§ 1. Such having been the effects of the pursuit of ideal beauty on the
religious mind of Europe, we might be tempted next to consider in what way the
same movement affected the art which concerned itself with profane subject, and,
through that art, the whole temper of modern civilization. decorative paintings
I shall, however, merely glance at this question. It is a very painful and a
very wide one. Its discussion cannot come properly within the limits, or even
within the aim, of a work like this; it ought to be made the subject of a
separate essay, and that essay should be written by some one who had passed less
of his life than I have among the mountains, and more of it among men. But one
or two points may be suggested for the reader to reflect upon at his
leisure. art oil paintings online
§ 2. I said just now that we might be tempted to consider how this pursuit of
the ideal affected profane art. Strictly speaking, it brought that art
into existence. As long as men sought for truth first, and beauty secondarily,
they cared chiefly, of course, for the chief truth, and all art was
instinctively religious. But as soon as they sought for beauty first, and truth
secondarily, they were punished by losing sight of spiritual truth altogether,
and the profane (properly so called) schools of art were instantly
developed. decorative paintings
The perfect human beauty, which, to a large part of the community, was by far
the most interesting feature in the work of the rising school, might indeed be
in some degree consistent with the agony of Madonnas, and the repentance of
Magdalenes; but could not be exhibited in fulness, when the subjects, however
irreverently treated, nevertheless demanded some decency in the artist, and some
gravity in the spectator. The newly acquired powers of rounding limbs, and
tinting lips, had too
little scope in the sanctities even of the softest womanhood; and the newly
acquired conceptions of the nobility of nakedness could in no wise be expressed
beneath the robes of the prelate or the sackcloth of the recluse. But the source
from which these ideas had been received afforded also full field for their
expression; the heathen mythology, which had furnished the examples of these
heights of art, might again become the subject of the inspirations it had
kindled;—with the additional advantage that it could now be delighted in,
without being believed; that its errors might be indulged, unrepressed by its
awe; and those of its deities whose function was temptation might be worshipped,
in scorn of those whose hands were charged with chastisement. oil paintings for sale
So, at least, men dreamed in their foolishness,—to find, as the ages wore on,
that the returning Apollo bore not only his lyre, but his arrows; and that at
the instant of Cytherea's resurrection to the sunshine, Persephone had
reascended her throne in the deep. art oil paintings
§ 3. Little thinking this, they gave themselves up fearlessly to the chase of
the new delight, and exhausted themselves in the pursuit of an ideal now doubly
false. Formerly, though they attempted to reach an unnatural beauty, it was yet
in representing historical facts and real persons; now they sought for
the same unnatural beauty in representing tales which they knew to be
fictitious, and personages who they knew had never existed. Such a state of
things had never before been found in any nation. Every people till then had
painted the acts of their kings, the triumphs of their armies, the beauty of
their race, or the glory of their gods. They showed the things they had seen or
done; the beings they truly loved or faithfully adored. But the ideal art of
modern Europe was the shadow of a shadow; and with mechanism substituted for
perception, and bodily beauty for spiritual life, it set itself to represent men
it had never seen, customs it had never practised, and gods in whom it had never
believed. buy oil paintings online
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