登陆注册
37927600000105

第105章 CHAPTER XX THE STONE MUGS(5)

And with his mother's consent, too. Not that he had asked it in so many words and stood hesitating, fearing to take the divergent path until he could take her willing blessing with him. He had made his decision firmly and against her wishes. She had kept silent at first, and had watched his progress as she had watched his baby steps, tearfully--prayerfully at times--standing ready to catch him if he fell. But that was over now. The bigness of her vision covering margins wide enough for new impressions, impressions which her broad mind, great enough and honest enough to confess its mistakes, always welcomed and understood, had long since made clear to her what in her early anxiety she had ignored:

--that if her son had inherited the creative and imaginative gifts of his father (those gifts which she so little understood), he had also inherited from her a certain spirit of determination, together with that practical turn of mind which had given the men of her own family their eminence. In proof of this she could not but see that the instability which she had so dreaded in his earlier years had given way to a certain fixedness of purpose and firm self-reliance. The thought of this thrilled her as nothing else in his whole career had ever done. All these things helped reconcile her to his choice of a profession.

Oliver, now thoroughly warm and dry, busied himself getting his brushes and paints together and scraping off one of Fred's palettes. Bianchi's bald head and fat, red, smooth-shaven face with its double chin--time had not dealt leniently with the distinguished lithographer--had inspired our hero to attempt a "Franz Hals smear," as Waller called it, and the Pole, when he arrived, was to sit for him in the costume of an old Dutch burgomaster, the big white ruff furnishing the high lights in the canvas.

By the time Oliver had arranged his palette the club had settled itself for work, the smoke from the pipes floating in long lines toward the ceiling, befogging the big white albatross that hung from a wire in the skylight. Munson, who had rubbed in a background of bitumen over a square tile, sat next to Fred, who was picking out, with the end of a wooden match, the outlines of an army-wagon sketched on a plate smeared with color. Simmons was looking over a portfolio that Watson, a new member, had brought with him, filled with a lot of his summer sketches made on the Normandy coast.

One view of the fish-market at Dieppe caught Oliver's eye. The slant of light burnishing the roof of the church to silver and flooding the pavement of the open square, crowded with black figures, the white caps of the fish-women indicated by crisp pats of the brush, pleased our painter immensely.

"Charming, old man," said Oliver, turning to Watson. "How long did it take you?"

"About four hours."

"Looks like it," growled Waller, reaching over Oliver's shoulder and drawing the sketch toward him.

"That's the gospel of 'smear,' Horn," and he tossed it back. "Not a figure in the group has got any drawing in it."

Waller had set his face against the new out-door school, and never lost a chance to ridicule it.

"That's not what Watson is after," exclaimed Oliver.

"The figures are mere accessories. The dominating light is the thing; he's got that"--and he held the sketch close to the overhead gas-jets so that the members could see it the better.

"Dominating light be hanged! What's the use of slobbering puddles of paint over a canvas and calling it plein air, or impressionism, or out-of-doors, or some such rot? Get down to business and DRAW. When you have done that you can talk. It can't be done in four hours, and if some of you fellows keep on the way you're going, you'll never do it in four years."

"A four hours' sketch handled as Watson has this," said Oliver, thoughtfully, "is better than four years' work on one of your Hudson Rivery things.

The sun doesn't stand still long enough for a man to get more than an expression of what he sees--that is if he's after truth. The angle of shadow changes too quickly, and so do the reflected lights."

"What's the matter with the next day?" burst out Waller. "Can't you take up your sketch where you left off? You talk as if every great picture had to be painted before luncheon."

"But there is no 'next day,'" interrupted Watson.

"I entirely agree with Horn." He had been listening to the discussion with silent interest. "No next day like the one on which you began your canvas.

The sky is different--gray, blue, or full of fleecy, sunny clouds. Your shadows are more purple, or blue or gray, depending on your sky overhead, and so are your reflections. If you go on and try to piece out your sketch, you make an almanac of it--not a portrait of what you saw. I can pick out the Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays on that kind of a sketch as soon as I see it. Nature is like a bird--if you want to surprise her, you must let go both barrels when she rises; if you miss her at your first shot you will never have another chance--not at that particular bird."

"Well, but suppose you DO happen to have two days alike," insisted Waller. "I have seen thirty days on a stretch in Venice without a cloud. What then?" The bird simile had evidently not appealed to the great critic.

"Then ten chances to one you are not the same man you were the day before," replied Watson, calmly, laying down his pipe. "You have had bad news from home or your liver is out of order, or worse still, you have seen some new subject which has taken hold of you and your first enthusiasm has oozed away.

If you persist in going on you will either undo what you did yesterday or you will trust to your memory of what you THINK yesterday was, to finish your sketch by. The first fills it full of lies and the second full of yourself; neither have anything to do with nature.

Four hours, Waller, not a minute more. You'll come to it before you die."

"That depends on what you have got to paint with," snapped out Jack Bedford, who was trying to clean a dingy-looking palette with a knife.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 红颜梦桃花满枝桠

    红颜梦桃花满枝桠

    在这乱世,权臣阴谋,红尘风雨之中,一个从青楼逃出来的女子,该何去何从......
  • 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!
  • 我追求梦想的故事之二

    我追求梦想的故事之二

    本书描写农村青年张大海,在城市努力拼搏的一段,坎坷曲折艰难的人生故事,最终成长为一名中学音乐老师,揭示出人生的真理,有梦想,肯努力,就一定能成功!
  • 地球生灵

    地球生灵

    媳妇,以前你干嘛同意和我在一起,追你的人那么多,我见过的花都没他们送你的多。我就是看你老实好欺负,特意收你看家护院给我做好吃的,好好干活知道吗。哦,这样啊……
  • 四月和你都很甜

    四月和你都很甜

    “上车!”身后的路虎不知何时与她并行,车窗缓缓摇下,露出的是一张棱角分明的脸,稀碎的刘海略略遮住眉毛,纤长而微卷的睫毛下是一双冷冽的眼,青铜色的眼瞳里看不出一丝情绪,高挺的鼻梁,削薄的唇轻抿,是叶锦淮!我微惊,愣在原地,五年了,我还是见到了他。曾经想过千千万万种相遇的方式,只是现在未免有点太草率了吧……
  • 看懂财务报表有绝招

    看懂财务报表有绝招

    本书以新颁布的《企业会计准则》为依据,按照新准则的要求,结合实例对财务报表相关科目进行逐一讲解,通过介绍两大上市公司的财务报表,教读者如何看懂财务报表。
  • 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!
  • 我是真的真有钱

    我是真的真有钱

    活了十八年的甄悠谦,在“真有钱”这个名字谐音里被笑话了十八年,直到有一天,亲爹露面,甄悠谦才发现,他真是真的真有钱!霸道总裁未婚妻,调皮捣蛋的惹祸精妹妹,扑面而来的奢旎圈子,疯狂爱慕他的女人们,叼丝变巨富大少,甄悠谦开始了痛并快乐着的精彩人生!本书又名《突然变得很有钱怎么办》,各位即将巨富的老板必需品。
  • 权少的宠妻之路

    权少的宠妻之路

    上一世,路凌虞是继承人也是一名黑客,却被一股来历不明的势力杀害,重活一世她一定要找出来那个,杀害她的人,可突然跳出来个未婚夫还爱粘着她。终于某人爆发了“权弈琛你有完没玩”路菱虞,“没完”某男说到,这是一场男主追妻,女主虐渣的的过程
  • 新脑

    新脑

    载入历史的公元二〇二〇年,后来被宣称是人类开启第四次工业革命即智能技术的革命元年。之后短短十几年,智能芯片被安装在了各种产品上,比如汽车、电脑、手机、家电等等,人们的生活发生了较之之前几百年都无法比拟的巨变,尤其是智能机器人持续地被批量生产出来,融入到了人类社会的生活当中。伟大的科技进步把人类从十八世纪的蒸汽时代、十九世纪的电气时代、二十世纪的生化时代大步迈进了二十一世纪的智能时代。就在人们沾沾自喜生活在一个幸运时代的时候,没有人意识到智能技术已经将人类的生存送上了穷途末路。还是狄更斯的那句老话,这是最好的时代,也是最坏的时代,两百年前如此,现在依旧。