Ruskin's work will send the painter more than ever to the study of nature ; will train men who have always been delighted spectators of nature, to be also attentive observers. Our critics will learn to admire, and mere admirers will learn how to criticise... Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Pagina 3291851Visualizzazione completa - Informazioni su questo libro
| 1851 - 792 pagine
...shame out of the field all such half-informed and conventional criticism, the mere connoisseurship of the picture gallery. On the other hand, they will...enterprise of Mr Ruskin's which distinguishes the first volume, that daring enumeration of the great palpable facts of nature — the sky, the sea, the earth,... | |
| 1851 - 790 pagine
...men who have always been delighted spectators of nature to be also attentive observers. Our crities will learn how to admire, and mere admirers will learn...enterprise of Mr. Ruskin's which distinguishes the first volume, that daring enumeration of the great palpable facts of nature—- the sky, the sea, the earth,... | |
| mrs. E J Burbury - 1851 - 344 pagine
...always been delighted spectators of nature, to be also attentive observers. Our critics will learn to admire, and mere admirers will learn how to criticise : thus a public will be educated. It is the object of Mr. Ruskin, in his first volume of ' Modern Painters,' to shew what the artist... | |
| Eneas Sweetland Dallas - 1852 - 330 pagine
...always been delighted spectators of nature, to be also attentive observers. Our critics will learn to admire, and mere admirers will learn how to criticise : thus a public will be educated.'' — Blackwoo£s Magazine. " A generous and impassioned review of the works of living painters. A hearty... | |
| Karl Friedrich August Gützlaff - 1852 - 320 pagine
...always been delighted spectators of nature, to be also attentive observers. Our critics will learn to admire, and mere admirers will learn how to criticise: thus a public will be educated." — Black-wood-s Magazine. " A generous and impassioned review of the works of living painters. A hearty... | |
| Sarah R. Whitehead - 1852 - 306 pagine
...always been delighted spectators of nature, to be also attentive observers. Our critics will learn to admire, and mere admirers will learn how to criticise : thus a public will be educated. It is the object of Mr. Ruskin, in his first volume of ' Modern Painters,' to shew what the artist... | |
| Julia Kavanagh - 1852 - 524 pagine
...always been delighted spectators of nature, to be also attentive observers. Our critics will learn to admire, and mere admirers will learn how to criticise : thus a public will be educated. It is the object of Mr. Ruskin, in his first volume of ' Modern Painters,' to shew what the artist... | |
| Sarah Stickney Ellis - 1852 - 326 pagine
...always been delighted spectators of nature, to be also attentive observers. Our critics will learn to admire, and mere admirers will learn how to criticise : thus a public will be educated. It is the object of Mr. Ruskin, in his first volume of ' Modern Painters,' to shew what the artist... | |
| James H. Watherston - 1852 - 158 pagine
...always been delighted spectators of nature, to be also attentive observers. Our critics will learn to admire, and mere admirers will learn how to criticise : thus a public will be educated." — BlackwootTt Magazine. " A generous and impassioned review of the works of living painters. A hearty... | |
| Karl Friedrich August Gützlaff - 1852 - 324 pagine
...always been delighted spectators of nature, to be also attentive observers. Our critics will learn to admire, and mere admirers will learn how to criticise : thus a public will be educated. It is the object of Mr. Ruskin, in his first volume of ' Modern Painters," to shew what the artist... | |
| |