Arnold's Library of the Fine Arts, Volume 3M.Arnold, 1832 - Art |
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Page 2
... masters equal , if not superior to , any that the world ever saw . There was only one circum- stance wanting to complete the triumph of Art ; and that was , to have some means of bringing it , and keeping it so before the public , as to ...
... masters equal , if not superior to , any that the world ever saw . There was only one circum- stance wanting to complete the triumph of Art ; and that was , to have some means of bringing it , and keeping it so before the public , as to ...
Page 4
... master of the pen or the pencil , much thought as well as much practice is necessary ; and that much thought is only attained by communing with other minds as well as our own ; - not only in the busy haunts of every - day life , but in ...
... master of the pen or the pencil , much thought as well as much practice is necessary ; and that much thought is only attained by communing with other minds as well as our own ; - not only in the busy haunts of every - day life , but in ...
Page 7
... masters . One of the objects of this work was to show that the English School had produced men who were ca- pable of rivalling the works of the greatest masters of the Continent , had they only received equal patronage and means of ...
... masters . One of the objects of this work was to show that the English School had produced men who were ca- pable of rivalling the works of the greatest masters of the Continent , had they only received equal patronage and means of ...
Page 10
... master with the English , for his drawings were replete with the principal attributes sought by English amateurs , -breadth and aërial perspective , with a spacious residue for the imagination to speculate upon . The admirers of Art in ...
... master with the English , for his drawings were replete with the principal attributes sought by English amateurs , -breadth and aërial perspective , with a spacious residue for the imagination to speculate upon . The admirers of Art in ...
Page 14
... masters are not unfrequently nothing more , as to subject , than the simple bassecour behind their own domicile . Girtin was a Londoner ; so was Turner : Varley was of the same great smoky town . These , deeply imbued with the love of ...
... masters are not unfrequently nothing more , as to subject , than the simple bassecour behind their own domicile . Girtin was a Londoner ; so was Turner : Varley was of the same great smoky town . These , deeply imbued with the love of ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration Albert Durer amateur Angelica Kauffman antique appear arches architect architecture artist beauty Benjamin West Bonington British building Bust Castle Cathedral Chapel character chiar'-oscuro Church colour composition copy crayons Design Ditto effect Elevation enamel engraving etching excellence execution exhibited expression feeling figures Frame Gainsborough Gallery genius Gentleman George George Barret Girtin Head Henry VIII House III.-No imagination imitation Italian James John Joseph Nollekens labour Lady Landscape light Liverseege look Lord manner marble Mary Moser master merit mind Miniatures nature object ornaments painter painting patronage Paul Sandby pencil perhaps picture placed Portrait Portraits miniatures possession principal racter Rembrandt Reynolds rich Richard Cosway Royal Academy Rubens Sandby scene sculpture Sir Joshua sketch society Society of Dilettanti specimens stained drawing student style supercolumniation talent taste Teniers Thomas Thomas Girtin tion Titian Venus View Villa water-colours whole William Young
Popular passages
Page 508 - Then Nebuchadnezzar came near to the mouth of the burning fiery furnace, and spake, and said, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego, ye servants of the most high God, come forth and come hither. Then Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, came forth of the midst of the fire.
Page 20 - So on he fares, and to the border comes Of Eden, where delicious Paradise, Now nearer, crowns with her enclosure green, As with a rural mound, the champaign head Of a steep wilderness, whose hairy sides With thicket overgrown, grotesque and wild, Access denied...
Page 421 - WHY weep ye by the tide, ladye, Why weep ye by the tide ? I'll wed ye to my youngest son, And ye shall be his bride : • • And ye shall be his bride, ladye, Sae comely to be seen." But aye she loot the tears down fa...
Page 301 - In the year 1734, some gentlemen who had travelled in Italy, desirous of encouraging at home a taste for those objects which had contributed so much to their entertainment abroad...
Page 402 - You must recollect, however, that I know nothing of painting ; and that I detest it, unless it reminds me of something I have seen, or think it possible to see...
Page 161 - Mr. Coney commenced another similar undertaking, half the size of the first work, intituled " Architectural Beauties of Continental Europe, in a Series of Views of remarkable edifices, civil and ecclesiastical, in France, the Low Countries, Germany, and Italy, engraved by J. Coney from his own drawings, taken on the spot, with descriptions and historical illustrations by HE Lloyd.
Page 293 - Your Committee cannot dismiss this interesting subject, without submitting to the attentive reflection of the House, how highly the cultivation of the Fine Arts has contributed to the reputation, character, and dignity of every Government by which they have been encouraged, and how intimately they are connected with the advancement of every thing valuable in science, literature, and philosophy.
Page 293 - But if it be true, as we learn from history and experience, that free Governments afford a soil most suitable to the production of native talents, to the maturity of the powers of the human mind, and to the growth of every species of excellence, by opening to merit the prospect of reward and distinction, — no country can be better adapted than our own to afford an...
Page 510 - ... such was the influence of his doctrine that the provost, bailies, and inhabitants harmoniously agreed to set up the reformed worship in the town. The church was stripped of all images and pictures, and the monasteries were pulled down.