Page:Women in the Fine Arts From the Seventh Century B.C. to the Twentiet.djvu/233

158 Mr. Harrison N. Howard, in Brush and Pencil^ writing of the exhibition of the National Academy of Design, says: "Belle Havens' the ’Last Load' is part and parcel with her other cart-and-horse compositions, commonplace and prosaic in subject, but rendered naturally and forcefully and with no small measure of atmospheric effect. The picture is not one of the winsome sort, and it doubtless makes less appeal to the spectator than any other of the prize-winners."

Hazleton, Mary Brewster. First Hallgarten prize, 1896; first prize travelling scholarship. School of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 1899; honorable mention, Buffalo, 1901.
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Hedinger, Elise. Family name Neumann. Born in Berlin, 1854. Pupil of Hoguet, Hertel, and Gussow in Berlin, and of Bracht in Paris. In recent years she has exhibited in Berlin and other cities many exquisite landscapes and admirable pictures of still-life, which have been universally praised. Heeren, Minna. Born in Hamburg; living in Düsseldorf. In the Gallery at Hamburg is her "Ruth and Naomi," 1854; other important works are "The Veteran of 1813 and His Grandson, Wounded in 1870," "The Little Boaster," "A Troubled Hour of Rest," etc.

Helena. A Greek painter of the fourth century B.C. Daughter of Timon, an Egyptian. She executed a picture of the "Battle of Issus," which was exhibited in the Temple of Peace, in the time of Vespasian, 333 B.C.