"Helen Kemp Frye (1910<U+2013>1986) was an accomplished artist and musician, and she was also the wife of the distinguished Canadian literary critic, Northrop Frye. During the 1940s and 1950s, she played an important role in art education, particularly with the programs at the Art Gallery of Toronto, and even more particularly with art education for children." -- book jacket.
Introduction -- 1. "The University and the Fine Arts" (1933) -- "Loan Collections from the Art Gallery of Toronto" (1936) -- 3. "Children in the Gallery" (1937) -- 4. "The Permanent Collection" (1937) -- 5. "Children at the Art Gallery of Toronto" (1937) -- 6. "Yvonne Williams" (1938) -- 7. "Yvonne McKague Housser" (1938) -- 8. "Fritz Brandtner" (1938) -- 9. "Art for Everyman" (1938) -- 10. "Art & Letters" (1941) -- 11. "Economy and the Arts" (1941) -- 12. "Societies and Society" (1941) -- 13. "Art in the Nineteenth Century" (1942) -- 14. "Portrait of the Artist in a Young Magazine" (1942) -- 15. "Manhandling the Arts" (1942) -- 16. "American Folk Arts" (1942) -- 17. "Design in Industry" (1947) -- 18. "Two Art Conferences" (1947) -- 19. "Canadian Handicrafts Abroad" (1949) -- 20. Review of Three Art Books (1951) -- 21. Review of "A.J. Casson", by Paul Duval (1952) -- 22. Review of "Emily Carr as I Knew Her", by Carol Pearson (1955) -- 23. Review of "The Noble Savage: A Life of Paul Gauguin", by L. and E. Hanson (1955) -- 24. "The Educational Work of an Art Museum": Thesis, National Gallery of Art (1934) -- Index