April 1879: The Water Colours In The Glasgow Institute Exhibition – “The Frugal Meal”, by Israels
The article on page three of The Glasgow Herald, on Tuesday the 1st of April, 1879, opens
with The Frugal Meal, by Israels. It reads:
“THE WATER COLOURS IN THE GLASGOW INSTITUTE.
‘The Frugal Meal’ of Israels, 530, a small water colour drawing in body colour,
is in itself sufficient to make memorable the water colour collection in the
present exhibition. The drawing is from the oil picture of the some (sic) subject
which was an attraction of the galleries some time since, but it is not an ordinary
replica. It is rather another picture in which certain traits are perhap more
delicately suggested than in the larger work. Refinement rather than commonplace
‘cleverness’ give exceptional value to the drawing. With no trace of arrangement—
either in the figures or in the colour—the picture has the best artistic qualities. The
imitator gains no insight from the simple workmanship of the artist. Floating
transparent colour over opaque, the drawing has none of the dull look of body colour
work, but without loss of richness, gains in precision. The execution of this drawing
gives our own water-colour artists a lesson in humility. The drawing has, moreover, a
quality our own art rarely reaches. It expresses a true pathos not to be mistaken for
theatrical emotion, and in this lies the art of Israels. The picture is an admirable
example of the painter, whose constant purpose is to ennoble simple lives untouched
by the vulgarities of wealth.”
George Fairfull-Smith, September 2025.