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ART EDV CAT ION.
a medley of copies in both branches, which, we take it, cannot be
of advantage to eitber subject. For the study of perspective, F.
Bossuet’s “ Summary of a Treatise on Linear Perspective,” must
be noted as an excellent little work, as far as systematic arrange-
ment and perspicuity of the drawings is concerned.
Glancing finally at the contiguous exhibition of the Belgian
booksellers, we shall have to mention the artistic, archoeological,
and art-industrial publications of Ch. Claesens (Liege), and the
interesting work by C. Colinet and Soran, “ Collection of the Re-
mains of our National Art of the Eleventh to the Sixteenth Cen-
turies,” which appears in Brussels, in parts.