Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- “THE ELEMENTS OF DRAWING” (1857)
- “THE ELEMENTS OF PERSPECTIVE” (1859)
- THE LAWS OF FÉSOLE” (1877—1878)
- APPENDIX
- I DRAWING LESSONS BY LETTER (1855)
- II A REVIEW OF “THE ELEMENTS OF DRAWING”: RUSKIN AND WILLIAM BELL SCOTT (1875)
- III PASSAGES FROM THE MS. OF THE INTENDED CONTINUATION OF “THE LAWS OF FÉSOLE”
- Plate section
II - A REVIEW OF “THE ELEMENTS OF DRAWING”: RUSKIN AND WILLIAM BELL SCOTT (1875)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- “THE ELEMENTS OF DRAWING” (1857)
- “THE ELEMENTS OF PERSPECTIVE” (1859)
- THE LAWS OF FÉSOLE” (1877—1878)
- APPENDIX
- I DRAWING LESSONS BY LETTER (1855)
- II A REVIEW OF “THE ELEMENTS OF DRAWING”: RUSKIN AND WILLIAM BELL SCOTT (1875)
- III PASSAGES FROM THE MS. OF THE INTENDED CONTINUATION OF “THE LAWS OF FÉSOLE”
- Plate section
Summary
TO THE EDITOR OF THE PALL MALL GAZETTE
Sir,—The excellent letters and notes which have recently appeared in your columns on the subject of reviewing lead me to think that you will give me space for the statement of one or two things which I believe it is right the public should know respecting the review which appeared in the Examiner of the 2nd of this month (but which I did not see till yesterday), by Mr. W. B. Scott, of Mr. St. J. Tyrwhitt's Letters on Landscape Art.
1. Mr. Scott is one of a rather numerous class of artists of whose works I have never taken any public notice, and who attribute my silence to my inherent stupidity of disposition.
2. Mr. Scott is also one of the more limited and peculiarly unfortunate class of artists who suppose themselves to have great native genius, dislike being told to learn perspective, and prefer the first volume of Modern Painters, which praises many third-rate painters, and teaches none, to the following volumes, which praise none but good painters, and sometimes admit the weakness of advising bad ones.
3. My first acquaintance with Mr. Scott was at the house of a gentleman whose interior walls he was decorating with historic frescoes, and whose patronage I (rightly or wrongly) imagined at that time to be of importance to him.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 491 - 494Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1904