Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- Modern Painters, VOL. III. (CONTAINING THE TEXT OF ALL THE EDITIONS)
- PREFACE
- PART IV “OF MANY THINGS”
- CHAP. I OF THE RECEIVED OPINIONS TOUCHING THE “GRAND STYLE”
- CHAP. II OF REALIZATION
- CHAP. III OF THE REAL NATURE OF GREATNESS OF STYLE
- CHAP. IV OF THE FALSE IDEAL:—FIRST, RELIGIOUS
- CHAP. V OF THE FALSE IDEAL:—SECONDLY, PROFANE
- CHAP. VI OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—FIRST, PURIST
- CHAP. VII OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—SECONDLY, NATURALIST
- CHAP. VIII OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—THIRDLY, GROTESQUE
- CHAP. IX OF FINISH
- CHAP. X OF THE USE OF PICTURES
- CHAP. XI OF THE NOVELTY OF LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XII OF THE PATHETIC FALLACY
- CHAP. XIII OF CLASSICAL LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XIV OF MEDIÆVAL LANDSCAPE:—FIRST, THE FIELDS
- CHAP. XV OF MEDIÆVAL LANDSCAPE:—SECONDLY, THE ROCKS
- CHAP. XVI OF MODERN LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XVII THE MORAL OF LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XVIII OF THE TEACHERS OF TURNER
- APPENDIX
- Plate section
CHAP. III - OF THE REAL NATURE OF GREATNESS OF STYLE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- Modern Painters, VOL. III. (CONTAINING THE TEXT OF ALL THE EDITIONS)
- PREFACE
- PART IV “OF MANY THINGS”
- CHAP. I OF THE RECEIVED OPINIONS TOUCHING THE “GRAND STYLE”
- CHAP. II OF REALIZATION
- CHAP. III OF THE REAL NATURE OF GREATNESS OF STYLE
- CHAP. IV OF THE FALSE IDEAL:—FIRST, RELIGIOUS
- CHAP. V OF THE FALSE IDEAL:—SECONDLY, PROFANE
- CHAP. VI OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—FIRST, PURIST
- CHAP. VII OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—SECONDLY, NATURALIST
- CHAP. VIII OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—THIRDLY, GROTESQUE
- CHAP. IX OF FINISH
- CHAP. X OF THE USE OF PICTURES
- CHAP. XI OF THE NOVELTY OF LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XII OF THE PATHETIC FALLACY
- CHAP. XIII OF CLASSICAL LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XIV OF MEDIÆVAL LANDSCAPE:—FIRST, THE FIELDS
- CHAP. XV OF MEDIÆVAL LANDSCAPE:—SECONDLY, THE ROCKS
- CHAP. XVI OF MODERN LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XVII THE MORAL OF LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XVIII OF THE TEACHERS OF TURNER
- APPENDIX
- Plate section
Summary
§ 1. I doubt not that the reader was ill-satisfied with the conclusion arrived at in the last chapter. That “great art” is art which represents what is beautiful and good, may not seem a very profound discovery; and the main question may be thought to have been all the time lost sight of, namely, “What is beautiful, and what is good?” No; those are not the main, at least not the first questions; on the contrary, our subject becomes at once opened and simplified as soon as we have left those the only questions. For observe, our present task, according to our old plan, is merely to investigate the relative degrees of the beautiful in the art of different masters; and it is an encouragement to be convinced, first of all, that what is lovely will also be great, and what is pleasing, noble. Nor is the conclusion so much a matter of course as it at first appears, for, surprising as the statement may seem, all the confusion into which Reynolds has plunged both himself and his readers, in the essay we have been examining, results primarily from a doubt in his own mind as to the existence of beauty at all.
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- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 44 - 69Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1904