The literary works [&c.]. In which is included a memoir by J. Farington, Volume 1 |
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Page 4
... means ; but a peo- ple whose whole attention is absorbed in those means , and who forget the end , can aspire but little above the rank of a barba- rous nation . Every establishment that tends to the cultivation of the pleasures of the ...
... means ; but a peo- ple whose whole attention is absorbed in those means , and who forget the end , can aspire but little above the rank of a barba- rous nation . Every establishment that tends to the cultivation of the pleasures of the ...
Page 8
... means of bestowing on whole nations refinement of taste which , if it does not lead directly to purity of manners , obviates at least their greatest depravation , by disentangling the mind from appetite , and conducting the thoughts ...
... means of bestowing on whole nations refinement of taste which , if it does not lead directly to purity of manners , obviates at least their greatest depravation , by disentangling the mind from appetite , and conducting the thoughts ...
Page 12
... means . But Sculpture having but one style , can only to one style of Painting have any relation ; and to this ( which is indeed the highest and most dignified that Paint- ing can boast ) , it has a relation so close , that it may be ...
... means . But Sculpture having but one style , can only to one style of Painting have any relation ; and to this ( which is indeed the highest and most dignified that Paint- ing can boast ) , it has a relation so close , that it may be ...
Page 14
... mean ambition of producing a picturesque effect or illusion of any kind , all the gran- deur of ideas which this art endeavours to excite , be degraded or destroyed , we may boldly oppose ourselves to any such innova- tion . If the ...
... mean ambition of producing a picturesque effect or illusion of any kind , all the gran- deur of ideas which this art endeavours to excite , be degraded or destroyed , we may boldly oppose ourselves to any such innova- tion . If the ...
Page 15
... means within the power of his art to produce a deception , provided this practice does not interfere with or destroy higher excellencies ; on these con- ditions he will be forced , however loth , to acknowledge that the boundaries of ...
... means within the power of his art to produce a deception , provided this practice does not interfere with or destroy higher excellencies ; on these con- ditions he will be forced , however loth , to acknowledge that the boundaries of ...
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Common terms and phrases
Academy acquired admirable altar AMSTER angels ANTWERP appears artist attention attitude beauty Bolswert BRANDT BRUSSELS Carlo Maratti certainly character Christ church Claude Lorrain colour composition considered Correggio criticism defect dignity DISCOURSE Domenichino Domenico Feti DORP drapery drawing drawn dress DUSSEL Dutch effect engraved excellence expression figure finished Gainsborough gallery genius GHENT give grace grandeur habit hand head idea imagination imitation invention Jan Steen Jordaens kind labour landscapes light and shadow likewise look Luca Giordano Magdalen manner Masaccio mass of light master means MECHLIN merit Michael Angelo mind nature never object observed painted painter Paolo Veronese perfect perhaps picture of Rubens Pieta Poetry portrait possessed principles produced racter Raffaelle reason RECOLLETS Rembrandt represented Rubens's Saint Sculpture seen Sergius Paulus spectator Steen style taste Teniers thing tion Titian truth ture VANDER Vandyck Virgin Weeninx whole woman
Popular passages
Page 107 - Or ounce, or tiger, hog, or bearded goat, All other parts remaining as they were ; And they, so perfect is their misery, Not once perceive their foul disfigurement, But boast themselves more comely than before ; And all their friends and native home forget, To roll with pleasure in a sensual sty.
Page 221 - I was much pleased with your ridicule of those shallow criticks, whose judgment, though often right as far as it goes, yet reaches only to inferior beauties, and who, unable to comprehend the whole, judge only by parts, and from thence determine the merit of extensive works.
Page 171 - That Gainsborough himself considered this peculiarity in his manner, and the power it possesses of exciting surprise, as a beauty in his works, I think may be inferred from the eager desire which we know he always expressed, that his pic-- tures, at the Exhibition, should be seen near, as well as at a distance.
Page 141 - This is a tribute which a painter owes to an architect who composed like a painter, and was 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.
Page 120 - It is the lowest style only, of arts, whether of Painting, Poetry, or Musick, that may be said, in the vulgar sense, to be naturally pleasing. The higher efforts of those arts, we know by experience, do not affect minds wholly uncultivated. This refined taste is the consequence of education and habit...
Page 231 - ... minute exactness in the detail, as I may say, of Nature modified by accident. The attention to these petty peculiarities is the very cause of this naturalness so much admired in the Dutch pictures, which, if we suppose it to be a beauty, is certainly of a lower order, which ought to give place to a beauty of a superior kind, since one cannot be obtained but by departing from the other.
Page 424 - Correggio, or any of the great colourists. The effect of his pictures may be not improperly compared to clusters of flowers; all his colours appear as clear and as beautiful : at the same time he has avoided that tawdry effect which one would expect such gay colours to produce: in this respect resembling Barocci more than any other painter.
Page 217 - I reflect, not without vanity, that these Discourses bear testimony of my admiration of that truly divine man ; and I should desire that the last words which I should pronounce in this Academy, and from this place, might be the name of — MICHAEL ANGELO.* * Unfortunately for mankind, these were the last words pronounced by this great Painter from the Academical chair.
Page 233 - Maratti, and from thence to the very pathos of insipidity to which they are now sunk ; so that there is no need of remarking, that where I mentioned the Italian Painters in opposition to the Dutch, I mean not the moderns, but the heads of the old Roman and Bolognian Schools ; nor did I mean to include in my idea of an Italian Painter, the Venetian School, which may be said to be the Dutch part of the Italian Genius.
Page 317 - The genius of Rubens no where appears to more advantage than here : it is the most carefully finished picture of- all his works. The whole is conducted with the most consummate art ; the composition is bold and uncommon, with circumstances which no other painter had ever before thought of; such as the breaking of the limbs, and the expression of the Magdalen, to which we may add the disposition of the three crosses, which are placed prospectively in an uncommon picturesque manner...