The matter, therefore, in which associative imagination can be shown is than which admits of great license and variety of arrangements, and in which a
certain amount of relation only is required; as especially in the elements of
landscape painting, in which best it may be illustrated. cheap oil paintings
When an unimaginative painter is about to draw a tree, (and we will suppose
him, for better illustration of the point in question, to have good feeling and
correct knowledge of the nature of trees,) he probably lays on his paper such a
general form as he knows to be characteristic of the tree to be drawn, and such
as he believes will fall in agreeably with the other masses of his picture,
which we will suppose partly prepared. When this form is set down, he assuredly
finds it has done something he did not intend it to do. It has mimicked some
prominent line,oil painting on canvas, or overpowered some necessary mass. He begins pruning and
changing, and after several experiments, succeeds in obtaining a form which does
no material mischief to any other. To this form he proceeds to attach a trunk,
and having probably a received notion or rule (for the unimaginative painter
never works without a principle) that tree trunks ought to lean first one way
and then the other as they go up, and ought not to stand under the middle of the
tree, he sketches a serpentine form of requisite propriety; when it has gone up
far enough, that is till it begins to look disagreeably long,oil painting on canvas for sale, he will begin to
ramify it, and if there be another tree in the picture with two large branches,
he knows that this, by all laws of composition, ought to have three or four, or
some different number; one because he knows that if three or four branches start
from the same point they will look formal, therefore he makes them start from
points one above another, and because equal distances are improper, therefore
they shall start at unequal distances. When they are fairly started, he knows
they must undulate or go backwards and forwards, which accordingly he makes them
do at random; and because he knows that all forms ought to be contrasted,cheap oil paintings for sale, therefore he makes one bend down while the other three go up. The three that go
up he knows must not go up [Page
155] without interfering with each other, and so he makes two of them
cross. He thinks it also proper that there should be variety of character in
them, so he makes the one that bends down graceful and flexible, and of the two
that cross, he splinters one and makes a stump of it. He repeats the process
among the more complicated minor boughs, until coming to the smallest, he thinks
farther care unnecessary, but draws them freely, and by chance. Having to put on
the foliage, he will make it flow properly in the direction of the tree's
growth, he will make all the extremities graceful, but will be grievously
plagued by finding them come all alike, and at last will be obliged to spoil a
number of them altogether, in order to obtain opposition. They will not,
however, be united in this their spoliation, but will remain uncomfortably
separate and individually ill-tempered. He consoles himself by the reflection
that it is unnatural for all of them to be equally perfect. abstract oil paintings
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