The Art-idea: Sculpture, Painting, and Architecture in AmericaHurd and Houghton, 1865 - 381 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 52.
Strana v
... becomes efficacious . In CHAPTER IV . Art addresses every Mind . - Nature one Form of God's Teaching , Art another . - Nature is God's Art . - Art - many Critics .. ― - as the Divine Creative Faculty bestowed on Man . - Few Artists ...
... becomes efficacious . In CHAPTER IV . Art addresses every Mind . - Nature one Form of God's Teaching , Art another . - Nature is God's Art . - Art - many Critics .. ― - as the Divine Creative Faculty bestowed on Man . - Few Artists ...
Strana 2
... becomes teachable and humble in proportion to its advancement , be- cause it measures all things in an increasing light ; while ignorance , believing its farthing candle to be the sun , ever shows itself vain , contradictory , and ...
... becomes teachable and humble in proportion to its advancement , be- cause it measures all things in an increasing light ; while ignorance , believing its farthing candle to be the sun , ever shows itself vain , contradictory , and ...
Strana 10
... becomes Efficacious . — INCE art bears so close a relationship to our faculties , it follows that it must be of vital importance to our civilization . In the enthusiasm of a favorite pursuit or sudden mental illumination we are liable ...
... becomes Efficacious . — INCE art bears so close a relationship to our faculties , it follows that it must be of vital importance to our civilization . In the enthusiasm of a favorite pursuit or sudden mental illumination we are liable ...
Strana 11
... becomes sublime in its very ignorance of mechanical execution by its suggestiveness of noble effort . There are minds , however , that see in such work only mat- ter for ridicule or antipathy ; they turn with zest to vulgar imitation ...
... becomes sublime in its very ignorance of mechanical execution by its suggestiveness of noble effort . There are minds , however , that see in such work only mat- ter for ridicule or antipathy ; they turn with zest to vulgar imitation ...
Strana 13
... become eloquent only as the feeling which dictated them is found to be impregnated with , and expressive of , the truths of science . The mind indignantly rejects as false all that the imagination would impose upon it not consistent ...
... become eloquent only as the feeling which dictated them is found to be impregnated with , and expressive of , the truths of science . The mind indignantly rejects as false all that the imagination would impose upon it not consistent ...
Iné vydania - Zobraziť všetky
The Art-idea: Sculpture, Painting, and Architecture in America James Jackson Jarves Úplné zobrazenie - 1865 |
Časté výrazy a frázy
ACADEMIC ART æsthetic Allston American architecture artists aspirations beauty BEECHER Boston building character Christian art church civilization classical color common composition conception degree delight divine Dusseldorf school elevated exalted examples execution expression external faculties faith fancy feeling forms Fra Angelico freedom galleries genius Gothic Grecian Greece Greek Greek art growth harmony Harriet Hosmer heart high art highest human ideal ideas imagination imitation individual inspiration instincts intellectual inventive Italy knowledge landscape landscape art lofty master material mediæval ment Michel Angelo mind modern monotheism moral motives nature ness noble objects original ornamentation Pagan painters painting pantheistic perfect Phidias pict poetical portraiture Pre-Raphaelitism principle progress Protestant Protestantism Puritan qualities race realistic refined religion religious repose Roman sculpture sense sensual sensuous sentiment soul spects spirit style suggestion symbolism taste things thought tion Titian tive true truth Vedder vigor
Populárne pasáže
Strana 291 - But perhaps he overstrains criticism in stating that "the perfection of art in an American's eyes would be the invention of a self-acting machine which should produce plans of cities, and designs for Gothic churches and classic monumental buildings, at so much per foot super, and so save all further thought or trouble." * Resentment at this caricature is checked when we remember that our countrymen have actually patented machines for producing sculpture, whether from life or copy; and that almost...
Strana 312 - The two great rules for design are these : 1st, that there should be no features about a building which are not necessary for convenience, construction, or propriety ; 2nd, that all ornament should consist of enrichment of the essential construction of the building.
Strana 239 - ... sameness of ideas, often destroying good work by bad, lawless in manner, using pigments sometimes as though they were mortar and he a plasterer, still there is ever perceptible in his works imagination, feeling, and technical instinct of a high order The French school has tempered his style, but he is by no means a mechanical follower of it. He can be as sensitive as he is powerful in his rendering of nature's phenomena. .... Inness gives with equal felicity the drowsy heat, hot shimmer, and...
Strana 343 - To stimulate this feeling, it is requisite that our public should have free access to museums, or galleries, in which shall be exhibited, in chronological series, specimens of the art of all nations and schools, arranged according to their motives and the special influences that attended their development. After this manner a mental and artistic history of the world may be spread out like a chart before the student, while the artist, with equal facility, can trace up to their origin the varied methods,...
Strana 236 - His speciality is meadows and coastviews, in wearisome horizontal lines and perspective, with a profuse supply of hay-ricks to vary the monotony of flatness, but flooded with rich sun-glow and sense of summer warmth.
Strana 276 - Harriet Hosmer is an example of a self-made sculptor by force of indomitable industry and will. She, alone of the women of America who have essayed sculpture, has achieved a reputation. ' Puck ' displays nice humor and is a spirited conception, but ' Zenobia ' is open to the charge of mere materialistic treatment. The accessories of queenly costume overpower the real woman. Indeed, Miss Hosmer's strength and taste lie chiefly in that direction. She has no creative power, but has acquired no small...
Strana 284 - A naked slave has burst his shackles, and, with uplifted face, thanks God for freedom. It symbolizes the African race of America, — the birthday of a new people into the ranks of Christian civilization. We have seen nothing in our sculpture more soul-lifting, or more comprehensively eloquent.
Strana 287 - Our synopsis of the art-idea would be incomplete without referring to the condition of architecture in America. Strictly speaking, we have no architecture. If, as has happened to the Egyptians, Ninevites, Etruscans, Pelasgians, Aztecs, and Central American races, our buildings alone should be left, by some cataclysm of nations, to tell of our existence, what would they directly express of us? Absolutely nothing! Each civilized race, ancient or modern, has incarnated its own aesthetic life and character...
Strana 183 - ... and that it was wholly an instrument of pride, superstition, and oppression on the part of the rulers, lay and clerical. At the same time, he asserts his predilection for the Germanic schools, because their pictures teem " with natural objects, with birds and cattle, with husbandry, with domestic scenes and interiors." We make no issue with those whose tastes prefer a boor's pipe or gin-flagon to a martyr's palm or saint's nimbus, a Flemish villager's carousal to an Italian tournament, a kitchen...
Strana 284 - it is the hint of a great work, which, put into heroic size, should become the companion of the Washington of our nation's Capitol, to commemorate the crowning virtue of democratic institutions in the final liberty of the slave.