Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- Modern Painters, Vol. V.
- PREFACE
- PART VI “OF LEAF BEAUTY”
- PART VII “OF CLOUD BEAUTY”
- PART VIII “OF IDEAS OF RELATION:—FIRST, OF INVENTION FORMAL”
- PART IX “OF IDEAS OF RELATION:—SECOND, OF INVENTION SPIRITUAL”
- CHAP. I THE DARK MIRROR
- CHAP. II THE LANCE OF PALLAS
- CHAP. III THE WINGS OF THE LION
- CHAP. IV DÜRER AND SALVATOR
- CHAP. V CLAUDE AND POUSSIN
- CHAP. VI RUBENS AND CUYP
- CHAP. VII OF VULGARITY
- CHAP. VIII WOUVERMANS AND ANGELICO
- CHAP. IX THE TWO BOYHOODS
- CHAP. X THE NEREID'S GUARD
- CHAP. XI THE HESPERID ÆGLÉ
- CHAP. XII PEACE
- EPILOGUE (1888)
- APPENDIX
- Plate section
CHAP. XI - THE HESPERID ÆGLÉ
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- Modern Painters, Vol. V.
- PREFACE
- PART VI “OF LEAF BEAUTY”
- PART VII “OF CLOUD BEAUTY”
- PART VIII “OF IDEAS OF RELATION:—FIRST, OF INVENTION FORMAL”
- PART IX “OF IDEAS OF RELATION:—SECOND, OF INVENTION SPIRITUAL”
- CHAP. I THE DARK MIRROR
- CHAP. II THE LANCE OF PALLAS
- CHAP. III THE WINGS OF THE LION
- CHAP. IV DÜRER AND SALVATOR
- CHAP. V CLAUDE AND POUSSIN
- CHAP. VI RUBENS AND CUYP
- CHAP. VII OF VULGARITY
- CHAP. VIII WOUVERMANS AND ANGELICO
- CHAP. IX THE TWO BOYHOODS
- CHAP. X THE NEREID'S GUARD
- CHAP. XI THE HESPERID ÆGLÉ
- CHAP. XII PEACE
- EPILOGUE (1888)
- APPENDIX
- Plate section
Summary
§ 1. Five years after the Hesperides were painted, another great mythological subject appeared by Turner's hand. Another dragon—this time not triumphant, but in death-pang, the Python slain by Apollo.
Not in a garden, this slaying, but in a hollow, among wildest rocks, beside a stagnant pool. Yet, instead of the sombre colouring of the Hesperid hills, strange gleams of blue and gold flit around the mountain peaks, and colour the clouds above them.
The picture is at once the type, and the first expression of a great change which was passing in Turner's mind. A change, which was not clearly manifested in all its results until much later in his life; but in the colouring of this picture are the first signs of it; and in the subject of this picture, its symbol.
§ 2. Had Turner died early, the reputation he would have left, though great and enduring, would have been strangely different from that which ultimately must now attach to his name. He would have been remembered as one of the severest of painters; his iron touch and positive forms would have been continually opposed to the delicacy of Claude and richness of Titian; he would have been spoken of, popularly, as a man who had no eye for colour. Perhaps here and there a watchful critic might have shown this popular idea to be false; but no conception could have been formed by any one of the man's real disposition or capacity.
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- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 409 - 440Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1903