Welcome to my blog!Cheap oil paintings for sale at cheap-oil-paintings-online.blogspot.com.
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Secondly. Of things capable of variety of scale
Another kind of exaggeration is of things whose size is variable to a size or
degree greater than that usual with them, as in waves and mountains; and there are hardly any limits to this exaggeration so long as the laws which
nature observes in her increase be observed. Thus, for instance: the form and
polished surface of a breaking ripple three inches high, are not representation
of either the form or the surface of the surf of a storm,art oil painting for sale, nodding ten feet above
the beach; neither would the cutting ripple of a breeze upon a lake if simply
exaggerated, represent the forms of Atlantic surges; but as nature increases her
bulk, she diminishes the angles of ascent, and increases her divisions; and if
we would represent surges of size greater than ever existed, which it is lawful
to do, we must carry out these operations to still greater extent. Thus, Turner,
in his picture of the Slave Ship, divides the whole sea into two masses of
enormous swell,oil paintings for sale, and conceals the horizon by a gradual slope of only two or three
degrees. This is intellectual exaggeration. In the Academy exhibition of 1843,
there was, in one of the smaller rooms, a black picture of a storm, in which
there appeared on the near sea, just about to be overwhelmed by an enormous
breaker, curling right over it, an object at first sight liable to be taken for
a walnut shell, but which, on close examination, proved to be a ship with mast
and sail, with Christ and his twelve disciples in it. This is childish
exaggeration, because it is impossible, by the laws of matter and motion, that
such a breaker should ever exist. Again in mountains,abstract oil paintings, we have repeatedly
observed the necessary building up and multitudinous division of the higher
peaks, and the smallness of the slopes by which they usually rise. We may,
therefore, build up the mountain as high as we please, but we must do it in
nature's way, and not in impossible peaks and precipices; not but that a daring
feature is admissible here and there, as the Matterhorn is admitted by nature;
but we must not compose a picture out of such exceptions; we may use them, but
they must be as exceptions exhibited. I shall have much to say, when we come to
treat of the sublime, of the various modes of treating mountain form, so that at
present I shall only point to an unfortunate instance of inexcusable and
effectless exaggeration in the distance of Turner's vignette to Milton, (the
temptation on the mountain,) and desire the reader to compare it with legitimate
exaggeration, in the vignette to the second part of Jacqueline, in Rogers's
poems. reproduction oil paintings uk
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment