mountain Car Trust 5 per cent. Bonds ... . ..... .
Thouron Prize Fund:
Iron Mountain Car Trust 5 per cent. Bonds . ....... _ .
3,045.7 8
Academy Medal Investment Income Account. ............ .
122.90
Cast Collection .. .... . .... . . .... ...... . .............. .
702 . 6 9 Lecture Room Decorations . ... .. .. ... . ... ... ... . .. ... . .
1,7 15. 65
Reconstruction of Building. .. ......................... .
500.00
801-36 '
Electric Lighting .. .......... . ...................... . .
Seventy-third Annual Exhibition ..... ..... . . .......... .
484. 1 7
International Exhibition. . . . . .. .. ... .. .......... . .. . .
68 9.73
Architectural Library . .. ... . . : . . ........... .. '.. ..... .
306 .5 0
Permanent Catalogue ... .. . _............ ... .. . " .... .
497. 21
Interest Receivable .. ... . . .. .... ....... _........ .. .. .. .
2,375. 00
Miscellaneous . . . .. ........... . .... _......... .. _..... .
566 . 2 4
Cash:
T~mple Trust Fund .. ....... . .... ..... . . $1,45 6 .3 8
Charles Toppan Prize Fund ....... _..... .
79 6 .9 6
Life Membership Fund ... . ....... ..... .
2, 01 7'.5 0
. Endowment and Trust Funds . ..... . .. .. .
380 .7 8
Cresson Scholarships Fund . . ........... .
2,544·39
General Fund ................. _ .. .. _..
2,883. 11

10,079. 12

LIABILITIES.
Capital Stock .... .. . _ ... . . . ..... .. ... , .......... . . .
$45 8,7 00 . 00
Surplus Capital ... ....... _ ......... . _............... .
131,900 .90
Old Stock. . .. . ...... , . _ ........ ... .. , . .......... . . .
12,650.00
83,000.00
Mortgage, Broad and Cherry Streets . . ............. . . ... .
Loans Payable ................... .... ............ .. . .
13,975. 00
12 5,37 6. 86
Endowment Fund ........... ' ....... ... .. .. .. .. . . .... .
60,000.00
Temple Trust Fund ... .. ..... .......... .... ... ... . ... .
15,000.00
Charles Toppan Prize Fund . ... ..... . .. . . ............. .
Academy Medal Endowment Fund .... ..... ..... ... .... ~
1,000.00
Gilpin Fund. -In Trust for Gilpin Gallery: Real. Estate ....... '" .. .. ..' .. ..... .... $32,902.22
Fund for Investment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 28,656.47
Pepper Trust Fund ..... . ..... . ..... . .................. .
Edmund Stewardson Prize Fund. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . ... .
Gibson Fund .... , . . . .. . ........................... .
Mary Smith Prize Fund ..... ... ......... .. . ....... . .. .
Phillips Bequest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .
Life Membership Fund .... . ..... '................. .. .. .
Jennie Sesnan Medal Fund ... ........................ .
Thouron Prize Fund ...................... . ........ .
Temple Trust Fund Income Account. . . . . . .. . .......... .
Toppan Prize Fund Income Account. ............. .. ... .
Gilpin Gallery Fund Income Account .......... ...... ... .
Pepper Fund Income Account. .. .... ....... . ... ....... .
Stewardson Prize Fund Income Account. . . , . . . . .. . . .... .
Mary Smith Prize Fund Income Account .. . ............. .
Thouron Prize Fund Income Account ......... . ... ..... .
Jennie Sesnan Medal Fund Income Account . ... .. ....... .
Benjamin Johnson Legacy .. ... .. ... .. . ............. .. .
Walter Lippincott Prize ..... " . .. ... .. . .. . ....... ... .. .
Annual Membership .. ......... "...................... .
Academy Fund for the Purchase of Pictures ..... .... .. .. .
Life Membership Income Account. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .... .
Travelling Scholarship. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. . .... .... .
Cresson Bequests Income Account ... . ............ : .. . .
Investment Account, Profit and Loss. . . . . . . ... .. . . ..... .
J\1iscellaneous ...... ... ... ................ . ..... . .... .
Profit and Loss. " ..... .. ... ... . ... .. ....... ..... .. .. .

.61,55 8 . 69
77,875. 00 .
3,000.00
10,000.00
2,000.00
12,000.00
7,100".00
I,OOO.CO

3,25 0 .00
3,25 6 .3 8
1,816.85
2,077·75
1,800.00
23·44
20 9. 88
100.00
27.5 0
850.00
300.'00
5,747. 02
260·47
300 .57
800.00
2.498 .75
821. 12
393 . 28
50 1. 0 7

PROFIT AND LOSS BALANCES,
DECEMBER 31, 1903.
CR.
Endowment Fund Income Account. .... . ........... ', ' . . .
Temple Tmst Fund Income Account ... . .. . .... ...... .. . .
Gilpin Gallery Fund Income Account. ... . ..... . . . ...... .
Pepper Tmst Fund Income Account. .... . ... . .. . . .... . . .
Phillips Bequest Income Account. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . ... .. .
Scholarship Fund from City of Philadelphia . . ....... . .. .
Academy Fund from City of Philadelphia .. .... . ...... .. .
Academy and Lecture Room Incom e .. . ... ..... . .. . .. . .
.Minor Exhibitions. ....... . . . ............. . ........ .

$9,7 22 .5 8
1,800.00
64 2 .5°
3,4 1 9.5 0
18 9. 8 5
5,000.00
7,5 00. 00
II7· 84
685· 57

DR.
Interest .. .. . ....................... .. ... .
General Exhibition .... . ........ . ..... , ... . .
General Expense . .... .. " . . . . ............ .
Instmction .. ... .. ........ ' .. . ..... . '...... . .
Repairs and Renewals . . ... .... .. .. . .. ... . . .
Seventy-first Annual Exhibition . .... . ....... .
Seventy-second Annual Exhibition ...... .... .
Gibson Fund Income Account .. . . ' .... ' " .. .
Electric Lighting . .. . . . ... . .. . .. ..... .. ... .

$3,7 02 .55
1,073. 63
8,33 8 . 1 9
10,229·34
2,459.4 1
69.97
1,47 0 .48
233. 20
1,000.00
$28,57 6 .77

Credit Balance ...... .. . . ... .... . . .. ......... .

. 5°1. 0 7
$29,077. 84

Item sets