Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 07, 1963, Image 21

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Few hobbies offer the challenge and fascination that can be found in oil painting, f 1 1 M -Xm II I m "
and one can become completely engrossed in the endless effects derived from I i. - - ,h hi
the application of paint to canvas. Mrs. T. W. Daily, left, above, and Mrs. Dunbar I 1 Bj . mmmmmmmmWMaammmmmWK U
Carpenter work intently on their paintings during an evening class at the Eugene I kWm il - t f I ll
Bennett studio in Jacksonville. Bh f Bk BJ I
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, Bjl f 3 'vTBIBBJP pBflBj JBB? 1 9 f ' - flPBK BBB -'- - "' 5 : 1 Bennett studio greets students on thair way to evening pil classes. AimMw
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SB teBBBM Mm mm I I 3ft: BjV. BJ BiK BUB H Oregon street. Painting classes are informal and students help- themselves to
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Mrs. Don Wendt, above, utilizes plastic left-over dish to wash out
brushes ... a convenience the old masters didn't have. Students
work quietly and occasionally check each others progress.
Inside the well-lighted studio, Mrs. George Brown concentrates on her still life painting.
Bennett considers interpretation of color one of the keynotes to painting.
Art Classes in
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Students havp their choice of subject matter which they will paint. Mrs. Robert Hood, right, above, painted a ferris wheel
with diff-cult elipses andproblems in perspective. Otherstudents above are Or. Scott FJlis and Mrs. D. C. Jackson.
Mrs. T. E. Knackstedi, above, who has just finished the series of six lessons from Bennett, gets a last-minute analysis of her
landscape before taking it home. Bennett plans to have more evening classes in oil painting tnis spring.
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