Volume XIX / Number 3
1928
Vol. XIX / No. 3
By: J. Alden Mason
Some Unusual Spearthrowers of Ancient America
THE spearthrower is one of the most remarkable of the inventions of primitive man and for that reason has ever […]
View ArticleVol. XIX / No. 3
By: Cornelia H. Dam
An Egyptian Kursi
DURING the year 1923 the MUSEUM added to its Arabic collection an exceptionally fine kursi, or table, of brass inlaid […]
View ArticleVol. XIX / No. 3
By: Helen E. Fernald
The T. Broom Belfield Collection of Japanese Netsuké
FOR flights of pure fun and fancy there is no field of art more prolific than that of the Japanese […]
View ArticleVol. XIX / No. 3
By: Edith H. Dohan
Three Greek Grave Monuments
IN Greek thought as in Christian, it was held an act of virtue to bury the dead, or rather, since […]
View ArticleVol. XIX / No. 3
By: L. Legrain
Old Sumerian Art
IT is a pure joy for a weary archaeologist to plunge into a study of Oriental art—the oldest known Mesopotamian […]
View Article