The Mind of the Artist - Thoughts and Sayings of Painters and Sculptors on Their Art by Various
page 28 of 157 (17%)
page 28 of 157 (17%)
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restlessness of a competitive spirit that may accomplish this.
A good poem, whether painted or written, whether large or small, should represent _beautiful life_. Are you able to name any one who has conceived this beauty of the life of men? I will not complicate the requirements of painted poesy by speaking of the music of colour with which it should be clothed; black and white were enough. The very attempt to express the confession of love were fulfilment sufficient. _Edward Calvert._ XLII So art has become foolishly confounded with education, that all should be equally qualified. Whereas, while polish, refinement, culture, and breeding are in no way arguments for artistic result, it is also no reproach to the most finished scholar or greatest gentleman in the land that he be absolutely without eye for painting or ear for music--that in his heart he prefer the popular print to the scratch of Rembrandt's needle, or the songs of the hall to Beethoven's "C Minor Symphony." Let him have but the wit to say so, and not let him feel the admission a proof of inferiority. Art happens--no hovel is safe from it, no prince may depend on it, the vastest intelligence cannot bring it about, and puny efforts to make it universal end in quaint comedy and coarse farce. This is as it should be; and all attempts to make it otherwise are due |
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