Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- I “LECTURES ON LANDSCAPE” (1871)
- II “THE RELATION BETWEEN MICHAEL ANGELO AND TINTORET” (1871)
- III “THE EAGLE'S NEST”: TEN LECTURES ON THE RELATION OF NATURAL SCIENCE TO ART (1872)
- IV “ARIADNE FLORENTINA”: SIX LECTURES ON WOOD AND METAL ENGRAVING (1872)
- APPENDIX: NOTES FOR OXFORD LECTURES
- Plate section
II - “THE RELATION BETWEEN MICHAEL ANGELO AND TINTORET” (1871)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- I “LECTURES ON LANDSCAPE” (1871)
- II “THE RELATION BETWEEN MICHAEL ANGELO AND TINTORET” (1871)
- III “THE EAGLE'S NEST”: TEN LECTURES ON THE RELATION OF NATURAL SCIENCE TO ART (1872)
- IV “ARIADNE FLORENTINA”: SIX LECTURES ON WOOD AND METAL ENGRAVING (1872)
- APPENDIX: NOTES FOR OXFORD LECTURES
- Plate section
Summary
1. In preceding lectures on sculpture I have included references to the art of painting, so far as it proposes to itself the same object as sculpture (idealization of form); and I have chosen for the subject of our closing inquiry, the works of the two masters who accomplished or implied the unity of these arts. Tintoret entirely conceives his figures as solid statues: sees them in his mind on every side; detaches each from the other by imagined air and light; and foreshortens, interposes, or involves them as if they were pieces of clay in his hand. On the contrary, Michael Angelo conceives his sculpture partly as if it were painted; and using (as I told you formerly) his pen like a chisel, uses also his chisel like a pencil; is sometimes as picturesque as Rembrandt, and sometimes as soft as Correggio.
It is of him chiefly that I shall speak to-day; both because it is part of my duty to the strangers here present to indicate for them some of the points of interest in the drawings forming part of the University collections; but still more, because I must not allow the second year of my professorship to close, without some statement of the mode in which those collections may be useful or dangerous to my pupils.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 71 - 110Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1906