§ 22. Now, historical or simply narrative art is very precious in its proper
place and way, but it is never great art until the poetical or
imaginative power touches it; and in proportion to the stronger manifestation of
this power, it becomes greater and greater, while the highest art is purely
imaginative, all its materials being wrought into their form by invention; and
it differs, therefore, from the simple historical painting, exactly as
Wordsworth's stanza, above quoted, differs from Saussure's plain narrative of
the parallel fact; and the imaginative painter differs from the historical
painter in the manner that Wordsworth differs from Saussure. oil paintings online
§ 23. Farther, imaginative art always includes historical art; so
that, strictly speaking, according to the analogy above used, we meet with the
pure blue, and with the crimson ruling the blue and changing it into kingly
purple, but not with the pure crimson: for all imagination must deal with the
knowledge it has before accumulated; it never produces anything but by
combination or contemplation. Creation, in the full sense, is impossible to it.
And the mode in which the historical faculties are included by it is often quite
simple, and easily seen. Thus, in Hunt's great poetical picture of the Light of
the World, the whole thought and arrangement of the picture being imaginative,
the several details of it are wrought out with simple portraiture; the ivy, the
jewels, the creeping plants, and the moonlight being calmly studied or
remembered from the things themselves. But of all these special ways in which
the invention works with plain facts, we shall have to treat farther
afterwards. cheap oil paintings
§ 24. And now, finally, since this poetical power includes the historical, if
we glance back to the other qualities required in great art, and put all
together, we find that the sum of them is simply the sum of all the powers of
man. For as (1) the choice of the high subject involves all conditions of right
moral choice, and as (2) the love of beauty involves all conditions of right
admiration, and as (3) the grasp of truth involves all strength of sense,
evenness of judgment, and honesty of purpose, and as (4) the poetical power
involves all swiftness of invention, and accuracy of historical memory, the sum of all these
powers is the sum of the human soul. Hence we see why the word "Great" is used
of this art. It is literally great. It compasses and calls forth the entire
human spirit, whereas any other kind of art, being more or less small or narrow,
compasses and calls forth only part of the human spirit. Hence the idea
of its magnitude is a literal and just one, the art being simply less or greater
in proportion to the number of faculties it exercises and addresses.[9]
And this is the ultimate meaning of the definition I gave of it long ago, as
containing the "greatest number of the greatest ideas." wholesale oil paintings
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