Pre-RaphaelitismG. P. Putnam's sons, 1891 - 91 oldal |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 5 találat összesen 8 találatból.
7. oldal
... least see why courtesy , and gravity , and sympathy with the feelings of others , and courage , and truth , and piety , and what else goes to make up a gentleman's character , should not be found behind a counter as well as elsewhere ...
... least see why courtesy , and gravity , and sympathy with the feelings of others , and courage , and truth , and piety , and what else goes to make up a gentleman's character , should not be found behind a counter as well as elsewhere ...
26. oldal
... least by solid weight of gold , we give to our young men . And we wonder we have no painters ! But we do worse than this . Within the last few years some sense of the real ten- dency of such teaching has appeared in some of our younger ...
... least by solid weight of gold , we give to our young men . And we wonder we have no painters ! But we do worse than this . Within the last few years some sense of the real ten- dency of such teaching has appeared in some of our younger ...
31. oldal
... least by the contradiction of statements directly false * It was not a little curious , that in the very num- ber of the Art Union which repeated this direct falsehood about the Pre - Raphaelite rejection of " linear perspective " ( by ...
... least by the contradiction of statements directly false * It was not a little curious , that in the very num- ber of the Art Union which repeated this direct falsehood about the Pre - Raphaelite rejection of " linear perspective " ( by ...
33. oldal
... least for the strongest among them . There may be some weak ones , whom the Tractarian heresies may touch ; but if so , they will drop off like decayed branches from a strong stem . I hope all things from the school . The second ...
... least for the strongest among them . There may be some weak ones , whom the Tractarian heresies may touch ; but if so , they will drop off like decayed branches from a strong stem . I hope all things from the school . The second ...
48. oldal
... least embarrassing himself with the actual color of the objects to be represented . A stone in the foreground might in nature have been cold gray , but it will be drawn nevertheless of a rich brown , because it is in the fore- ground ...
... least embarrassing himself with the actual color of the objects to be represented . A stone in the foreground might in nature have been cold gray , but it will be drawn nevertheless of a rich brown , because it is in the fore- ground ...
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
aërial Art Union artists aspect bas relief bears date blue Brignal brown Calais cern character Claude clever clouds color composition drawings effort England series engraving executed express exquisite faculties faithful false falsehood Farnley Fawkes feeble feeling fishing Fogg Art Museum force foreground genius gray hills hope ideal beauty imagination imitate impression infinite instinct invention John Lewis kind Knickerbocker Press labor landscape large number least Liber Studiorum light and shade linear perspective LL.D Llanthony Llanthony Abbey local color look Lucerne ment mind MONT CENIS moorland nature ness never noblest once over-work paint pathy perfect perhaps perspective pieces poet possess Poussin Pre-Raphaelites principal light profes quiet Raphael Raphaelesque rendered Rhine rocks scenes seen sense shadow sion sketch slightest starfish strange strength sunset suppose sympathy teaching things thought tint tion truth ture Turner Turner's second period Ulleswater Vandevelde vignette Winchelsea youth
Népszerű szakaszok
24. oldal - Nature," there was not one of the things which he wished to represent, that stayed for so much as five seconds together : but none of them escaped for all that: they are sealed up in that strange storehouse of his; he may take one of them out perhaps, this day twenty years, and paint it in his dark room, far away.
15. oldal - ... priori, that the men intended successfully to resist the influence of such a system should be endowed with little natural sense of beauty, and thus rendered dead to the temptation it presented. Summing up these conditions, there is surely little cause for surprise that pictures painted, in a temper of resistance, by exceedingly young men, of stubborn instincts and positive self-trust, and with little natural perception of beauty, should not be calculated, at the first glance, to win us from works...
5. oldal - Europe at the same moment to his true duty — the faithful representation of all objects of historical interest, or of natural beauty existent at the period ; representation such as might at once aid the advance of the sciences, and keep faithful record of every monument of past ages which was likely to be swept away in the approaching eras of revolutionary change.
17. oldal - ... the third or fourth year of their efforts they should have produced works in many parts not inferior to the best of Albert Durer, this is perhaps not less strange. But the loudness and universality of the howl which the common critics of the press have raised against them, the utter absence of all generous help or encouragement from those who can both measure their toil and appreciate their success, and the shrill, shallow laughter of those who can do neither the one nor the other—these are...
69. oldal - Many critics, especially the architects, have found fault with me for not " teaching people how to arrange masses" ; for not "attributing sufficient importance to composition." Alas! I attribute far more importance to it than they do ;—so much importance that I should just as soon think of sitting down to teach a man how to write a " Divina Commedia," or "King Lear," as how to "compose," in the true sense, a single building or picture.