§ 4. It is evident that within this faithful idealism, and as one
branch of it only, will arrange itself the representation of the human form and
mind in perfection, when this perfection is rationally to be supposed or
introduced,—that is to say, in the highest personages of the story. The careless
habit of confining the term "ideal" to such representations, and not under standing the imperfect
ones to be equally ideal in their place,oil paintings online, has greatly added to the
embarrassment and multiplied the errors of artists. Thersites is just as ideal as Achilles, and Alecto as Helen; and, what is more,
all the nobleness of the beautiful ideal depends upon its being just as probable
and natural as the ugly one, and having in itself, occasionally or partially,
both faults and familiarities. If the next painter who desires to illustrate the
character of Homer's Achilles, would represent him cutting pork chops for
Ulysses, he would enable the public to understand the Homeric ideal better than they have
done for several centuries. For it is to be kept in mind that the naturalist
ideal has always in it, to the full, the power expressed by those two words.
It is naturalist, because studied from nature, and ideal, because it is mentally
arranged in a certain manner. Achilles must be represented cutting pork chops,
because that was one of the things which the nature of Achilles involved his
doing: he could not be shown wholly as Achilles, if he were not shown doing
that. But he shall do it at such time and place as Homer chooses. art oil paintings online
§ 5. Now, therefore, observe the main conclusions which follow from these two
conditions, attached always to art of this kind. First, it is to be taken
straight from nature; it is to be the plain narration of something the painter
or writer saw. Herein is the chief practical difference between the higher and
lower artists; a difference which I feel more and more every day that I give to
the study of art. All the great men see what they paint before they paint
it,—see it in a perfectly passive manner,—cannot help seeing it if they would;
whether in their mind's eye, or in bodily fact, does not matter; very often the
mental vision is, I believe, in men of imagination, clearer than the bodily one;
but vision it is, of one kind or another,—the whole scene, character, or
incident passing before them as in second sight, whether they will or no, and
requiring them to paint it as they see it; they not daring, under the might of
its presence, to
alter one jot or tittle of it as they write it down or paint it down; it being to them
in its own kind and degree always a true vision or Apocalypse, and invariably
accompanied in their hearts by a feeling correspondent to the words,—"Write the
things which thou hast seen, and the things whichare." original oil paintings
And the whole power, whether of painter or poet, to describe rightly what we
call an ideal thing, depends upon its being thus, to him, not an ideal, but a
real thing. No man ever did or ever will work well, but either from
actual sight or sight of faith; and all that we call ideal in Greek or any other
art, because to us it is false and visionary, was, to the makers of it, true and
existent. The heroes of Phidias are simply representations of such noble human
persons as he every day saw, and the gods of Phidias simply representations of
such noble divine persons as he thoroughly believed to exist, and did in mental
vision truly behold. Hence I said in the second preface to the Seven Lamps of
Architecture: "All great art represents something that it sees or believes in;
nothing unseen or uncredited." where to buy oil paintings
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