An Inquiry Into the Beauties of Painting: And Into the Merits of the Most Celebrated Painters, Ancient and Modern, Ausgabe 2R. and J. Dodsley, 1761 - 200 Seiten |
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Seite ix
... elegant ; whether the proportions be juft or unequal ; the carnations , cold or animated ? If the colours in a picture be happily dif- pofed , the general effect will be pleaf- ing ; and in proportion to the force of the clear obfcure ...
... elegant ; whether the proportions be juft or unequal ; the carnations , cold or animated ? If the colours in a picture be happily dif- pofed , the general effect will be pleaf- ing ; and in proportion to the force of the clear obfcure ...
Seite 12
... elegant : It acquires , like the ear , an [ b ] habitual delicacy ; and anfwers , with the fame fidelity and precifion , to the fineft im- preffions : Verfed in the works of the best painters , it foon learns to diftinguish true ...
... elegant : It acquires , like the ear , an [ b ] habitual delicacy ; and anfwers , with the fame fidelity and precifion , to the fineft im- preffions : Verfed in the works of the best painters , it foon learns to diftinguish true ...
Seite 14
... elegant fimplicity of Raphael . Was this change , in both cafes , the refult of reafoning , or produced by a [ i ] The grace of Guido is rather technical than ideal ; by the first is meant a certain flow of Contour , invariably applied ...
... elegant fimplicity of Raphael . Was this change , in both cafes , the refult of reafoning , or produced by a [ i ] The grace of Guido is rather technical than ideal ; by the first is meant a certain flow of Contour , invariably applied ...
Seite 31
... elegant fpeculation , or as the means of polishing and foftening our manners , we could not prize them too highly ; but their effects are much more extenfive . The powers of eloquence and mufick are univerfally ac- knowledged ; fo would ...
... elegant fpeculation , or as the means of polishing and foftening our manners , we could not prize them too highly ; but their effects are much more extenfive . The powers of eloquence and mufick are univerfally ac- knowledged ; fo would ...
Seite 37
... elegant , D3 elegant obferver of beauty , down to the illiterate ruftic DIAL . III . Usefulness of PAINTING . 37.
... elegant , D3 elegant obferver of beauty , down to the illiterate ruftic DIAL . III . Usefulness of PAINTING . 37.
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Æneid ancients angel antiquity Apelles artiſts beauty beſt cafe character Clear obfcure colours compariſon compofition Correggio courſe defcribed defcription defign difpofition diftinction diftinguiſh effect elegant Euphranor excellent expreffed expreffion fame fays fecond fect feem fenfe fenfible fentiments fhall fhould fimple firft firſt fome fpirit fplendor fpring ftatues ftill ftudy ftyle fubject fublime fuch fufficient fuperior fuppofe genius give grace greateſt Greek Hence himſelf ideas imagination imitation itſelf jects juft juſt laft Laocoon lefs leſs lights and fhades mafter meaſure mechanick Medea merit moderns moft moſt muft muſt nature obferve objects occafion OVID paffions painters painting Parrhafius pencil perfect perfon Phidias Philoftratus picture pleafing pleaſe pleaſure Plin Pliny Plutarch poet praiſe Praxiteles racter Raphael reaſon reft reprefent ſcience ſeems ſeveral taſte thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe Timanthes Timomachus tion Titian uſe Venus xxxv Zeuxis γαρ δε εις εν και μεν
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 15 - The following obfervation by Tully, at the fame time that it illuftrates, receives authority from this faft. — " All * men, by a kind of tacit feeling, without art or fcience, diftinguifh, in both cafes, what is right from what is wrong ; and, as they evidently do fo in painting and fculpture, fo, &c. &c.
Seite 13 - ... of time, aft fo coldly upon us : Nay, fome men there are, and thofe too very capable of judging in other matters, who never rife to this change ; but continue, to the laft, under the influence of the fame boyifh and wanton imagination, B.
Seite 13 - ... mark its advances ; the contrary of which is almoft ever the cafe ; fo that we are often furprifed at this alteration in ourfelves, and wonder, that the ideas and objects which...
Seite 42 - nee stetit ante oculos ejus Minerva: dignus tamen ilia arte animus et concepit deos, et exhibuit."f And this leads me to remark what must have been likewise another and a very powerful source of the advancement of the arts of design among the Greeks. The Grecian mythology furnished a most ample source for the exercise of the genius of the painter and sculptor. The distinct and characteristic...
Seite 11 - In this, the imagination, on its firft fetting out, ever prefers extravagance to juftnefs, or falfe beauties to true ; it kindles at the flafhes of Claudian ; and flutters at the points of Statius ; this is its childhood. As it grows in vigour, it refines in feeling ; till, fuperior to its firft attra&ions, it refts on the tender pathetick of Virgil ; or the manly fpirit of Lucretius.
Seite 11 - ... reafoning ; and feels in an inftant that truth , which the other developes by degrees. B. You have been defcribing, what Tully calls a learned, and we, I think, may term a chafte eye. But, do you not, in this procefs, make the growth of tafte [h] Confnetudo oculoram.
Seite 16 - ... favourite manner. They feldom, like gentlemen and fcholars, rife to an unprejudiced and liberal contemplation of true beauty. The difficulties they find in the practice of their art, tie them down to the mechanic ; at the fame time that...
Seite 12 - Guido : this c lafts not long ; it grows chafte in its purfuit ; and flighting * thofe falfe beauties, dwells on the native and mellow tints *• of Titian ; on the unforced attitudes, and elegant fimpli
Seite 179 - The wit of man could not devise means more certain of the end proposed ; such a chain of circumstances is equal to a narration , and I cannot but think, that the whole would have been an example of invention and conduct, even in the happiest age of antiquity.
Seite 29 - They could not better (how the fenfe they had of its power than in the care they took of its direction. They knew the dominion it had over our paffions, and hence were careful to lodge it in the fafeft hands.