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Gentleman's Magazine 1843 part 2 p.460
best parts of Cuyp, but at the same time there is not a
single vestige of the same kind of solecism. It is true that
in his fondness for colour Turner is in the habit of
allowing excessively cold fragments in his warmest pictures;
but these are never, observe, warm colours with no light
upon them, useless as contrasts, while they are discords in
the tone, but they are bits of the very coolest tints,
partially removed from the general influence, and
exquisitely valuable as colour, though, with all deference
be it spoken, I think them sometimes slightly destructive of
what would otherwise be perfect tone. * *
* The best proof of the grammatical accuracy of the
tones of Turner is in the perfect and unchanging influence
of all his pictures at any distance. We approach only to
follow the sunshine into every cranny of the leafage, and
retire only to feel it diffused over the scene, the whole
picture glowing like a sun or star, at whatever distance we
stand, and lighting the air between us and it, while many
even of the best pictures of Claude must be looked close
into to be felt, and lose light every foot that we retire.
The smallest of the three sea-ports in the National Gallery
is valuable and right in tone when we are close to it, but
ten yards off it is all brickdust, offensively and evidently
false in its whole hue," &c.
Let us now pass on to another great name; the name of one
who has been long ranked as the foremost in his branch of
the art, and the productions of whose pencil are not to be
purchased except by the affluent.
"I wish Ruysdael had painted one or two rough seas. I
believe, if he had, he might have saved the unhappy public
from much grievous victimizing, both in mind and pocket, for
he would have shown that Vandevelde and Backhuysen were not
quite sea-deities. As it is, I believe there is scarcely
such another instance to be found in the history of man of
the epidemic aberration of mind into which multitudes fall
by infection, as is furnished by the value set upon the
works of these men. All others of the ancients have
real power of some kind or other, either solemnity of
intention, as the Poussins, or refinement of feelings, as
Claude, or high imitative accuracy, as Cuyp and Paul Potter,
or rapid power of execution, as Salvator; there is something
in all which ought to be admired, and of which, if
exclusively contemplated, no degree of admiration, however
enthusiastic, is unaccountable or unnatural. But Vanddevelde
and Backhuysen have no power, no redeeming quality of
mind: their works are neither reflective, nor eclectic, nor
imitative; they have neither tone, nor execution, nor
colour, nor composition, nor any artistical merit to
recommend them; and they present not even a deceptive, much
less a real, resemblance of nature. Had they given us
staring green seas with hatchet edges, such as we see 'Her
Majesty's ships so-and-so' fixed into by the heads or sterns
in the outer-room of the academy, the thing would have been
comprehensible; there is a natural predilection in the mind
of man for green waves with curling tops, but not for clay
and wool; and the colour, we should have thought, would have
been repulsive even to those least cognizant of form.
Whatever may be the chilliness or mistiness or opacity of a
Dutch climate and ocean, there is no water which has motion
in it, and air above it, which ever assumes such a
grey as is attributed to sea by these painters; cold
and lifeless the general effect may be, but at all times it
is wrought out of variety of hue in its parts; it is a grey
caused by coldness of light, not by absence of colour. And
how little the authority of these men is worthy of trust in
matters of effect, is sufficiently shown by their constant
habit of casting coal-black shadow half-way across the
picture on the nearest waves, for, as I have before shown,
water itself never takes any shadow at all, and the
shadow upon foam is so delicate in tint and so broken in
form as to be scarcely traceable. The men who could allow
themselves to lay a coal-black shadow upon what never takes
any shadow at all, and whose feelings were not hurt by the
sight of falsehood so distinct and recoiled not at the shade
themselves had made, can be little worthy of credit in any
thing that they do or assert. Then, their foam is either
deposited in spherical and tubular concretions, opaque and
unbroken on the surfaces of the waves, or else, the more
common case, it is merely the whiteness of the wave shaded
gradually off, as if it were the light side of a spherical
object, of course representing every breaker as crested, not
with spray, but with a puff of smoke. Neither let it be
supposed that in so doing they had any intention of
represent-
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