The Return

Marcus Stone (1840−1921)

1891

Oil on canvas

Source: the 1893 The Magazine of Art

“It is one of the characteristics of Mr. Marcus Stone that, be his subject humorous or tender, he never fails to create exactly the impression on the general pubic that he intended when he first intended when he conceived his composition. When “The Return” was exhibited at the Royal Academy two years ago, it attracted the full share of popular attention which is invariably the reward of Mr. Stone’s work. It gladdened the great mass of those whom it is the artist’s delight to please with graceful scenes of lover’s loves — their quarrels and reconciliations, their wooings and jealousies, their joys and disappointments. Mr. Stone’s little dramas are always delicately imagined. High comedy is in them, but never tragedy; emotion but never passion. Refines and graceful — as becomes the pretty costume-period which the painter most affects (in theatrical language, the “powder-period”) — their story gently forces itself on the mind of the spectator without, on the one hand, impelling him to sudden laughter, or, on the other, with any approach to violence.” [continued below]

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