Monday, November 11, 2019

Against the antique

The doom of the arts of Europe went forth from that chamber, and it was brought about in great part by the very excellencies of the man who had thus marked the commencement of decline. The perfection of execution and the beauty of feature which were attained in his works, and in those of his great contemporaries, rendered finish of execution and beauty of form the chief objects of all artists; and thenceforward execution was looked for rather than thought, and beauty rather than veracity.
And as I told you, these are the two secondary causes of the decline of art; the first being the loss of moral purpose. Pray note them clearly. In mediæval art, thought is the first thing, execution the second; in modern art execution is the first thing, and thought the second. And again, in mediæval art, truth is first, beauty second; in modern art, beauty is first, truth second. The mediæval principles led up to Raphael, and the modern principles lead down from him.
Now, first, let me give you a familiar illustration of the difference with respect to execution. Suppose you have to teach two children drawing, one thoroughly clever and active-minded, the other dull and slow; and you put before them Jullien's chalk studies of heads—études à deux crayons—and desire them to be copied. The dull child will slowly do your bidding, blacken his paper and rub it white again, and patiently and painfully, in the course of three or four years, attain to the performance of a chalk head, not much worse than his original, but still of less value than the paper it is drawn upon. But the clever child will not, or will only by force, consent to this discipline. He finds other means of expressing himself with his pencil somehow or another; and presently you find his paper covered with sketches of his grandfather and grandmother, and uncles, and cousins—sketches of the room, and the house, and the cat, and the dog, and the country outside, and everything in the world he can set his eyes on; and he gets on, and even his child's work has a value in it—a truth which makes it worth keeping; no one knows how precious, perhaps, that portrait of his grandfather may be, if any one has but the sense to keep it till the time when the old man can be seen no more up the lawn, nor by the wood. That child is working in the Middle-Age spirit—the other in the modern spirit. But there is something still more striking in the evils which have resulted from the modern regardlessness of truth. Consider, for instance, its effect on what is called historical painting. What do you at present mean by historical painting? Now-a-days it means the endeavoring, by the power of imagination, to portray some historical event of past days. But in the Middle Ages, it meant representing[115] the acts of their own days; and that is the only historical painting worth a straw. Of all the wastes of time and sense which Modernism has invented—and they are many—none are so ridiculous as this endeavor to represent past history. What do you suppose our descendants will care for our imaginations of the events of former days? Suppose the Greeks, instead of representing their own warriors as they fought at Marathon, had left us nothing but their imaginations of Egyptian battles; and suppose the Italians, in like manner, instead of portraits of Can Grande and Dante, or of Leo the Tenth and Raphael, had left us nothing but imaginary portraits of Pericles and Miltiades? What fools we should have thought them! how bitterly we should have been provoked with their folly! And that is precisely what our descendants will feel towards us, so far as our grand historical and classical schools are concerned. What do we care, they will say, what those nineteenth century people fancied about Greek and Roman history! If they had left us a few plain and rational sculptures and pictures of their own battles, and their own men, in their every-day dress, we should have thanked them. "Well, but," you will say, "we have left them portraits of our great men, and paintings of our great battles." Yes, you have indeed, and that is the only historical painting that you either have, or can have; but you don't call that historical painting. You don't thank the men who do it; you look down upon them and dissuade them from it, and tell them they don't belong to the grand schools. And yet they are the only true historical painters, and the only men who will produce any effect on their own generation, or on any other. Wilkie was a historical painter, Chantrey a historical sculptor, because they painted, or carved, the veritable things and men they saw, not men and things as they believed they might have been, or should have been. But no one tells such men they are historical painters, and they are discontented with what they do; and poor Wilkie must needs travel to see the grand school, and imitate the grand school, and[116] ruin himself. And you have had multitudes of other painters ruined, from the beginning, by that grand school. There was Etty, naturally as good a painter as ever lived, but no one told him what to paint, and he studied the antique, and the grand schools, and painted dances of nymphs in red and yellow shawls to the end of his days. Much good may they do you! He is gone to the grave, a lost mind. There was Flaxman, another naturally great man, with as true an eye for nature as Raphael,—he stumbles over the blocks of the antique statues—wanders in the dark valley of their ruins to the end of his days. He has left you a few outlines of muscular men straddling and frowning behind round shields. Much good may they do you! Another lost mind. And of those who are lost namelessly, who have not strength enough even to make themselves known, the poor pale students who lie buried forever in the abysses of the great schools, no account can be rendered; they are numberless. 130. And the wonderful thing is, that of all these men whom you now have come to call the great masters, there was not one who confessedly did not paint his own present world, plainly and truly. Homer sang of what he saw; Phidias carved what he saw; Raphael painted the men of his own time in their own caps and mantles; and every man who has arisen to eminence in modern times has done so altogether by his working in their way, and doing the things he saw. How did Reynolds rise? Not by painting Greek women, but by painting the glorious little living Ladies this, and Ladies that, of his own time. How did Hogarth rise? Not by painting Athenian follies, but London follies. Who are the men who have made an impression upon you yourselves—upon your own age? I suppose the most popular painter of the day is Landseer. Do you suppose he studied dogs and eagles out of the Elgin Marbles? And yet in the very face of these plain, incontrovertible, all-visible facts, we go on from year to year with the base system of Academy teaching, in spite of which every one of these men has risen: I say in spite of the entire method and aim of our art-teaching.[117] It destroys the greater number of its pupils altogether; it hinders and paralyzes the greatest. There is not a living painter whose eminence is not in spite of everything he has been taught from his youth upwards, and who, whatever his eminence may be, has not suffered much injury in the course of his victory. For observe: this love of what is called ideality or beauty in preference to truth, operates not only in making us choose the past rather than the present for our subjects, but it makes us falsify the present when we do take it for our subject. I said just now that portrait-painters were historical painters;—so they are; but not good ones, because not faithful ones. The beginning and end of modern portraiture is adulation. The painters cannot live but by flattery; we should desert them if they spoke honestly. And therefore we can have no good portraiture; for in the striving after that which is not in their model, they lose the inner and deeper nobleness which is in their model. I saw not long ago, for the first time, the portrait of a man whom I knew well—a young man, but a religious man—and one who had suffered much from sickness. The whole dignity of his features and person depended upon the expression of serene, yet solemn, purpose sustaining a feeble frame; and the painter, by way of flattering him, strengthened him, and made him athletic in body, gay in countenance, idle in gesture; and the whole power and being of the man himself were lost. And this is still more the case with our public portraits. You have a portrait, for instance, of the Duke of Wellington at the end of the North Bridge—one of the thousand equestrian statues of Modernism—studied from the show-riders of the amphitheater, with their horses on their hind-legs in the saw-dust.[38][118] Do you suppose that was the way the Duke sat when your destinies depended on him? when the foam hung from the lips of his tired horse, and its wet limbs were dashed with the bloody slime of the battle-field, and he himself sat anxious in his quietness, grieved in his fearlessness, as he watched, scythe-stroke by scythe-stroke, the gathering in of the harvest of death? You would have done something had you thus left his image in the enduring iron, but nothing now. But the time has at last come for all this to be put an end to; and nothing can well be more extraordinary than the way in which the men have risen who are to do it. Pupils in the same schools, receiving precisely the same instruction which for so long a time has paralyzed every one of our painters,—these boys agree in disliking to copy the antique statues set before them. They copy them as they are bid, and they copy them better than any one else; they carry off prize after prize, and yet they hate their work. At last they are admitted to study from the life; they find the life very different from the antique, and say so. Their teachers tell them the antique is the best, and they mustn't copy the life. They[119] agree among themselves that they like the life, and that copy it they will. They do copy it faithfully, and their masters forthwith declare them to be lost men. Their fellow-students hiss them whenever they enter the room. They can't help it; they join hands and tacitly resist both the hissing and the instruction. Accidentally, a few prints of the works of Giotto, a few casts from those of Ghiberti, fall into their hands, and they see in these something they never saw before—something intensely and everlastingly true. They examine farther into the matter; they discover for themselves the greater part of what I have laid before you to-night; they form themselves into a body, and enter upon that crusade which has hitherto been victorious. And which will be absolutely and triumphantly victorious. The great mistake which has hitherto prevented the public mind from fully going with them must soon be corrected. That mistake was the supposition that, instead of wishing to recur to the principles of the early ages, these men wished to bring back the ignorance of the early ages. This notion, grounded first on some hardness in their earlier works, which resulted—as it must always result—from the downright and earnest effort to paint nature as in a looking-glass, was fostered partly by the jealousy of their beaten competitors, and partly by the pure, perverse, and hopeless ignorance of the whole body of art-critics, so called, connected with the press. No notion was ever more baseless or more ridiculous. It was asserted that the Pre-Raphaelites did not draw well, in the face of the fact, that the principal member of their body, from the time he entered the schools of the Academy, had literally encumbered himself with the medals given as prizes for drawing. It was asserted that they did not draw in perspective, by men who themselves knew no more of perspective than they did of astrology; it was asserted that they sinned against the appearances of nature, by men who had never drawn so much as a leaf or a blossom from nature in their lives. And, lastly, when all these calumnies or absurdities would tell no more, and it began to be forced upon men's unwilling belief that the style of the Pre-Raphaelites was true[120] and was according to nature, the last forgery invented respecting them is, that they copy photographs. You observe how completely this last piece of malice defeats all the rest. It admits they are true to nature, though only that it may deprive them of all merit in being so. But it may itself be at once refuted by the bold challenge to their opponents to produce a Pre-Raphaelite picture, or anything like one, by themselves copying a photograph. Let me at once clear your minds from all these doubts, and at once contradict all these calumnies. Pre-Raphaelitism has but one principle, that of absolute, uncompromising truth in all that it does, obtained by working everything, down to the most minute detail, from nature, and from nature only.[39] Every Pre-Raphaelite landscape background is painted to the last touch, in the open air, from the thing itself. Every Pre-Raphaelite figure, however studied in expression, is a true portrait of some living person. Every minute accessory is painted in the same manner. And one of the chief reasons for the violent opposition with which the school has been attacked by other artists, is the enormous cost of care and labor which such a system demands from those who adopt it, in contradistinction to the present slovenly and imperfect style. (LECTURES ON ARCHITECTURE AND PAINTING, Pre-Raphaelitism)

Thursday, January 8, 2015

On the picturesque

"... Now,  I  have  insisted  long  on  this  English  character, because I want the reader to understand thoroughly the opposite element  of  the  noble  picturesque:  its  expression,  namely,  of suffering, of poverty, or decay, nobly endured by unpretending strength  of  heart.  Nor  only  unpretending,  but  unconscious.  If there be visible pensiveness in the building, as in a ruined abbey, it becomes, or claims to   become,   beautiful;   but   the   picturesqueness   is   in   the unconscious suffering.

...their  merely  outward  delightfulness—that  which  makes  them  pleasant in painting, or, in the literal sense, picturesque—is their actual variety of colour and form. A broken stone has necessarily more various forms in it than a whole one; a bent roof has more various  curves  in  it  than  a  straight  one;  every  excrescence  or  cleft  involves  some  additional  complexity  of  light  and  shade,  and   every   stain   of   moss   on   eaves   or   wall   adds   to   the delightfulness  of  colour.  Hence,  in  a  completely  picturesque  object, as an old cottage or mill, there are introduced, by various circumstances  not  essential  to  it,  but,  on  the  whole,  generally somewhat detrimental to it as cottage or mill, such elements of  sublimity—complex light and shade, varied colour, undulatory  form, and so on—as can generally be found only in noble natural
objects, woods, rocks, or mountains."

Modern Painters IV

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Of Truth of Clouds I

The scenery of the sky is thus formed of an infinitely graduated series of systematic forms of cloud, each of which has its own region in which alone it is formed, and each of which  has  specific  characters  which  can only  be  properly determined  by  comparing  them  as  they  are  found  clearly distinguished by intervals of considerable space. I shall therefore consider the sky as divided into three regions: the upper region, or region of the cirrus; the central region, or region of the stratus; the lower region, or the region of the rain-cloud.

The cirrus cloud:
First, Symmetry. They are nearly always arranged in some definite and evident order, commonly in long ranks reaching sometimes from the zenith to the horizon, each  rank  composed  of  an  infinite  number  of transverse bars of about the same length, each bar thickest in the middle, and terminating in a traceless vaporous point at each side.

Secondly, Sharpness of Edge. The edges of the bars of the upper clouds which are turned to the wind, are often the  sharpest  which  the  sky  shows;  no  outline whatever  of  any  other  kind  of  cloud,  however marked and energetic, ever approaches the delicate decision of these edges.

Thirdly,   Multitude.   The   delicacy   of   these   vapours   is sometimes carried into such an infinity of division, that no other sensation of number that the earth or heaven can give is so impressive. Number is always most felt  when  it  is  symmetrical  (vide  Burke  on  "Sublime"  part  ii.sect. 8), and, therefore, no sea-waves nor fresh leaves make their number so evident  or  so  impressive  as  these  vapours.  Nor  is nature content with an infinity of bars or lines alone; each bar is in  its  turn  severed  into  a  number  of  small  undulatory  masses, more or less connected according to the violence of the wind. When this division is merely affected by undulation, the cloud exactly  resembles  sea-sand  ribbed  by  the  tide;  but  when  the division  amounts  to  real  separation  we  have  the  mottled  or mackerel skies. Commonly, the greater the division of its bars, the broader and more shapeless is the rank or field, so that in the mottled  sky  it  is  lost  altogether,  and  we  have  large  irregular fields of equal size, masses like flocks of sheep; such clouds are three or four thousand feet below the legitimate cirrus.  I have seen them cast a shadow on Mont Blanc at sunset, so that they must descend nearly to within fifteen thousand feet of the earth.

Fourthly, Purity of Colour. The nearest of these clouds, those over the observer's head, being  at least three miles above  him,  and  the  greater  number  of  those  which enter the ordinary sphere of vision, farther from him still, their dark sides are much greyer and cooler than  those  of  other  clouds,  owing  to  their  distance.  They  are composed of the purest aqueous vapour, free from all foulness of earthy gases, and of this in the lightest and most ethereal state in which it can be, to be visible. Farther, they receive the light of the sun in a state of far greater intensity than lower objects, the beams being transmitted to them through atmospheric air far less dense,  and  wholly  unaffected  by  mist,  smoke,  or  any  other impurity. Hence their colours are more pure and vivid, and their white less sullied than those of any other clouds.  

Lastly, Variety. Variety is never so conspicuous, as when it is  united  with  symmetry.  The  perpetual  change  of form  in  other  clouds  is  monotonous  in  its  very dissimilarity, nor is difference striking where no connection is implied; but if through a range of barred clouds crossing half the heaven, all governed by the same forces and falling into one general  form,  there  be  yet  a  marked  and  evident  dissimilarity between  each  member  of  the  great  mass, one  more  finely drawn,  the  next  more  delicately  moulded,  the  next  more gracefully  bent,  each  broken  into  differently  modelled  and variously  numbered  groups, the  variety  is  doubly  striking, because contrasted with the perfect symmetry of which it forms a part. 

JMW Turner: Mercury & Argos
JMW Turner:Napoleon
JMW Turner: The fighting Temeraire

Courtesy of carlwozniak.com

Friday, February 1, 2013

Of the sky

The sky is thought of as a clear, high, material dome, the  clouds  as  separate  bodies  suspended  beneath  it;  and  in consequence, however delicate and exquisitely removed in tone their skies may be, you always look at them, not through them. Now if there be one characteristic of the sky more valuable or necessary to be rendered than another, it is that which Wordsworth has given in the second book of the Excursion:

"The chasm of sky above my head
Is Heaven's profoundest azure; no domain
For fickle, short-lived clouds, to occupy,
Or to pass through; but rather an abyss
In which the everlasting stars abide,
And whose soft gloom, and boundless depth, might tempt
The curious eye to look for them by day."
...
And  if  you  look intensely at the pure blue of a serene sky, you will see that there is  a  variety  and  fulness  in  its  very  repose.  It  is  not  flat  dead colour, but a deep, quivering, transparent body of penetrable air, in which you trace or imagine short falling spots of deceiving light, and dim shades, faint veiled vestiges of dark
vapour."

.........

"The appearance of mist or whiteness in the blue of the sky is thus a circumstance which more or less accompanies sunshine,  and  which,  supposing  the  quantity  of  vapour constant, is greatest in the brightest sunlight. When there are no clouds in the sky, the whiteness, as it  affects  the  whole  sky  equally,  is  not  particularly noticeable. But when there are clouds between us and the sun, the sun being low, those clouds cast shadows along  and  through  the  mass  of  suspended  vapour.  Within the space of   these   shadows,   the  vapour,   as   above   stated,   becomes transparent and invisible, and the sky appears of a pure blue. But where  the  sunbeams  strike,  the  vapour  becomes  visible  in  the form  of  the  beams,  occasioning  those  radiating  shafts  of  light which    are    one    of    the    most    valuable    and    constant accompaniments  of  a  low  sun.  The  denser  the  mist,  the  more distinct and sharp-edged will these rays be; when the air is very clear, they are mere vague, flushing, gradated passages of light; when it is very thick, they are keen-edged and decisive in a high degree. "

The blessing of beauty

"...and yet it is not in the broad and fierce manifestations of the elemental energies, not in the clash of the hail, nor the drift of the whirlwind, that the highest characters of the sublime are developed. God is not in the earthquake, nor in the fire, but in the still, small voice. They are but the blunt and the low faculties of our nature, which can only be addressed through lamp-black and lightning. It is in quiet and subdued passages of unobtrusive majesty, the deep, and the calm, and the perpetual; that which must be sought ere it is seen, and loved ere it is understood; things which the angels work out for us daily, and yet vary eternally: which are never wanting, and never repeated; which are to be found always, yet each found but once; it is through these that the lesson of devotion is chiefly taught, and the blessing of beauty given. These are what the artist of highest aim must study; it is these, by the combination of which his ideal is to be created; these, of which so little notice is ordinarily taken by common observers, that I fully believe, little as people in general are concerned with art, more of their ideas of sky are derived from pictures than from reality; and that if we could examine the conception formed in the minds of most educated persons when we talk of clouds, it would frequently be found composed of fragments of blue and white reminiscences of the old masters."

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Details in painting and the general truth

...a  man  who attended   to   general   character   would   in   five minutes produce a more faithful representation of a tree, than the unfortunate mechanist in as many years,  is  thus  perfectly  true  and  well founded; but  this  is  not because details are undesirable, but because they are best given by  swift execution,  and  because,  individually,  they  cannot  be given to all.

(Modern Painters I, p. 340)

Monday, January 28, 2013

Beautiful incomprehensibility

But if there be this mystery and inexhaustible finish merely in  the  more  delicate  instances  of  architectural decoration, how much more in the ceaseless and incomparable decoration of nature. The detail of a single weedy bank laughs the carving of ages to scorn.  Every  leaf  and  stalk  has  a  design  and  tracery  upon  it; every  knot  of  grass  an  intricacy  of  shade  which  the  labour  of  years could never imitate, and which, if such labour could follow it out even to the last fibres of the leaflets, would yet be falsely represented, for, as in all other cases brought forward, it is not clearly  seen,  but  confusedly  and  mysteriously.  That  which  is nearness  for  the  bank,  is  distance  for  its  details;  and  however near  it  may  be,  the  greater  part  of  those  details  are  still  a beautiful incomprehensibility.