button to main menu  Gents Mag 1843 part 2 p.455

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Gentleman's Magazine 1843 part 2 p.455
and modern landscape to faithfulness in representing nature. I shall pay no regard whatsoever to what may be thought beautiful, or sublime, or imaginative. I shall look only for truth, bare, clear, downright statement of facts, shewing in each particular, as far as I am able, what the truth of nature is, and then seeking for the plain expression of it, and for that alone, and I shall thus endeavour, totally regardless of fervour of imagination or brilliancy or effect, or any other of their more captivating qualities, to examine and judge the works of the great living painter,* who is, I believe, imagined by the majority of the public to paint more falsehood and less fact than any other known master. We shall see with what reason."
The author, as a preliminary step to prove the importance of accurate and scientific investigations of the subject, considers how far the truth of nature is to be discovered by the uneducated senses. "Cannot we," say the public, "see what nature is with our own eyes, and find out for ourselves what is like her?" Now, in the first place, he considers that men derive pleasure from art, and discern the beauties of art, in proportion to their natural sensibilty to colour and form, and in connection with a healthy state of moral feeling, and then he adds,
"Next to sensibility, which is necessary for the perception of facts, come reflection and memory, which are necessary for the retention of them, and recognition of their resemblances. For a man may receive impression after impression, and that vividly and with delight, and yet, if he take no care to reason upon those impressions and trace them to their sources, he may remain totally ignorant of the facts that produced them; nay, may attribute them to facts with which they have no connexion, or may coin causes for them that have no existence at all. And the more sensibility and imagination a man possesses, the more likely will he be to fall into error: for then he will see whatever he expects, and admire and judge with his heart, and not with his eyes. How many people are misled by what has been said and sung of the serenity of Italian skies, to suppose they must be more blue than the skies of the north, and think that they see them so; whereas the sky of Italy is far more dull and grey in colour than the skies of the north, and is distinguished only by its intense repose of light: and this is confirmed by Benvenuto Cellini; who, I remember, on his first entering France, is especially struck by the clearness of the sky, as contrasted with the mist of Italy; and, what is more strange still, when people see in a painting what they suppose to have been the source of their impressions, they will affirm it to be truthful, though they feel no such impression resulting from it. Thus, though day after day they may have been impressed by the tone and warmth of an Italian sky, yet not having traced the feeling to its source, and supposing themselves impressed by its blueness, they will affirm a blue sky in a painting to be truthful, and reject the most faithful rendering of all the real attributes of Italy as cold or dull. And this influence of the imagination over the senses is peculiarly observable in the perpetual disposition of mankind, to suppose that they see what they know, and vice versa, in their not seeing what they do not know. ...
Barry, in his sixth lecture, takes notice of the same want of actual sight in the early painters of Italy. 'The imitations,' he says, 'of early art are like those of children - nothing is seen in the spectacle before us, unless it be previously known and sought for: and numberless observable differences between the age of ignorance and that of knowledge, show how much the contraction or extension of our sphere of vision depends upon other considerations than the mere returns of our natural optics. The people of those ages only saw so much, and admired it, because they knew no more;' and the deception which takes place so broadly in cases like these has infinitely greater influences over our judgment of the more intricate and less tangible truths of nature. We are constantly supposing that we see what experience only has shown us, or can show us, constantly missing the sight of what we do not know beforehand to be visible; and painters to the last hour of their lives are apt to fall in some degree into the error of painting what exists, rather than what they can see. ...
Be it also observed that all these difficulties would lie in the way, even if the truths of nature were always the same, constantly repeated and brought before us. But the truths of nature are one eternal change - one infinite
* J. W. Turner.
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