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Gentleman's Magazine 1843 part 2 p.461
[represent]ing the vaporous spray taken off wild waves by
violent wind. That magnificent effect only takes place on
large breakers, and has no appearance of smoke except a
little distance; seen near, it is dust. But the Dutch
painters cap every little cutting riple with smoke,
intending it for foam, and evidently thus representing it
because they had not sufficient power over the brush to
produce the broken effect of real spray. Their seas, in
consequence, have neither frangibility nor brilliancy; they
do not break, but evaporate; their foam neither flies, nor
sparkles, nor springs, nor wreathes, nor curdles, nay it is
not even white, but of a dirty effloresence or exhalation,
and their ships are inserted into this singular sea with
peculiar want of truth; for, in nature, three circumstances
contribute to disguise the water-line upon the wood; where a
wave is thin, the colour of the wood is shown a little
through it; when a wave is smooth, the colour of the wood is
a little reflected upon it; and when a wave is broken, its
foam more or less obscures and modifies the line of
junction; besides which, the wet wood itself catches some of
the light and colour of the sea. Instead of this, the
water-line of the Dutch vessels is marked clear and hard all
round; the water reflecting nothing, showing nothing through
it, and equally defined in edge of foam as in all other
parts. Finally, the curves of their waves are not curves of
projection, which all sea-lines are, but the
undulating lines of ropes, or other tough and connected
bodies. Whenever two curves dissimilar in their nature meet
in the sea, of course they both break and form an edge; but
every kind of curve, catenary or conic, is associated by
these painters in most admired disorder, joined
indiscriminately by their extremities. This is a point,
however, in which it is impossible to argue without going
into high mathematics; and even then the nature of
particular curves, as given by the brush, would be scarcely
demonstrable; and I am therefore less disposed to take much
trouble about it, because I think that the persons who are
really fond of these works are almost beyond the reach of
argument. I can understand why people like Claude, and
perceive much in their sensations which is right and
legitimate, and which can be appealed to, and I can give
them credit for perceiving more in him than I am at present
able to perceive; but when I hear of persons honestly
admiring Vandevelde or Backhuysen, I think there must be
something physically wrong or wanting in their perceptions -
at least, I can form no estimate of what their feelings or
notions are, and cannot hope for anything of principle or
opinion common between us which I can address or understand.
The seas of Claude are the finest pieces of water-painting
in ancient art. I do not say that I like them, because they
appear to me selections of the particular moment when the
sea is most insipid and characterless; but I think that they
are exceedingly true to the forms and time selected, or, at
least, that the fine instances of them are so, of which
there are exceeding few. Anything and everything is fathered
upon him, and he probably committed many mistakes himself,
and was occasionally right rather by accident than by
knowledge. Claude and Ruysdael, then, may be considered as
the only two men who could paint anything like water in
extended spaces, or in action. The great mass of the
landscape painters, though they sometimes succeeded in the
imitation of a pond or gutter, display, wherever they have
space or opportunity to do so, want of feeling in every
effort, and want of knowedge in every line."
Now we must place in contrast to this the author's
description, or at least a portion of it, of Turner's power
in the same department of painting.
"Beyond dispute, the noblest sea that Turner has ever
painted, and therefore the noblest ever painted by man, is
that of the Slave Ship, the chief Academy picture of the
exhibition of 1840. It is a sunset upon the Atlantic, after
prolonged storm; but the storm is partially lulled, and the
torn and streaming rain-clouds are moving in scarlet lines
to lose themselves in the hollow of the night. The whole
surface of sea included in the picture is divided into two
ridges of enormous swell, not high, nor local, but a low,
heaving of the whole ocean, like the lifting of its bosom by
deepdrawn breath after the torture of the storm. Between
these two ridges the fire of the sunset falls along the
trough of the sea, dyeing it with an awful but glorious
light, the intense and lurid splendour which burns like gold
and bathes like blood. Along this fiery path and valley the
tossing waves by which the swell of the sea is restlessly
divided lift themselves in dark, indefinite, fantastic
forms, each casting a faint and ghastly shadow behind it
along the illumined foam. They do not rise everywhere, but
three or four together in wild groups, fitfully and
furiously, as the under strength of the swell compels or
permits them,
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