The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 07, No. 40, February, 1861 by Various
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page 4 of 282 (01%)
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familiar not only with Nature's coloring, but with the works of the best
schools of art, and had been in continual contact with the first living artists. The instances of this peculiar blindness are exceptional, yet not more so than is the perfection of vision which enables the eye to discriminate accurately the innumerable tints derived from the three primitives. Nothing can be finer than the sense of identity and harmony resulting from this exquisite organization. We have been told that there is a workman at the Gobelin manufactory who can select twenty-two thousand tints of the material employed in the construction of its famous tapestries. This capability is, of course, almost wholly dependent upon rare physical qualifications; yet it is the basis, the very foundation of a painter's power. Still, it is _but_ the foundation. An "eye for color" never yet made any man a colorist. Perhaps there can be no severer test of this faculty of perception than the copying of excellent pictures. And among the few successful copies which have been produced, Page's stand unsurpassed. The ability to perceive Nature, when translated into art, is, however, a possession which this painter shares with many. Nor is he alone in the skill which enables him to realize upon his own canvas the effects which some master has rendered. It is in the presence of Nature itself that a power is demanded with |
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