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Show PAINTINGS PLAY PART IN HOME SHOW Featuring 23 paintings of prominent promi-nent Utah and out of state artists, Nilson Fine Arts Gallery has readied read-ied the special art show for the furniture style show tonight. Included in the display are exhibits ex-hibits from the Maxwell Gallery in San Francisco. Selected to show how different types of paintings may be adapted for particular furniture designs, the show includes such well known artists as Florence Ware, Mary Kimball, Jack Vigos, Harrison Groutage, Elsa Saxon, Michael Cannon, B. Y. Andelin, Gael Lind-strom, Lind-strom, Dean Fausett,. Paul Salisbury, Salis-bury, Lynn Fausett and Manyard Dixon. Paintings on review are Lillies and Candelabra, Along Cottonwood Creek, Tranquility, Phlox, Spring in Brighton, Autumn Aspens, Hamilton Ham-ilton Fort, Britton Falls, Road to the Hills, The Crossing, The Gold of Autumn, Where the Sagebrush Sage-brush Grows, Afternoon Shadows, Vista Through the Aspens, Fields of Toquerville. Two paintings, Mt. Olympus by Mary Kimball and Harrison Groutage. Grou-tage. are exhibited in the show. Included in the special show selected se-lected by the Maxwell Gallery of San Francisco are works of John G. Brown N-A, whose works are represented in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Corcran Gallery Gal-lery in Washington, D. C. The artist was born in 1831. Paintings by Mario Agostinelli and Gustave Jean Jacquet, who ws a pupil of Bouguereau, and exhibited many of his pieces in Paris salon, will be seen. Kern Hermann, the Hungarian artist who displayed works in Vienna Vi-enna and Munich; Lanfant and paintings of John Constable, R.A., one of the most celebrated English landscape painters and a forerunner forerun-ner of the French impressionists, are artists represented in the outstanding out-standing show. Nilson's is stressing the beauty of paintings in home decorations rather than prints, and the public is invited to attend the show. |