§ 1. I am afraid the reader must be, by this time, almost tired of hearing
about truth. But I cannot help this; the more I have examined the various forms
of art, and exercised myself in receiving their differently intended
impressions, the more I have found this truthfulness a final test, the only test
of lasting power; and, although our concern in this part of our inquiry is,
professedly, with the beauty which blossoms out of truth, still I find myself
compelled always to gather it by the stalk, not by the petals. I cannot hold the
beauty, nor be sure of it for a moment, but by feeling for that strong stem. art oil paintings
We have, in the preceding chapters, glanced through the various operations of
the imaginative power of man; with this almost painfully monotonous result, that
its greatness and honor were always simply in proportion to the quantity of
truth it grasped. And now the question, left undetermined some hundred pages
back (Chap. II. § 6), recurs to us in a simpler form
than it could before. How far is this true imagination to be truly represented?
How far should the perfect conception of Pallas be so given as to look like
Pallas herself, rather than like the picture of Pallas? abstract oil paintings
§ 2. A question, this, at present of notable interest, and demanding instant
attention. For it seemed to us, in reasoning about Dante's views of art, that he
was, or might be, right in desiring realistic completeness; and yet, in what we
have just seen of the grotesque ideal, it seemed there was a certain
desirableness in incompleteness. And the schools of art in Europe are, at this
moment, set in two hostile ranks,—not nobly hostile, but spitefully and
scornfully, having for one of the main grounds of their dispute the apparently
simple question, how far a picture may be carried forward in detail, or how soon
it may be considered as finished.art oil paintings online
I propose, therefore, in the present chapter, to examine, as thoroughly as I
can, the real signification of this word, Finish, as applied to art, and to see
if in this, as in other matters, our almost tiresome test is not the only right
one; whether there be not a fallacious finish and a faithful
finish, and whether the dispute, which seems to be only about completion and
incompletion, has not therefore, at the bottom of it, the old and deep grounds
of fallacy and fidelity.
§ 3. Observe, first, there are two great and separate senses in which we call
a thing finished, or well finished. One, which refers to the mere neatness and
completeness of the actual work, as we speak of a well-finished knife-handle or
ivory toy (as opposed to ill-cut ones); and, secondly, a sense which refers to
the effect produced by the thing done, as we call a picture well-finished if it
is so full in its details,original oil paintings, as to produce the effect of reality on the spectator.
And, in England, we seem at present to value highly the first sort of finish
which belongs to workmanship, in our manufactures and general doings of
any kind, but to despise totally the impressive finish which belongs to the
work; and therefore we like smooth ivories better than rough ones,—but
careless scrawls or daubs better than the most complete paintings. Now, I
believe that we exactly reverse the fitness of judgment in this matter, and that
we ought, on the contrary, to despise the finish of workmanship, which is
done for vanity's sake, and to love the finish of work, which is done for
truth's sake,—that we ought, in a word, to finish our ivory toys more roughly,
and our pictures more delicately.
Let us think over this matter. cheap oil paintings
§ 4. Perhaps one of the most remarkable points of difference between the
English and Continental nations is in the degree of finish given to their
ordinary work. It is enough to cross from Dover to Calais to feel this
difference; and to travel farther only increases the sense of it. English
windows for the most part fit their sashes, and their woodwork is neatly planed
and smoothed; French windows are larger, heavier, and framed with wood that
looks as if it had been cut to its shape with a hatchet; they have curious and
cumbrous fastenings, and can only be forced asunder or together by some
ingenuity and effort, and even then not properly. So with everything else—French, Italian, and
German, and, as far as I know, Continental. Foreign drawers do not slide as well
as ours: foreign knives do not cut so well; foreign wheels do not turn so well,
and we commonly plume ourselves much upon this, believing that generally the
English people do their work better and more thoroughly, or as they say, "turn
it out of their hands in better style," than foreigners. I do not know how far
this is really the case. There may be a flimsy neatness,oil paintings for sale, as well as a
substantial roughness; it does not necessarily follow that the window which
shuts easiest will last the longest, or that the harness which glitters the most
is assuredly made of the toughest leather. I am afraid, that if this peculiar
character of finish in our workmanship ever arose from a greater heartiness and
thoroughness in our ways of doing things, it does so only now in the case of our
best manufacturers; and that a great deal of the work done in England, however
good in appearance, is but treacherous and rotten in substance. Still, I think
that there is really in the English mind, for the most part, a stronger desire
to do things as well as they can be done, and less inclination to put up with
inferiorities or insufficiencies, than in general characterise the temper of
foreigners. There is in this conclusion no ground for national vanity; for
though the desire to do things as well as they can be done at first appears like
a virtue, it is certainly not so in all its forms. On the contrary, it proceeds
in nine cases out of ten more from vanity than conscientiousness; and that,canvas paintings for sale, moreover, often a weak vanity. I suppose that as much finish is displayed in the
fittings of the private carriages of our young rich men as in any other
department of English manufacture; and that our St. James's Street cabs,
dogcarts, and liveries are singularly perfect in their way. But the feeling with
which this perfection is insisted upon (however desirable as a sign of energy of
purpose) is not in itself a peculiarly amiable or noble feeling; neither is it
an ignoble disposition which would induce a country gentleman to put up with
certain deficiencies in the appearance of his country-made carriage. It is true
that such philosophy may degenerate into negligence, and that much thought and
long discussion would be needed before we could determine satisfactorily the
limiting lines between virtuous contentment and faultful carelessness; but at all events
we have no right at once to pronounce ourselves the wisest people because we
like to do all things in the best way. There are many little things which to do
admirably is to waste both time and cost; and the real question is not so much
whether we have done a given thing as well as possible, as whether we have
turned a given quantity of labor to the best account. art oil paintings
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