The DiscoursesScott, 1887 - 283 Seiten |
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Seite 7
... correct drawing of every separate part - heads , hands , feet , and pieces of drapery ; they then painted the picture , and after all , retouched it from the life . The pictures , thus wrought with such pains , now appear like the ...
... correct drawing of every separate part - heads , hands , feet , and pieces of drapery ; they then painted the picture , and after all , retouched it from the life . The pictures , thus wrought with such pains , now appear like the ...
Seite 8
... correctly what we see will not give a proportionable power of drawing correctly what we imagine . He who endeavours to copy nicely the figure before him , not only acquires a habit of exactness and precision , but is continually ...
... correctly what we see will not give a proportionable power of drawing correctly what we imagine . He who endeavours to copy nicely the figure before him , not only acquires a habit of exactness and precision , but is continually ...
Seite 20
... correctly , with as little effort of the mind as is required to trace with a pen the letters of the alphabet . That this facility is not unattainable some members in this Academy give a sufficient proof . And be assured , that , if this ...
... correctly , with as little effort of the mind as is required to trace with a pen the letters of the alphabet . That this facility is not unattainable some members in this Academy give a sufficient proof . And be assured , that , if this ...
Seite 35
... correct and perfect design ; if we should suppose , also , that he has acquired a knowledge of the unadulterated habits of nature , which gives him simplicity ; the rest of his task is , perhaps , less than is generally imagined ...
... correct and perfect design ; if we should suppose , also , that he has acquired a knowledge of the unadulterated habits of nature , which gives him simplicity ; the rest of his task is , perhaps , less than is generally imagined ...
Seite 37
... correct and just imitation of his object has its merit . Even the painter of still life , whose highest ambition is to give a minute repre- sentation of every part of those low objects which he sets before him , deserves praise in ...
... correct and just imitation of his object has its merit . Even the painter of still life , whose highest ambition is to give a minute repre- sentation of every part of those low objects which he sets before him , deserves praise in ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquired admiration advantage Albert Durer ancient appear artist attention Carlo Maratti character Claude Lorrain colour composition considered copy Correggio criticism defects degree dignity discourse disposition distinguished drapery drawing dress Edited effect elegance endeavour equally Ernest Rhys excellence expression figure finished Gainsborough genius give grace grandeur habit highest imagination imitation instance invention Joseph Skipsey judgment justly kind labour light and shadow manner Masaccio masters means merit method Michel Angelo mind minute modern nature necessary never object observed opinion ornaments painters painting particular passions Paul Veronese peculiar Pellegrino Tibaldi perfection perhaps picture Pietro Perugino poetry portraits possessed Poussin practice principles proceed produced Raffaelle rank reason recommend Rembrandt Reynolds Royal Academy Rubens rules Sculpture sense Sergius Paulus simplicity Sir Joshua spectator Students style suppose taste things thought tion Titian true truth variety Venetian Venetian school vulgar whole wish
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 30 - There is no excellent Beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion. A man cannot tell, whether Apelles or Albert Durer were the more trifler; whereof the one would make a personage by geometrical proportions, the other by taking the best parts out of divers faces to make one Excellent.
Seite 27 - The gusto grande of the Italians, the beau ideal of the French, and the great style, genius, and taste among the English, are but different appellations of the same thing. It is this intellectual dignity...
Seite 228 - ... defrauded of the due reward of his merit by the wits of his time who did not understand the principles of composition in poetry better than he, and who knew little or nothing of what he understood perfectly, the general ruling principles of architecture and painting.
Seite 216 - Such men will always prefer imitation to that excellence which is addressed to another faculty that they do not possess; but these are not the persons to whom a painter is to look, any more than a judge of morals and manners ought to refer controverted points upon those subjects to the opinions of people taken from the banks of the Ohio, or from New Holland.
Seite 272 - Angelo; with all the rest of the cant of Criticism, which he emitted with that volubility which generally those orators have, who annex no ideas to their words. As we were passing through the rooms, in our way to the Gallery, I made him observe a whole length of Charles the First, by...
Seite 29 - It must be an eye long used to the contemplation and comparison of these forms ; and which, by a long habit of observing what any set of objects of the same kind have in common, has acquired the power of discerning what each wants in particular.
Seite 153 - To what Falconet has said, we may add that supposing this method of leaving the expression of grief to the imagination to be, as it was thought to be, the invention of the painter, and that it deserves all the praise that has been given it, still it is a trick that will serve but once; whoever does it a second time will not only want novelty, but be justly suspected of using artifice to evade difficulties. If difficulties overcome make a great part of the merit of art, difficulties evaded can deserve...
Seite 244 - His handling, the manner of leaving the colours, or, in other words, the methods he used for producing the effect, had very much the appearance of the work of an artist who had never learned from others the usual and regular practice belonging to the art ; but still, like a man of strong intuitive perception of what was required, he found out a way of his own to accomplish his purpose.
Seite 97 - Study therefore the great works of the great masters, for ever. Study as nearly as you can, in the order, in the manner, and on the principles, on which they studied. Study nature attentively, but always with those masters in your company ; consider them as models which you are to imitate, and at the same time as rivals with whom you are to contend.
Seite 282 - ... but, because it is uncommon, is it therefore beautiful? The beauty that is produced by colour, as when we prefer one bird to another, though of the same form, on account of its colour, has nothing to do with this argument, which reaches only to form. I have here considered the word beauty as being properly applied to form alone.