Anecdotes of Painting in England;: With Some Account of the Principal Artists; and Incidental Notes on Other Arts;J. Dodsley, 1786 - Artists, British |
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Page viii
... master Crewe ? One prophecy I will venture to make ; fir Joshua is not a plagiary , but will beget a thoufand . The exuberance of his invention will be the grammar of future painters of portrait . 3 lovers lovers of arts the industry of ...
... master Crewe ? One prophecy I will venture to make ; fir Joshua is not a plagiary , but will beget a thoufand . The exuberance of his invention will be the grammar of future painters of portrait . 3 lovers lovers of arts the industry of ...
Page ix
... masters , when we confider that they fpent their lives in attaining perfection ; and who , foaring above their modest timidity , has transferred the vigour of Raphael to her copies in water - colours . There will be recorded the living ...
... masters , when we confider that they fpent their lives in attaining perfection ; and who , foaring above their modest timidity , has transferred the vigour of Raphael to her copies in water - colours . There will be recorded the living ...
Page xiii
... master . If Raphael died young , fo did Le Sueur ; the former had feen the antique , the latter only prints from Raphael : yet in the Chartreuse , what airs of heads ! what harmony of colouring ! what aerial perspective ! How Grecian ...
... master . If Raphael died young , fo did Le Sueur ; the former had feen the antique , the latter only prints from Raphael : yet in the Chartreuse , what airs of heads ! what harmony of colouring ! what aerial perspective ! How Grecian ...
Page 1
... masters , who not only laboured under the timidity of the new art , but who faw no- thing but the ftarch and unpliant habits of the times , we were fallen into a loose , and , if I may use the word , a diffolute kind of paint- VOL . IV ...
... masters , who not only laboured under the timidity of the new art , but who faw no- thing but the ftarch and unpliant habits of the times , we were fallen into a loose , and , if I may use the word , a diffolute kind of paint- VOL . IV ...
Page 6
... a Catalan , who fettled in France , and became master of the menagerie at Versailles . The fon being born at Paris in 1663 , Louis the fourteenth did did him the honour of being his godfather , and 6 Painters in the Reign of George I.
... a Catalan , who fettled in France , and became master of the menagerie at Versailles . The fon being born at Paris in 1663 , Louis the fourteenth did did him the honour of being his godfather , and 6 Painters in the Reign of George I.
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affifted almoſt architect architecture artiſts beauty beſt beſtowed bufinefs buſineſs Claud Lorrain colouring copied Dahl defigned died diſtinguiſhed ditto drawing duke earl England Engliſh engraver eſtabliſhed executed faid fame faſhion fatire fays fcenes fculp feems feen fent feveral fhould fide fince finiſhed firft firſt fmall fome foon fquare ftatues ftill ftudied ftyle fubject fucceeded fuch garden genius George GEORGE KNAPTON Gibbs Godfrey Kneller Gothic architecture grace himſelf hiſtory Hogarth inv houfe houſe imitated Inigo Jones James Thornhill Jervas John juſt Kent king Kneller laft landſcape laſt leaſt lefs lord lord Burlington maſter merit mezzotinto moft moſt muſt nature obferve paffed painted painter parterre perfon plates portraits prefent prints profeffion publiſhed refided reign Robert Walpole ſcene ſeem ſeen ſeveral ſhall ſmall ſtaircaſe ſteps Stourhead ſtudied ſtyle tafte taſte thefe theſe thofe Thornhill thoſe tion ture uſe vafes Vertue whofe whoſe
Popular passages
Page 269 - Ran nedlar, vifiting each plant, and fed Flow'rs worthy of Paradife, which not nice art In beds and curious knots, but nature boon Pour'd forth profufe on hill and dale and plain, Both where the morning fun firft warmly fmote The open field, and where the unpierc'd {hade Imbrown'd the noon-tide
Page 252 - With deeper red the full pomegranate glows.. The branch here bends beneath the weighty pear, And verdant olives flourifh round the year. « * * * * * Beds of all various herbs, for ever green, In beauteous order terminate the fcene. Alcinous's garden was planted by
Page 276 - for that purpofe, if this piece of gardening had been then in as much vogue as it is now. " From the middle of this parterre is a defcent by many fteps flying on each fide of a grotto that lies between them,, covered with lead and flat, into the lower garden which is. all fruit-trees ranged
Page 273 - when I knew it about thirty years ago. It was made by the countefs of Bedford, efteemed among the greateft wits of her time, and celebrated by doctor Donne ; and with very great care, excellent contrivance, and much coft ; but greater fums may be thrown away without
Page 279 - whereas in regular figures it is .hard to make any great and remarkable faults.*' Fortunately Kent and a few others were not quite fo timid, or we might ftill be going up and down flairs in the open air. It is true, we have heard much lately, as
Page 288 - The contiguous ground of the park without the funk fence was to be harmonized with the lawn within ; and the garden in its turn was to be fet free from its prim regularity, that it might aflbrt with the wilder country without. The funk fence afcertained the fpecific garden, but that it might not draw too obvious a line of
Page 295 - through the gloom from the grotto to the opening day, the retiring and again aflembling {hades, the dufky groves, the larger lawn, and the folemnity of the termination at the cyprefles that lead up to his mother's tomb, are managed with exquifite judgment; and though lord Peterborough affifted him To form his quincunx and to rank his vines, thofe were not the
Page 304 - with fo ferious an air of wild and uncultivated extent, that •when you look down on this feeming foreft, you are amazed to find it contain a very few acres. In general, except as a fcreen to conceal fome deformity, or as a fhelter in
Page 279 - hardly advife any of thefe attempts in the figure of gardens among us, they are adventures of too hard achievement for any common hands : and though there may be more honour if they fucceed well, yet there is more
Page 288 - reafons. No fooner was this fimple enchantment made, than levelling, mowing and rolling, followed. The contiguous ground of the park without the funk fence was to be harmonized with the lawn within ; and the garden in its turn was to be fet free from its prim regularity, that it might