Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

Reynolds, Joshua; Zimmern, Helen; Zimmern, Helen [Editor]
Discourses — London: Walter Scott, 1887

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.61012#0069
Overview
Facsimile
0.5
1 cm
facsimile
Scroll
OCR fulltext
THE THIRD DISCOURSE.

35

to unlearn, as their manners were nearly approaching to
this desirable simplicity; while the modern artist, before he
can see the truth of things, is obliged to remove a veil, with
which the fashion of the times has thought proper to cover
her.
Having gone thus far in our investigation of the great
style in painting ; if we now should suppose that the artist
has found the true idea of beauty, which enables him to
give his works a correct and perfect design; if we should
suppose, also, that he has acquired a knowledge of the
unadulterated habits of nature, which gives him simplicity;
the rest of his task is, perhaps, less than is generally
imagined. Beauty and simplicity have so great a share in
the composition of a great style, that he who has acquired
them has little else to learn. It must not, indeed, be
forgotten that there is a nobleness of conception which goes
beyond anything in the mere exhibition even of perfect
form; there is an art of animating and dignifying the
figures with intellectual grandeur, of impressing the appear-
ance of philosophic wisdom, or heroic virtue. This can
oily be acquired by him that enlarges the sphere of his
understanding by a variety of knowledge, and warms his
imagination with the best productions of ancient and
modern poetry.
A hand thus exercised, and a mind thus instructed, will
bring the art to a higher degree of excellence than, perhaps,
it has hitherto attained in this country. Such a student will
disdain the humbler walks of painting, which, however
profitable, can never assure him a permanent reputation.
He will leave the meaner artist servilely to suppose that
those are the best pictures which are most likely to de-
ceive the spectator. He will permit the lower painter,
like the florist or collector of shells, to exhibit the minute
 
Annotationen