FINE N 6537 . L44 A4 1921 CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY FINE ARTS LIBRARY The MEMORIAL ART GALLERY ROCHESTER, NEW YORK CATALOGUE OF AN EXHIBITION OF PAINTINGS AND ETCHINGS BY HAYLEY LEVER PAINTINGS BY LEOPOLDO MARIOTTI AND ETCHINGS AND LITHOGRAPHS BY HERBERT PULLINGER MARCH Nineteen Hundred Twenty-One , THE MEMORIAL ART GALLERY IS OPEN EVERY DAY FROM 10:00 A. M. TO 5:00 P. M., EXCEPTING ON SUNDAYS AND MONDAYS. WHEN IT IS OPCN FROM l:»0 JO 5:00 P. M. FRIDAYS: ADMISSION TWENTY-FIVE CENTS. ALL OTHER DAYS FREE. MANY OF THESE PAINTINGS ARE FOR ^ SALE: FOR PRICES APPLY AT THE DESK OR AT THE OFFICE OF THE GALLERY. col THE MEMORIAL ART GALLERY ROCHESTER NEW YORK CATALOGUE OF AN EXHIBITION OF PAINTINGS AND ETCHINGS BY HAYLEY LEVER PAINTINGS BY LEOPOLDO MARIOTTI AND ETCHINGS AND LITHOGRAPHS BY HERBERT PULLINGER l\3i Oi 0| col Oil col col 03s MARCH Nineteen Hundred Twenty-One Fine Am PAINTINGS AND ETCHINGS BY HAYLEY LEVER PAINTINGS 1. Drying Sails 2. Morning in the Harbor 3. Landing Fish 4. Haze in the Harbor 5. Dance of the Boats 6. Exmouth Sands, Devonshire, England 7. Fifth Avenue, French and English Commission, 1917 8. Summer 9. Pleasure Yachts 10. Hai'bor Entrance 11. Drying Nets 12. Fifth Avenue from the Library 13. Lower New York 14. Evening, Gloucester, Massachusetts 15. St. Ives, Fishermen's Shelter 16. Herring Boats 17. Pilchard Boats 18. Fishing Schooners 19. "L", Sixty-sixth Street, New York City 20. Gray Moon, St. Ives 21. Fog, Gloucester 22. From Stage Fort Park, Gloucester 3 23. Flowers 24. Sea Mist 25. Boats, Gloucester ETCHINGS 26. Warships 27. Fish Houses, Gloucester 28. From the Hill 29. Landing Fish, St. Ives 30. Under Weigh 31. Moonlight 32. Fishing Schooners — Dry Point 33. Harbor 34. Pleasure Yachts 35. Fishing Boats PAINTINGS BY LEOPOLDO MARIOTTI 36. Nettuno 37. Nettuno with Monte Circe 38. June in Venice 39. A Path in the Sea 40. Customs House Boat, Venice 41. A September Sunset, Venice 42. The Hills of Padua from Venice 43. Toilers of the Sea 44. The Lagoon at Sunset 45. Derelicts, Venice 46. Venetian Chimneys 47. Chioggia in August 48. Sunset on the Lagoon 49. Fisherman's Hut, Nettuno 50. A Tuscan Hilltop, Lucignano 51. Medieval Palace, Viterbo 52. A Sunny Courtyard, Viterbo 53. Tuscan Village at Sunrise 54. A Hilltown near Rome 55. The Alban Hills 56. Waiting for the Tide 57. Murano 58. Vitertbo 5 59. Church of the Salute, from the Giudccca 60. Clouds over the Lagoon 61. The Broad Giudccca 62. Nettuno — ^A Breezy Morning 63. Afterglow 64. Afterglow 65. In the Valley of the Chiana River 66. The Heart of the Wood, Tuscany 67. Boat on the Lagoon 68. The Fishing Boat 69. Sorrento 70. Street in Olevamo Romano 71. Nettuno 72. Sunset 73. September 74. The Storm 75. Boat on the Lagoon 76. Return from the Fair 77. Castle of St. Angelo 78. Italian Shrine 79. Madonna and Child ETCHINGS AND LITHOGRAPHS BY HERBERT PULLINGER ETCHINGS 80. Pouring an Armor Plate, Midvale 81. Building Wooden Ships on the Delaware 82. The Hammer Strop 83. Loading Coal 84. In Port 85. Charging an Open Furnace 86. Pouring an Armor Plate, Midvale 87. The Wrecker 88. Pouring the Heat, Bethlehem 89. The Furnace, Bethlehem Steel Works 90. The Press, Bethlehem Steel Works 91. The Molten Fall, Bethlehem 92. The Hammer, Bethlehem 93. Laying the Keel of a Destroyer, New York Slips 94. Hog Island 95. Building Ships 96. Under Construction LITHOGRAPHS 97. Fifth Avenue, New York 98. Broad Street, The Curb Market 99. Municipal Building, New York 7 100. The Woolworth Building, New York 101. Bowling Green, New York 102. Metropolitan Museum, New York 103. New York from Brooklyn Bridge 104. The Capitol, Washington 105. City Hall Tower, Philadelphia 106. The Furnace, Bethlehem Steel Works 107. The Gantry 108. The Locomotive Erecting Shop 109. The Breaker, Scra|titon 110. Building Ships, Gloucester, New Jersey 111. The Old State House, Boston 112. State House, Boston 113. Customs House Tower, Boston 114. Pouring, Midvale 115. The Press Plant, Midvale 116. Tempering a Big Gun Tube, Midvale 117. Machining, Midvale 118. The Hammer, Midvale, Forging a 16-inch Shell GENERAL^ ANNOUNCEMENTS THE object of the Memorial Art Gallery is to further the interests of fine art in the city of Rochester by maintaining exhibitions of pictures and statuary, an art library, and a collection of photographs and prints, -which shall be a means both of pleasui-e and of education for all citizens of Rochester. Irf order that. a- large number of lovers of art may share in maldng the Gallery useful and enjoyable fpr all the citizens, provision has been made in the By-Laws for membership in vari- ous classes. CLASSES OF MEMBERSHIP 1. SuPFORTEKS. Persons vrho shall contribute two hundred and fifty dollars a year toward the maintenance of the Art Gallery. 2. Sustaining Members. Persons who shall contribute one hundred dollars a year, or more, but, less than two hundred and fifty dollars. 3. Contributing Members. Persons who sihall contribute twen^-five dollars a year, or more, but less than one hundred dollars. 4. Annual Members. Persons who shall contribute ten dol- lars a year, or more, but less than twenty-five dollars. 5. Associate Members. Any artist, school teacher, or art craftsman actively practicing his profession, may become an As- sociate Member of the Art Gallery upon payment of five dollars a year. PRIVILEGES OF MEMBERS All members are entitled to free admission to the Gallery at all times that it is open to the public, and to all lectures, recep- tions and private views that may be conducted by the Directors. They are entitled also to the privilege of drawing books from the library of the Art Gallery. • Suppor.ters and Sustaining Members have the privilege of free admission for members of their families and for visiting friends. Each Contributing Mehiber shall have the privilege of free admissions for himself and one other member bf his family. CLUBS AND SOaETIES Societies, study clubs, and similar organizations are cordially invited to make full use of the Gallery at all times. No charge will be made for admission to organizations visiting the Gallery in a body. Appointments for such visits should be made in advance.