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Fine Arts Journal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fine Arts Journal
CategoriesFine arts, applied arts
FrequencyMonthly
Founded1899 (1899)
Final issueSeptember 1919
CountryUSA
Based inChicago
ISSN2151-2760

The Fine Arts Journal, published in Chicago from 1899 to 1919,[1] was an art magazine devoted to the fine arts and increasingly to the arts in the broadest sense. The editor to 1905 was Marian A. White, who sought to make the journal a vehicle "to promote and foster a love for art American in type and the work of the American artist in particular", but resigned when she felt the publisher was insisting that it be a "write-up periodical".[2] From 1907 it was adopted as the official publication of the National Art Society, also based in Chicago.[citation needed]

Editors

  • Marian A. White (1899-1905)
  • Evelyn M. Stuart (1905-1910)
  • James William Pattison (1910-1915)

References

  1. ^ ""Fine Arts Journal" at JH Libraries". catalyst.library.jhu.edu. 2012. Retrieved February 11, 2012.
  2. ^ Herbert Easton Fleming, Magazines of a Market-Metropolis, being a History of the Literary Periodicals and Interests of Chicago. [year missing] p. 107.