Landscapes
288 pages
English

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288 pages
English

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Description

Although considered a minor genre for a long time, the art of landscape has risen above its forebears - religious and historic painting - to become a genre of its own. Giorgione in Italy, the Brueghels of the Flemish School, Claude Lorrain and Poussain of the French School, the Dutch landscape painters and Turner and Constable of England are just a few of the great landscapists who have left their indelible mark on the history of landscape and the art of painting as a whole.After serving for a long time as a backdrop for paintings and as a skill-practising exercise for artists, nature came to be observed for its own sake and was incorporated into works of art as an illustration of an enlightened and scientific study of the world. Through continual change, it has inspired the greatest painters and has allowed some others, like Turner, to transcend the relentless search for mere realism in pictorial representation. Through this study, Émile Michel offers an exceptional panorama, from the 15th century to the present, of art and the way artists portray the world in all its splendour.

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Publié par
Date de parution 04 juillet 2023
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781783107841
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 4 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0800€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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Author: Émile Michel

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Michel, Emile, 1828-1909.
[Mantres du paysage. English]
Landscapes / Emile Michel.
p. cm.
Originally published: Les mantres du paysage. Paris : Hachette, 1906.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Landscape painting, European. 2. Landscapes in art. I. Title.
ND1353.M5313 2011
758’.1094--dc23
2011028285

© Confidential Concepts, worldwide, USA
© Parkstone Press International, New York, USA
Image-Bar www.image-bar.com

All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced or adapted without the permission of the copyright holder, throughout the world. Unless otherwise specified, copyright on the works reproduced lies with the respective photographers, artists, heirs or estates. Despite intensive research, it has not always been possible to establish copyright ownership. Where this is the case, we would appreciate notification.

ISBN: 978-1-78310-784-1
Émile Michel




Landscapes
Contents


Preface
Chapter 1 The Masters of Landscape Painting in Italy
Chapter 2 Landscape in the Flemish and German Schools
The Flemish School
The Miniaturists
The Bruegels, Rubens, and Teniers
German Landscape
Chapter 3 Dutch Landscapists
The School of Utrecht and the “Italianisers”
The Landscapists of Haarlem
Painters of the sea, beaches, and towns of Holland
Rembrandt’s Landscapes
Chapter 4 Landscape in the Spanish and French Schools
The Spanish School
A Late Blooming
French School
‘Le Lorrain’, Claude Gellée
Chapter 5 Landscapists of the English School
Art, Nature, and Turner
John Constable
Chapter 6 The Masters of Modern Landscape Painting
Théodore Rousseau and the Barbizon painters
The Schism of 1820
Landscapists born prior to 1820
Landscapists born after 1820
Conclusion
Index
Notes
Pieter Bruegel the Elder , The Magpie on the Gallows (Peasants “ dancing under the gallows ” ) (detail), 1568. Oil on panel, 45.6 x 50.8 cm.
Hessisches Landesmuseum, Darmstadt, Germany.


Preface


This book does not claim to be a complete history of landscape painting. The length of such a history would considerably exceed the proportions of this volume, but I have nevertheless endeavoured to give some idea of the order in which the different masters appeared, and of the relative importance of each. Having only to speak here of those who excelled, I have tried to show, in some sort of sequence, whence these artists came, the special merit of each, and his influence on the development of art.
This chronological order was imposed by the subject itself. It is also helpful for the explanation of certain facts. The development of landscape painting did not take place simultaneously, but by turns in the various schools according to the preoccupations of the various regions, and the genius of the great artists distinguished as its exponents.
Our study begins with the Renaissance. As the imitation of nature played but a minor part in antiquity, we need not look for masters in landscape painting there. In Greece, the anthropomorphism of religion prevailed in art as in literature, and among the statuary of the great epoch there is scarcely a fragment of rock or a tree trunk with ivy or vine leaves clinging to it to be found. Although landscape painting occupies a fairly important place in the villas of Rome and the Campagna, it always remains purely decorative, and the pictorial elements to be found in it seem to be merely accidental. Such work, too, was anonymous, and of a secondary order whose facile execution denoted a certain skill: but it does not compare with that close interpretation of nature in which all details are used to enhance the general effect.
We shall not attempt to discuss, in this volume, the way in which landscape painting has been understood and practised in the Far East. In Japanese albums, particularly in those of Hokusaï, the varied subjects are rendered with a lifelike and piquant conciseness. Except for degrees of dexterity, these somewhat summary sketches, aced with a clever lightness of touch and drawn without models, are a result of very similar formulæ. Charming though they are, they lack the individual originality and that rich diversity of feeling that can be appreciated in the European masters. It is to the latter, therefore, that we shall confine our study.
Among these we shall notice many artists who were not exclusively landscapists, and side by side with Claude, J. van Ruisdael, Constable, Corot, Rousseau, and Daubigny, several great masters, such as Van Eyck, Titian, Dürer, Poussin, Rubens, Rembrandt and Velázquez, who practised all branches of art, have their place in this volume by virtue of the skill with which they interpreted nature and expressed her beauties. In order to better understand them, I have studied these artists both in their works and in the countries in which they lived, and have endeavoured to point out any special features peculiar to them and to judge the sincerity of their interpretations. It is impossible to thoroughly appreciate Claude and Poussin without having seen Italy, when, different as was their style, it becomes evident that the same scenery inspired them both. It is the same in Holland; at every step one discovers the humble subjects of which Van Goyen, J. van Ruisdael, and Van de Velde have given us such faithful and poetical representations. By living again with them in the countries where their talent was formed, I have more than once come across their favourite haunts, and even the very spot at which they halted.
As regards modern times, it is the uniquely enviable privilege of my age to have come in contact with most of the landscapists who have been the glory of the nineteenth century school. Some of the details which I give concerning them, their careers and their ideas, I have had either from their own lips or from their friends and acquaintances. But to criticise impartially the artists of one’s own day, one must not be too near them, and it is for this reason that this volume deals only with those who are no longer with us.
Having made frequent comparisons of very dissimilar works, I have developed the faculty of admiring the most diverse styles and of recognising talent wherever it is to be found.
Chapter 1 The Masters of Landscape Painting in Italy


Canaletto (Giovanni Antonio Canal) , The Porta Portello, Padua (detail), c.1741-1742.
Oil on canvas, 62 x 109 cm .
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
Leonardo da Vinci , Mona Lisa (Portrait of Lisa Gherardini, wife of Francesco del Giocondo) , 1503-1506.
Oil on poplar, 77 x 53 cm . Musée du Louvre, Paris.
Raphael (Raffaello Santi) , La Belle Jardinière, also known as Madonna and Child with Saint John the Baptist in a Landscape , 1507-1508. Oil on wood,
122 x 80 cm . Musée du Louvre, Paris.


Landscape painting made its appearance very late in Christian art, and for a long time it played but a minor part. It is not our intention here to treat its humble origins: a few words will suffice to show the clumsiness of its first attempts and the slowness with which it developed. In the mosaics, as in the primitive miniatures, picturesque elements borrowed from nature held a considerable place from an early date, but these purely decorative elements were reproduced in so rudimentary a fashion, that those who depicted them considered it prudent to add the names of the objects which they meant to portray.
In the long and profound obscurity which enveloped Western Europe during the Middle Ages, the first symptoms of revival are so rare and so faint that it is difficult to distinguish them from the ruins left by vanished civilisations.
During the sanguinary struggles that marked those centuries of cultural atrophy, it seems as though art had been on the verge of foundering completely, until beliefs more elevated and more humane finally supplanted the narrow and savage formalism that had been enforced by a myriad of despotic landlords and religious authorities.
Nature, for a long time considered as an enemy, disclosed her beauties to the tender and ardent soul of St. Francis (1182-1226). In the depth of the solitude to which he is attracted, God speaks to him, and in the most insignificant creatures he recognises the work of the Creator, which he celebrated in impassioned accents such as Europe had not yet heard.
As Frederic Ozanam says, the Basilica of Assisi, the venerated tomb of the saint, was destined to be the cradle of a new art. It was at Assisi that Giotto (1267-1337) opened up hitherto unexplored paths for painting. True, landscape painting plays a very secondary part in his works, and a return to the direct observation of nature is manifested more particularly by a closer study of the human figure. But his desire for truth urged him on to represent with greater exactness the various spots where he placed his compositions, to introduce into them picturesque details which his predecessors had neglected: some semblance of architecture, rocks of strange forms and colours, with shrubs or trees growing in their crevices. His perspective was childish; the proportions of objects were scarcely respected at all; the houses were too small to shelter the persons near them; the colouring was dull and monotonous, and the forms were rudimentary and simplified to excess.
Sculptors, and particularly Lorenzo Ghiberti (1378-1455), drew largely from nature in their works, reproducing minor details with grace and exactness; whilst Giotto di Bondone’s successors for a long time copied one another. But just as the study of the forms and proportions of the human body was developed by the observance of anatomy, that of the representation of landscape gradually gained in breadth and precision from a more correct knowledge of th

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