Outline History of the Fine Arts: Embracing a View of the Rise, Progress, and Influence of the Arts Among Different Nations, Ancient and Modern, with Notices of the Character and Works of Many Celebrated Artists ...Harper and Brothers, 1840 - 330 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 21
Page 75
... and Cimabue , the father of modern paint- ers , and the reviver of the art in Italy , turned a portion of the attention of his great genius to architecture . He studied the antique critically , and became ARCHITECTURE . 75.
... and Cimabue , the father of modern paint- ers , and the reviver of the art in Italy , turned a portion of the attention of his great genius to architecture . He studied the antique critically , and became ARCHITECTURE . 75.
Page 76
... studied the antique critically , and became , theoretically , a thorough classical architect . By his instruction Arnolpho Lapo be- came very proficient in the art , and was esteem- ed the wonder of the age . He built the cathe- dral of ...
... studied the antique critically , and became , theoretically , a thorough classical architect . By his instruction Arnolpho Lapo be- came very proficient in the art , and was esteem- ed the wonder of the age . He built the cathe- dral of ...
Page 83
... studied Vitruvius carefully , and from his minute descriptions , formed beautiful plans These the capacious mind of Jones , and the scientific genius of Wren improved , and they left behind them as monuments of their genius , the most ...
... studied Vitruvius carefully , and from his minute descriptions , formed beautiful plans These the capacious mind of Jones , and the scientific genius of Wren improved , and they left behind them as monuments of their genius , the most ...
Page 142
... studied rather to please the beholder with a portraiture of the simple truths of nature , than to astonish by grandeur and majesty . They studied grace in attitude , as well as truth in symmetry , and tales of heroism , love , and wo ...
... studied rather to please the beholder with a portraiture of the simple truths of nature , than to astonish by grandeur and majesty . They studied grace in attitude , as well as truth in symmetry , and tales of heroism , love , and wo ...
Page 160
... studied in the same school that Phidias , Praxiteles , and Lysippus did , and hence , instead of imitating he rivalled them . And yet with all his originality of conception , he was ambitious to imitate the antique so far as to attempt ...
... studied in the same school that Phidias , Praxiteles , and Lysippus did , and hence , instead of imitating he rivalled them . And yet with all his originality of conception , he was ambitious to imitate the antique so far as to attempt ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
adorned Albert Durer ancient antiquity Apelles arch architects architrave Aristides of Thebes art of sculpture artist Athens beautiful building built Cæsar called capital celebrated cents century character church Cimabue coins colossal colours columns Composite order cultivated decorated domestic architecture Doric drawing Durer early edifices Egypt Egyptian eminence employed England engraving erected Etruscans excellent executed exhibit feet high flourished frieze genius Grecian Greece Greeks Hindoo honour human figure hundred years B. C. imitation invention Julius Cæsar king latter Lysippus magnificent marble ment Michael Angiolo modern monuments mosaic Muslin Nicholas Poussin origin ornaments painter painting palace Parthenon Pausanias pencil perfection Pericles period Phidias picture Pliny Polygnotus portrait practised Praxiteles present produced pyramids Raffaelle reign repre represented Roman Rome ruins sacred says sculp sculpture seen specimens splendid statue stone style supposed taste temple Thebes tion Titian tombs ture Vitruvius walls wood writers Zeuxis
Popular passages
Page 3 - The Swiss Family Robinson; or, the Adventures of a Father and Mother and Four Sons on a Desert Island. With Explanatory Notes and Illustrations. First and Second Series. New Edition, complete in one volume, 3s. 6d. Geography for my Children. By Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe. Author of " Uncle Tom's Cabin,
Page 210 - Thou shalt not make to thyself any graven image, nor the likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or in the earth beneath, or in the water under the earth. Thou shalt not bow down to them, nor worship them...
Page 222 - His line is uniformly grand. Character and beauty were admitted only as far as they could be made subservient to grandeur. The child, the female, meanness, deformity, were by him indiscriminately stamped with grandeur. A beggar rose from his hand the patriarch of poverty ; the hump of his dwarf is impressed with dignity ; his women are moulds of generation ; his infants teem with the man ; his men are a race of giants. This is the ' Terribil Via ' hinted at by Agostino Carracci.
Page 290 - Cunio, twin brother and sister ; first reduced, imagined, and attempted to be executed in relief with a small knife on blocks of wood, made even and polished by this learned and dear sister...
Page 290 - ... attempted to be executed in relief, with a small knife on blocks of wood, made even and polished by this learned and dear sister ; continued and finished by us together, at Ravenna, from the eight pictures of our invention, painted six times larger than here represented ; engraved, explained by verses, and thus marked upon the paper, to perpetuate the number of them, and to enable us to present them to our relations and friends in testimony of gratitude, friendship, and affection. All this was...
Page 223 - He is the inventor of epic painting, in that sublime circle of the Sistine chapel which exhibits the origin, the progress, and the final dispensations of theocracy. He has personified motion in the groups of the cartoon of Pisa; embodied sentiment on the monuments of St.
Page 207 - Minotaur, which lies stretched at his feet, with the head of a bull and the body of a man.
Page 217 - To a capacity which at once penetrated the principle and real aim of the art, he joined an inequality of fancy that at one moment lent him wings for the pursuit of beauty, and the next flung him on the ground to crawl after deformity : we owe him chiaro-scuro with all its magic, we owe him caricature with all its incongruities.
Page 223 - The fabric of St. Peter's, scattered into infinity of jarring parts by Bramante and his successors, he concentrated ; suspended the cupola, and to the most complex gave the air of the most simple of edifices.
Page 141 - Daughter of Tantalus, Niobe, hear my words which are the messengers of wo ; listen to the piteous tale of our sorrows. Loose the bindings of thy hair, mother of a race of youths who have fallen beneath the deadly arrows of Phoebus. Thy sons no longer live. But what is this ? I see something more. The blood of thy daughters too is streaming around. One lies at her mother's knees ; another in her lap ; a third on the earth ; and one clings to the breast : one gazes stupified at the coming blow, and...