The Works of John Ruskin: The elements of drawing. The elements of perspective. Aratra penteliciJ. Wiley, 1889 |
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Page 20
... suppose a lithograph on the titlepage of a new opera air , or a woodcut in the cheapest illustrated newspaper of the day - they will find themselves entirely beaten . And yet that common lithograph was drawn with coarse chalk , much ...
... suppose a lithograph on the titlepage of a new opera air , or a woodcut in the cheapest illustrated newspaper of the day - they will find themselves entirely beaten . And yet that common lithograph was drawn with coarse chalk , much ...
Page 22
... suppose that we see what we only know , and have hardly any consciousness of the real aspect of the signs we have learned to inter pret . Very few people have any idea that sunlighted grass is yellow . colour have an appearance of lines ...
... suppose that we see what we only know , and have hardly any consciousness of the real aspect of the signs we have learned to inter pret . Very few people have any idea that sunlighted grass is yellow . colour have an appearance of lines ...
Page 46
... suppose is about the size of a in Fig . 5. ( it had better not be much larger ) , on a piece of not very white paper , on the table in front of you . Sit so that the light may come from your left , else the shadow of the pencil point ...
... suppose is about the size of a in Fig . 5. ( it had better not be much larger ) , on a piece of not very white paper , on the table in front of you . Sit so that the light may come from your left , else the shadow of the pencil point ...
Page 48
... Suppose you have a brown book on a white sheet of paper , on a red tablecloth . You have nothing to do but to put on spaces of red , white , and brown , in the same shape , and gradated from dark to light in the same degrees , and your ...
... Suppose you have a brown book on a white sheet of paper , on a red tablecloth . You have nothing to do but to put on spaces of red , white , and brown , in the same shape , and gradated from dark to light in the same degrees , and your ...
Page 58
... suppose yourself condescending in doing this . The greatest masters are always fond of drawing pat terns ; and the greater they are , the more pains they take to do it truly . Nor can there be better practice at any time , as ...
... suppose yourself condescending in doing this . The greatest masters are always fond of drawing pat terns ; and the greater they are , the more pains they take to do it truly . Nor can there be better practice at any time , as ...
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Common terms and phrases
angles arch artists Athena bas-relief beautiful blue boughs brush character chiaroscuro circle clouds colour construction COROLLARY curve cutting the sight-line Dædalus dark delicate distance dividing-point draw edge engraving equal expression figure FIND THE VANISHING-POINT flat give given in position gradation Greek grey hand horizontal line HORIZONTAL PLANE Idolatry imitate inclined line Join kind leaf leaves LET A B light and shade line A B look masses measuring-line merely Nature never object observe outline painter painting paper Paul Veronese pencil Phidias picture piece Pindar plane plate polygonal position and magnitude practice Problem produce Prussian blue pyramid racter rectangle represent round sculpture seen shadow side sight-magnitude sight-point sketch square stone stone pine student surface things tint Titian touch tree true Turner vertical line Zeus
Popular passages
Page 116 - Set me as a seal upon thine heart, as a seal upon thine arm : for love is strong as death ; jealousy is cruel as the grave : the coals thereof are coals of fire, which hath a most vehement flame...
Page 153 - ... you will find in practice, that brilliancy of hue, and vigour of light, and even the aspect of transparency in shade, are essentially dependent on this character alone ; hardness, coldness, and opacity resulting far more from equality of colour than from nature of colour.
Page xi - I would rather teach drawing that my pupils may learn to love Nature, than teach the looking at Nature that they may learn to draw.
Page 188 - Now in art every colour has an opponent colour, which, if brought near it, will relieve it more completely than any other ; so, also, every form and line may be made more striking to the eye by an opponent form or line near them ; a curved line is set off by a straight...
Page viii - God, by which the heavens were of old, and the earth, standing out of the water and in the water...
Page 178 - Rivers in this way are just like wise men, who keep one side of their life for play and another for work ; and can be brilliant, and chattering, and transparent when they are at ease, and yet take deep counsel on the other side when they set themselves to the main purpose.
Page 167 - Thus a musician composes an air, by putting notes together in certain relations ; a poet composes a poem, by putting thoughts and words in pleasant order ; and a painter a picture, by putting thoughts, forms, and colours in pleasant order. In all these cases, observe, an intended unity must be the result of composition. A paviour cannot be said to compose the heap of stones which he empties from his cart, nor the sower the handful of seed which he scatters from his hand. It is the essence of composition...