Page:Cyclopedia of painters and paintings (IA cyclopediaofpain04cham).pdf/215
(1879); Steamboat Wharf in Norway, Winter Evening in Norway (1880); Winter Morning on Coast of Norway (1881); Moon-Rise, Return from Mass (1882); Morning in Cornwall, Unrest (1883); The Old Net (1884), Luxembourg Museum; Morning at the Christiania Fjord (1884); Sunset near Trondhjem, Calm in a Fjord (1885); Bandaksvandet Lake, Norway (1886).
SMITH-LEWIS, JOHN, born at Burlington,
Vt.; contemporary. Genre painter,
pupil in Paris of Ernest Hébert. Mention
honourable, Paris Salon, 1886. Work: Gathering
Varech in a Storm (1886).
SMITHS OF CHICHESTER. See Smith,
George.
SMITS, EUGÈNE, born in Antwerp in
1826. History and landscape painter, pupil
of Brussels Academy and of Triqueti in
Paris. Visited Italy in 1861-64, also Germany
and Holland. Medals, Brussels, 1866;
Order of Leopold, 1870; Officer, 1881;
Order of Francis Joseph of Austria. Studio
in Brussels. Works: Roma, King of Belgium;
Seasons, Brussels Museum; Santa
Trinità de' Monti; Neptune Festival; Mirror;
Roman Garden; Diana; Convalescence;
Souvenir of Naples.—Müller, 325.
SMOUT, LUCAS, the younger, born at
Antwerp, baptized Feb. 27,1671, died there
April 6, 1713. Flemish school; marine
painter, son of Lucas Smout, the elder (history
painter, 1620-74), and pupil of Hendrik
van Minderhout. Works: Coast View with
Country House and Figures, do. with Roman
Monuments, Cattle and Figures, Schwerin
Gallery; Naval Battle in Kjöge Bay, 1710,
Hofrath C. Rost, Dessau.—Schlie, 587; Van
den Branden, 1056; Zeitschr. f. b. K., vi.
347; xvii. 62.
SNAKE CHARMER (Le charmeur de
serpents), Mariano Fortuny, A. T. Stewart
Collection, New York; canvas, H. 1 ft. 6 in.
× 4 ft. An Arab, with shoulders and legs
bare, is lying flat on a rug spread on the
ground, holding in his left hand a rod and
intently watching a serpent crawling towards
him; behind him, another Arab, seated,
holding a musical instrument in his lap;
at left, a stork standing over the serpent.
Painted in 1870. Same subject, Édouard
André, Paris. Etched by Boilvin.—Gaz. des
B. Arts (1875), xi. 278.
Snake in the Grass, Sir Joshua Reynolds, National Gallery, London.
SNAKE IN THE GRASS, Sir Joshua Reynolds, National Gallery, London; canvas, H. 4 ft. 1 in. × 3 ft. 3 in. A girl seated on a bank is sporting with Cupid, who has seized both ends of her girdle and is untying it; in the grass by her side, the head of a snake; in background, a red curtain. Exhibited at Royal Academy, 1785, under title of Venus. Painted for Lord Carysfort, who paid 200 guineas for it. Subsequently called Love unloosing the Zone of Beauty, and later, Snake in the Grass, the snake possibly being intended as an emblem of Cupid. Purchased with the Peel pictures in 1871. Duplicate in Soane Museum, London; another in Baron Rothschild's Collection; a third in Hermitage, St. Petersburg, called Venus and Cupid. Engraved by J. R. Smith (1787); S. W. Reynolds; H. Robinson.—Cat. Nat. Gal.; Leslie & Taylor, ii.