THE ELEMENTS OF PERSPECTIVE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
Summary
When you begin to read this book, sit down very near the window, and shut the window. I hope the view out of it is pretty; but, whatever the view may be, we shall find enough in it for an illustration of the first principles of perspective (or, literally, of “looking through”).
Every pane of your window may be considered, if you choose, as a glass picture; and what you see through it, as painted on its surface.
And if, holding your head still, you extend your hand to the glass, you may, with a brush full of any thick colour, trace, roughly, the lines of the landscape on the glass.
But, to do this, you must hold your head very still. Not only you must not move it sideways, nor up and down, but it must not even move backwards or forwards; for, if you move your head forwards, you will see more of the landscape through the pane; and, if you move it backwards, you will see less: or considering the pane of glass as a picture, when you hold your head near it, the objects are painted small, and a great many of them go into a little space; but, when you hold your head some distance back, the objects are painted larger upon the pane, and fewer of them go into the field of it.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 241 - 332Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1904