The Complete Works of John Ruskin, Volume 27Society of English and French Literature, 1885 |
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Pagina 23
... seem tran- scendental . Altogether void of such consideration or care , Lord Lindsay never even so much as states the meaning or purpose of his appeal , but , clasping his hands desperately over his head , disappears on the instant in ...
... seem tran- scendental . Altogether void of such consideration or care , Lord Lindsay never even so much as states the meaning or purpose of his appeal , but , clasping his hands desperately over his head , disappears on the instant in ...
Pagina 28
... seem at first generally ap- plicable , or its results consistent . The passages in which such interpretation has been attempted in the work before us , are too graceful to be regretted , nor is their brilliant suggestiveness otherwise ...
... seem at first generally ap- plicable , or its results consistent . The passages in which such interpretation has been attempted in the work before us , are too graceful to be regretted , nor is their brilliant suggestiveness otherwise ...
Pagina 35
... seem to have built them with peculiar zest , and to have had a keen eye for the picturesque in grouping them with the churches they belong to . " I need scarcely add that the round arch is exclusively employed in pure Lombard ...
... seem to have built them with peculiar zest , and to have had a keen eye for the picturesque in grouping them with the churches they belong to . " I need scarcely add that the round arch is exclusively employed in pure Lombard ...
Pagina 37
... seem to have built them with peculiar zest , and to have had a keen eye for the picturesque in grouping them with the churches they belong to . " I need scarcely add that the round arch is exclusively employed in pure Lombard ...
... seem to have built them with peculiar zest , and to have had a keen eye for the picturesque in grouping them with the churches they belong to . " I need scarcely add that the round arch is exclusively employed in pure Lombard ...
Pagina 47
... seems to have forgotten from the first , that the mountains of Syene are not the rocks of Paros . Neither the social habits nor intellectual powers of the Greek had so much share in inducing his advance in Sculpture beyond the Egyptian ...
... seems to have forgotten from the first , that the mountains of Syene are not the rocks of Paros . Neither the social habits nor intellectual powers of the Greek had so much share in inducing his advance in Sculpture beyond the Egyptian ...
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Angelico angels architecture artists beauty blue carved century character chiaroscuro Christian color composition conceive dark decoration delight Donatello drapery drawing Eastlake English engraving Eraclius execution expression Eyck eyes fancy feeling Fra Angelico fresco gesso Giottesque Giotto Gothic grace Greek ground hand heart heaven human imitation intellect interest invention Italian Italy J. M. W. TURNER kind labor less light linseed oil look Lord Lindsay Madonna masters means ment mind modern moral nation nature ness never Niccola Pisano noble oil-painting once painters painting passion perfect perhaps Perugino picture pleasure practice Pre-Raphaelites present principles pure question Raphael reader Rembrandt respect Rubens SAMUEL PROUT schools sculpture sense sensual shade shadows spirit stone suppose teach Theophilus things thought tints tion Titian transparent true truth ture Turner varnish walls whole youth
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Pagina 151 - Now in order that people may be happy in their work, these three things are needed : They must be fit for it : They must not do too much of it : and they must have a sense of success in it...
Pagina 169 - If their sympathies with the early artists lead them into medievalism or Romanism, they will of course come to nothing. But I believe there is no danger of this, at 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.
Pagina 155 - Therefore, literally, it is no man's business whether he has genius or not : work he must, whatever he is, but quietly and steadily; and the natural and unforced results of such work will be always the things that God meant him to do, and will be his best.
Pagina 150 - Turner their example, as his latest are to be their object of emulation, should go to nature in all singleness of heart, and walk with her laboriously and trustingly, having no other thoughts but how best to penetrate her meaning, and remember her instruction, rejecting nothing, selecting nothing, and scorning nothing; believing all things to be right and good, and rejoicing always in the truth.
Pagina 27 - Passion natural, suffered from things visible ; passion spiritual, centred on things unseen : and the strife or antagonism which is throughout the subject of Lord Lindsay's proof, is not, as he has stated it, between the moral, intellectual, and sensual elements, but between the upward and downward tendencies of all three — between the spirit of Man which goeth upward, and the spirit of the Beast which goeth downward.
Pagina 158 - Europe, at the moment when the invention of printing superseded their legendary labors, was no false instinct. It was misunderstood and misapplied, but it came at the right time, and has maintained itself through all kinds of abuse ; presenting in the recent schools of landscape, perhaps only the first fruits of its power. That instinct was urging every painter in Europe at the same moment to his true duty—the faithful representation of all objects of historical interest, or of natural beauty existent...
Pagina 152 - The very removal of the massy bars which once separated one class of society from another, has rendered it tenfold more shameful in foolish people's, ie, in most people's eyes, to remain in the lower grades of it, than ever it was before. When a man born of an artisan was looked upon as an entirely different species of animal from a man born of a noble, it made him no more uncomfortable or ashamed to...
Pagina 179 - ... then all kinds of inner domestic life — interiors of rooms, studies of costumes, of still life, and heraldry, including multitudes of symbolical vignettes ; then marine scenery of every kind, full of local incident ; every kind of boat and...
Pagina 192 - They are different in their choice, different in their faculties, but all the same in this, that Raphael himself, BO far as he was great, and all who preceded or followed him who ever were great, became so by painting the truths around them as they appeared to each man's own mind, not as he had been taught to see them, except by the God who made both him and them.
Pagina 286 - But as I reach this point of reverence, the unreasonable thing is sure to give a shriek as of a thousand unanimous vultures, which leaves me shuddering in real physical pain for some half minute following...