登陆注册
37359300000035

第35章

Delivered to the Students of the Royal Academy on the Distribution of the Prizes, December 10th, 1776, by the President.

Gentlemen,--It has been my uniform endeavour, since I first addressed you from this place, to impress you strongly with one ruling idea.I wished you to be persuaded, that success in your art depends almost entirely on your own industry; but the industry which I principally recommended, is not the industry of the HANDS, but of the MIND.

As our art is not a divine gift, so neither is it a mechanical trade.Its foundations are laid in solid science.And practice, though essential to perfection, can never attain that to which it aims, unless it works under the direction of principle.

Some writers upon art carry this point too far, and suppose that such a body of universal and profound learning is requisite, that the very enumeration of its kind is enough to frighten a beginner.Vitruvius, after going through the many accomplishments of nature, and the many acquirements of learning, necessary to an architect, proceeds with great gravity to assert that he ought to be well skilled in the civil law, that he may not be cheated in the title of the ground he builds on.

But without such exaggeration, we may go so far as to assert, that a painter stands in need of more knowledge than is to be picked off his pallet, or collected by looking on his model, whether it be in life or in picture.He can never be a great artist who is grossly illiterate.

Every man whose business is description ought to be tolerably conversant with the poets in some language or other, that he may imbibe a poetical spirit and enlarge his stock of ideas.He ought to acquire a habit of comparing and divesting his notions.He ought not to be wholly unacquainted with that part of philosophy which gives him an insight into human nature, and relates to the manners, characters, passions, and affections.He ought to know something concerning the mind, as well as a great deal concerning the body of man.

For this purpose, it is not necessary that he should go into such acompass of reading, as must, by distracting his attention, disqualify him for the practical part of his profession, and make him sink the performer in the critic.Reading, if it can be made the favourite recreation of his leisure hours, will improve and enlarge his mind without retarding his actual industry.

What such partial and desultory reading cannot afford, may be supplied by the conversation of learned and ingenious men, which is the best of all substitutes for those who have not the means or opportunities of deep study.There are many such men in this age; and they will be pleased with communicating their ideas to artists, when they see them curious and docile, if they are treated with that respect and deference which is so justly their due.Into such society, young artists, if they make it the point of their ambition, will by degrees be admitted.There, without formal teaching, they will insensibly come to feel and reason like those they live with, and find a rational and systematic taste imperceptibly formed in their minds, which they will know how to reduce to a standard, by applying general truth to their own purposes, better perhaps than those to whom they owed the original sentiment.

Of these studies and this conversation, the desired and legitimate offspring is a power of distinguishing right from wrong, which power applied to works of art is denominated taste.Let me then, without further introduction, enter upon an examination whether taste be so far beyond our reach as to be unattainable by care, or be so very vague and capricious that no care ought to be employed about it.

It has been the fate of arts to be enveloped in mysterious and incomprehensible language, as if it was thought necessary that even the terms should correspond to the idea entertained of the instability and uncertainty of the rules which they expressed.

To speak of genius and taste as any way connected with reason or common sense, would be, in the opinion of some towering talkers, to speak like a man who possessed neither, who had never felt that enthusiasm, or, to use their own inflated language, was never warmed by that Promethean fire, which animates the canvas and vivifies the marble.

If, in order to be intelligible, I appear to degrade art by bringing herdown from her visionary situation in the clouds, it is only to give her a more solid mansion upon the earth.It is necessary that at some time or other we should see things as they really are, and not impose on ourselves by that false magnitude with which objects appear when viewed indistinctly as through a mist.

We will allow a poet to express his meaning, when his meaning is not well known to himself, with a certain degree of obscurity, as it is one source of the sublime.But when, in plain prose, we gravely talk of courting the muse in shady bowers, waiting the call and inspiration of genius, finding out where he inhabits, and where he is to be invoked with the greatest success; of attending to times and seasons when the imagination shoots with the greatest vigour, whether at the summer solstice or the equinox, sagaciously observing how much the wild ******* and liberty of imagination is cramped by attention to established rules, and how this same imagination begins to grow dim in advanced age, smothered and deadened by too much judgment.When we talk such language, or entertain such sentiments as these, we generally rest contented with mere words, or at best entertain notions not only groundless, but pernicious.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天道弥仙

    天道弥仙

    天道乾坤,唯念可破,千秋风云,乘于一瞬,御剑弥仙,无我无求,破而后立,方有所成。天道,人情,为何不能共存?上古的神族,仙族,以及流传的神秘的后人。人鬼魔仙神妖,会有什么样的故事?这是一个孩童的奇遇之旅,情感之旅,热血之旅,也是他成长的过程!敬请期待,希望大家多多支持,欢迎收藏推荐,谢谢!感谢中国作者素材库免费封面支持一般在晚上6点或8点更新,望阅读本书的兄弟们阅读愉快,身心舒爽!!!
  • 乔屠夫的女儿想当国公

    乔屠夫的女儿想当国公

    不喜欢杀猪的将军不是一位好国公。穿越生活太无趣,乔巧巧给自己定了个小目标,把本该亲爹继承的国公爵位抢过来。亲爹离家出走当起了屠夫,……论怎么从屠夫的女儿到史上第一女国公,啊哟,不错哦!奥利给!
  • 听秋声馆词话

    听秋声馆词话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 金权和王权

    金权和王权

    柯南醒来发现得到皇帝系统,自由穿梭在现实和异世界之中,且看柯南是如何在21世纪建立起一个支配全球的商业帝国,如何在异时空里王权至上脚踏万族!
  • 九州辟邪传

    九州辟邪传

    妖魔乱世,九州风起,金戈铁马留下,血与泪的歌。在黑暗中积累了几百年的阴谋终于浮出水面。谁在算计与窥探,谁又能够担起拯救九州的重任,所谓恩怨相对,家国大义可在否。且听先生妙语,观世间万象。
  • 我欲踏天

    我欲踏天

    道衍轮回,不羡镜花水月;仙戮十方,休问造化三千;一条气势磅礴的荒脉万年死寂,究竟蛰伏着何等惊天秘辛?一个个道尊大帝前赴后继,只为追逐那星空中亘古长存的杀狱,究竟窥探到了何等的天机?凡人白漠为族人所害、误入死地、得造化钟灵,一路踏破仙凡!
  • 挣脱面具

    挣脱面具

    小时候的单纯到长大都已经变得面目全非,该如何去找寻他们或者自己的本心呢,和他们一起不活在面具之下呢?慢慢的找回最简单的自我活下去
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 失败的狮王托克

    失败的狮王托克

    所选寓言,文笔流畅,语言朴素,短小精炼,长不过千字,短的仅有几十字,为了便于读者理解,大都在文末点明寓意,非常适合青少年阅读。这些寓言,取材于生活,多以动物为角色,采用拟人的手法,揭示了深刻的现实,或哲理,或教训,或讽喻。本书的另一特点是,为了吸引青少年的阅读兴趣,寓言大都是以童话形式撰写,内容轻松活泼,寓意贴近生活,让青少年在阅读中“删去昨天的烦恼,选择今天的快乐,设置明天的幸福,存储永远的爱心,粘贴美丽的心情,复制开心的时刻。”
  • 营花

    营花

    女主女扮男装混进训练营。却被逮个真着。“那小白脸哪来的?”指挥官眼睛扫向她。小兵颤颤巍巍的不敢看他的眼睛,“是...是...。”女强男强。