Art Principles with Special Reference to Painting: Together with Notes on the Illusions Produced by the PainterG. P. Putnam's sons, 1919 - 379 Seiten |
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... sensorial effects and beauty of expression respec- tively . There are kinds of sensorial beauty which depend for their perception upon immediately pre- ceding sensory experience , or particular coexistent surroundings which are not ...
... sensorial effects and beauty of expression respec- tively . There are kinds of sensorial beauty which depend for their perception upon immediately pre- ceding sensory experience , or particular coexistent surroundings which are not ...
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... sensorial and intellectual elements therein is more or less uneven ; or if the beauty present be almost entirely emotional , according as the observer may be affected by independent sensorial conditions of time or place . Consequent ...
... sensorial and intellectual elements therein is more or less uneven ; or if the beauty present be almost entirely emotional , according as the observer may be affected by independent sensorial conditions of time or place . Consequent ...
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... sensorial nerves , and a brain which directs the imagination . The primitive peoples made beautiful things long before they could read or write , and the recognition of harmony of form appears to have been one of the first ...
... sensorial nerves , and a brain which directs the imagination . The primitive peoples made beautiful things long before they could read or write , and the recognition of harmony of form appears to have been one of the first ...
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... sensorial nerves at birth , and the precocity or otherwise of the infantile imagination . From the fact that we can cultivate the eye and ear so as to recognize forms of harmony which we could not before perceive , and seeing that the ...
... sensorial nerves at birth , and the precocity or otherwise of the infantile imagination . From the fact that we can cultivate the eye and ear so as to recognize forms of harmony which we could not before perceive , and seeing that the ...
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... sensorial nerves varies largely in different persons at birth , and when a boy at a very early age shows precocious ability in music or drawing , we may properly infer that the condition of his optic or aural nerves is comparatively ...
... sensorial nerves varies largely in different persons at birth , and when a boy at a very early age shows precocious ability in music or drawing , we may properly infer that the condition of his optic or aural nerves is comparatively ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accessories action æsthetic æsthetic value ancient Angels Aphrodite appear artist Associated Arts bronze century character Child Christ Coll colour commonly composition considerable Correggio countenance death Deity divine drapery effect emotional Encyclopædia Britannica example executed exhibited experience expression figure Florence frescoes Frick Collection Giorgione goddess grace Grecian Greeks harmony head hence Homer human ideal illusion of motion imagination imitation Impressionism indicated invention Italian Jacob Ruysdael kind landscape less Lionardo Louvre Madonna masters Michelangelo mind Museum National Gallery nature necessarily nerves Nicholas Poussin NOTE observer opening distance painter painting particular perfect personages Phidias picture Pitti Palace PLATE poet poetry portrait portraiture pose possible Praxiteles present presumed produced pure qualities Raphael rarely recognized relief Rembrandt Renaissance representation represented Reynolds Rubens scene sculpture sensorial beauty signs sion smile still-life sublime suggestion things Timanthes Tintoretto tion Titian tones Uffizi Uffizi Gallery varied Velasquez Venus Venus Anadyomene Virgin woman
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 301 - Blest as th" immortal gods is he, The youth who fondly sits by thee, And hears and sees thee all the while Softly speak and sweetly smile. 'Twas this deprived my soul of rest, And raised such tumults in my breast ; For while I gazed, in transport tost, My breath was gone, my voice was lost : III.
Seite 282 - You must have no dependence on your own genius. If you have great talents, industry will improve them; if you have but moderate abilities, industry will supply their deficiency. Nothing is denied to well-directed labour: nothing is to be obtained without it.
Seite 282 - The poorest of men, as he observed himself, did not labour from necessity more than he did from choice. Indeed, from all the circumstances related of his life, he appears not to have had the least conception that his art was to be acquired by any other means than great labour ; and yet he, of all men that ever lived, might make the greatest pretensions to the efficacy of native genius and inspiration.
Seite 303 - I viewed them again and again ; I even affected to feel their merit and admire them more than I really did. In a short time, a new taste and a new. perception began to dawn upon me, and I was convinced that I had originally formed a false opinion of the perfection of art...
Seite 301 - O'er my dim eyes a darkness hung ; My ears with hollow murmurs rung. IV. In dewy damps my limbs were chill'd ; My blood with gentle horrors thrill'd ; My feeble pulse forgot to play ; I fainted, sunk, and died away.
Seite 275 - Art is a human activity, consisting in this, that one man consciously, by means of certain external signs, hands on to others feelings he has lived through, and that other people are infected by these feelings, and also experience them.
Seite 310 - Thou hast come, O stranger, to the seats of this land, renowned for the steed ; to seats the fairest on earth, the chalky Colonus ; where the vocal nightingale, chief abounding, trills her plaintive note in the green vales, tenanting the dark-hued ivy and the leafy grove of the god, untrodden [by mortal foot], teeming with fruits, impervious to the sun, and unshaken by the winds of every storm ; where Bacchus ever roams in revelry companioning his divine nurses.
Seite 351 - He could not for some time account for this circumstance; but when he recollected, that when he first saw them, he had his note-book in his hand, for the purpose of writing down short remarks, he perceived what had occasioned their now making a less impression in this respect than they had done formerly.. By the eye passing immediately from the white paper to the picture, the colours derived uncommon richness and warmth.. For want of this foil, they afterwards appeared comparatively cold.
Seite 301 - Twas this deprived my soul of rest, And raised such tumults in my breast; For while I gazed, in transport tost, My breath was gone, my voice was lost. "My bosom glowed; the subtle flame Ran quick through all my vital frame; O'er my dim eyes a darkness hung; My ears with hollow murmurs rung. "In dewy damps my limbs were chilled; My blood with gentle horrors thrilled; My feeble pulse forgot to play, I fainted, sunk, and died away.
Seite 282 - If you have great talents, industry will improve them; if you have but moderate abilities, industry will supply their deficiency. Nothing is denied to well-directed labour: nothing is to be obtained without it. Not to enter into metaphysical discussions on the nature or essence of genius, I will venture to assert that assiduity unabated by difficulty, and a disposition eagerly directed to the object of its pursuit, will produce effects similar to those which some call the result of natural powers.