Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Studio, Vol. 44: An Illustrated Magazine of Fine and Applied Art; July 15, 1908
In accepting what he has to offer. There is nothing tentative about his art, nothing which suggests that he has any hesitation concerning the ideas he wishes to put forward, or over the way in which these ideas should be given proper form. There are no secrets in the mechanism of etching which have eluded his enquiry, and no problems of practice which he has been unable to solve his thoroughness as a craftsman has come by steady and serious study, in which he has felt his way step by step, and has progressed regularly from one stage to another.
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