cuts which he contributed to Punch during a period of 
nearly forty years; and still more in the originals of these, the masterly 
pen-and-ink drawings which are now for the first time shown in a 
collected form to the Public." 
So says Mr. CLAUDE PHILLIPS, in his "Prefatory Note," to the 
"Catalogue of a Collection of Drawings of the late CHARLES
KEENE," now on view at the Rooms of the Fine Arts Society, 148, 
New Bond Street. 
If the British Public possess that "taste for Art" and that "sense of 
humour" which some claim for and others deny to it, it (the B.P.) will 
throng the comfortable and well-lighted Gallery in New Bond Street, 
where hang some hundreds of specimens of the later work of the most 
unaffected humorist, and most masterly "Black-and-White" artist of his 
time. Walk up, Ladies and Gentlemen, and see--such miracles of 
delineation, such witcheries of effect, as were never before put on paper 
by simple pen-and-ink! 
It is difficult to realise sometimes that it is pen and ink, and that 
only--all the delightful display of fresh English landscape and 
unsophisticated British humanity, teeming with effects of distance, 
hints of atmosphere, and suggestions of colour. Many a much-belauded 
brush is but a fumbling and ineffective tool, compared with the 
ink-charged crowquill handled by CHARLES KEENE. Look at 
"_Grandiloquence_!" (No. 220) There's composition! There's effect! 
Stretch of sea, schooner, PAT's petty craft, grandiloquent PAT himself, 
a nautical Colossus astride on his own cock-boat, with stable sea-legs 
firmly dispread, the swirl of the sea, the swish of the waves, the very 
whiff of the wind so vividly suggested!--and all in some few square 
inches of "Black-and-White!" 
Look, again, at the breadth of treatment, the power of humorous 
characterisation, the strong charm of _technique_, the colour, the action, 
the marvellous ease and accuracy of street perspective in No. 16 ("_The 
Penny Toy!_"). Action? Why, you can see the old lady jump, let alone 
the frog! Fix your eye on the frightened dame's foot, and you'll swear it 
jerks in time to the leap of the "horrid reptile." 
Or at that vivid bit of London "hoarding," and London low life, and 
London street-distance in "_'Andicapped!_" (No. 25.) Good as is the 
"gaol-bird," is not the wonderfully real "hoarding" almost better? 
Who now can draw--or, for that matter, _paint_--such a shopkeeper, 
such a shop, such a child customer as those in "_All Alive!_" (No. 41), 
where the Little Girl a-tip-toe with a wedge of cheap "Cheddar" at the 
counter, comes down upon him of the apron with the crusher, "Oh, 
mother's sent back this piece o' cheese, 'cause father says if he wants 
any bait when he's goin' a fishin', he can dig 'em up in our garden!"
Are you a fisherman, reader? Then will you feel your angling as well as 
your artistic heart warmed by No. 75 ("_The Old Adam_") and No. 6 
("_Wet and Dry_"), the former especially! What water, what Scotch 
boys, what a "prencipled" (but piscatorial) "Meenister"! Don't you feel 
your elbow twitch? Don't you want to snatch the rod from SANDY 
McDOUGAL's hand, and land that "fush" yourself, Sawbath or no 
Sawbath? 
But, bless us, one wants to describe, and praise, and purchase them all! 
A KEENE drawing, almost any KEENE drawing, is "a thing of beauty 
and a joy for ever" to everyone who has an eye for admirable art and 
adorable drollery. And good as is the fun of these drawings, the graphic 
force, and breadth, and delicacy, and freshness, and buoyancy, and 
breeziness, and masterly ease, and miraculous open-airiness, and 
general delightfulness of them, are yet more marked and marvellous. 
Time would fail to tell a tithe of their merits. An essay might be penned 
on any one of them--but fate forbid it should be, unless a sort of artistic 
CHARLES LAMB could take the task in hand. Better far go again to 
New Bond Street and pass another happy hour or two with the ruddy 
rustics and 'cute cockneys, the Scotch elders and Anglican curates, the 
stodgy "Old Gents" and broad-backed, bunchy middle-class matrons, 
the paunchy port-swigging-buffers, and hungry but alert street-boys, 
the stertorous cabbies, and chatty 'bus-drivers, the "festive" diners-out 
and wary waiters, the Volunteers and _vauriens_, the Artists and 'Arries, 
the policemen and sportsmen, amidst the incomparable street scenes, 
and the equally inimitable lanes, coppices, turnip-fields and stubbles, 
green glades and snowbound country roads of wonderful, 
ever-delightful, and--for his comrades and the Public 
alike--all-too-soon-departed CHARLES KEENE! 
Nothing really worthy of his astonishing life-work, of even that part of 
it exhibited here, could be written within brief compass, even by the 
most appreciative, admiring, and art-loving of his sorrowing friends or 
colleagues. Let the British Public go to New Bond Street, and see for 
itself, in the very hand-work of this great    
    
		
	
	
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