26 JULY 1856, page 20

From Fine Art We May Turn To Glance At The

art which has now struck so deep a root, and which pushes its ramifications in such manifold direc- tions—Photography. No special photographic discovery, that we are aware of,......

Photography Has Already Exercised No Inconsiderable...

it is next to be the turn of Stereoscopy, if we put faith in the author of a rather remarkable pamphlet just published.* The gentleman in question, Mr. Lone, who professes to be......

Perhaps We May Safely Affirm That The Horizon Of Binocular

painting is at least a remote one. Nearer us, are two notable art projects,—the National Portrait Gallery, and the Manchester Forhibition of the Art- Treasures of the United......

Irts.

THE CLOSE OF THE SEASON. THIS is the closing-week for most of our leading art-exhibitions. The Royal Academy, the Water-Colour Galleries, the Suffolk Street Society, the French......

At The Crystal Palace, The Gallery Of Which We Spoke

in its undeve- loped infancy has now assumed shape, consistency, and arrangement, and presents a Teat collection, which, though disfigured by far too lax an admission of......

The French Exhibition, Opening At A Busy Time, Received...

no- tice at our hands than its merits would have warranted. During its continuance, several works of its original stock have been removed,— among them, Brion's fine funeral in......

A Work Of High Interest Has Been On Exhibition This

week at the Poly- technic Institution,—being a copy made for the University of Virginia by M. Paul Bake, a French artist long resident at Rome, of Itaffaelle's world-renowned......

On The 13th July, At Castleton, Monmouthshire, The Wife Of

Sir George Walker, Bart., of a son. On the 14th, at Ashwell-Thorpe Hall, Norfolk, Lady Tyrwhitt, of a son. stOu the 17th, at the Rectory, Hertingfordbury, Hertz, the Wife of the......