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William Hogarth - Aestheticism in Art

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William Hogarth Aestheticism in Art
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William Hogarth wrote his Analysis of Beauty in 1753, during the Age of Enlightenment. Through this captivating text, he tends to define the notion of beauty in painting and states that it is linked, per se, to the use of the serpentine lines in pictorial compositions. He calls it the line of beauty . His essay is thus dedicated to the study of the composition of paintings, depending on the correct use of the pictorial lines, light, colour, and the figures attitudes. These timeless concepts have been applied by several artists through the centuries. Paintings from every period have here been chosen to support this demonstration. They allow us to explore the various manners in which beauty can be expressed in painting.

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William Hogarth

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Hogarth, William, 1697-1764

[Analysis of beauty]

Aestheticism in art / William Hogarth. -- [New edition].

Includes index.

Aesthetics--Early works to 1800. I. Title.

BH181.H6 2013

701.17--dc23

2012051018

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: 978-1-78310-792-6

William Hogarth

Aestheticism

in Art

CONTENTS Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino known as Raphael The Madonna and - photo 1

CONTENTS

Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino known as Raphael The Madonna and Child with the - photo 2

Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino, known as Raphael, The Madonna and Child with the Infant Saint John the Baptist, known as La Belle Jardinire, 1507-1508.

Oil on wood, 122 x cm . Muse du Louvre, Paris.

Introduction

If a preface was ever necessary, it may very likely be thought so for the following work; the title of which (in the proposals published some time since) have greatly amused and raised expectations of the curious, though not without a mixture of doubt, that its purpose could ever be satisfactorily fulfilled. For, despite the fact that beauty is seen and confessed by all, from the many fruitless attempts to account for the cause of its being so, enquiries on this subject have almost been sacrificed; and the subject generally thought to be a matter of too high and too delicate a nature to admit of any true or intelligible discussion. Something, therefore, introductory ought to be offered upon the presenting of a work with a face so entirely new, especially as it will naturally encounter, and perhaps even overthrow, several long-received, thorough and established opinions. Since controversies may arise, how far, and after what manner, does this subject have to go to be considered and treated fairly? It will also be proper to lie before the reader what may be understood from the works of both ancient and modern writers and painters.

It is no wonder that this subject was considered inexplicable for so long, as the nature of many parts of it cannot possibly come within the reach of mere men with pens; otherwise those ingenious gentlemen who have published treatises about it (and who wrote much more learnedly than can be expected from one who never took up the pen before) would not so soon have been bewildered in their accounts of it and obliged so suddenly to turn into the broad and more beaten path of moral beauty, in order to extricate themselves from the difficulties they seem to have met with in this. Whats more, they were forced for the same reasons to amuse their readers with amazing (but often misapplied) encomiums on deceased painters and their performances, wherein they continually discoursed effects instead of developing causes. After much flattery, in very pleasing language, one is fairly set down just from where they were picked up, honestly confessed to that in terms of grace, the main point in question, the men do not even pretend to know anything of the matter. And, indeed, how should they? A practical knowledge of the whole art of panting (sculpture alone not being sufficient) is required and, to some degree of eminence; it would be difficult for anyone to pursue the chain of this inquiry through all its parts offhand; however, it is my hope that all will be understood following this work.

Guido di Pietro known as Fra Angelico Christ Glorified in the Court of Heaven - photo 3

Guido di Pietro, known as Fra Angelico, Christ Glorified in the Court of Heaven (predella of the altarpiece of San Domenico in Fiesole), c. 1423-1424.

Tempera on panel, 31.7 x cm . The National Gallery, London.

Naturally one might wonder why the best painters within these two centuries, who, according to their works, appear to have excelled in grace and beauty, should have been so silent in an affair of such seeming importance to the imitative arts and their own honour. To this, I say, that it is probable that they arrived at that excellence in their works by the mere dint of imitating with great exactness the beauties of nature, and by often copying and retaining strong ideas of graceful antique statues which might sufficiently serve their purposes as painters without troubling themselves with a further inquiry into the particular causes of the effects before them. Is it not a little strange that the great Leonardo da Vinci (amongst the many philosophical precepts which he hath at random laid down in his treatise on painting) did not give the lead hint of anything tending to a system of this kind, especially as he was a contemporary of Michelangelo, who is said to have discovered a certain principle in the trunk of an antique statue (which became well known from this circumstance by the name of Michelangelos Torso, or Back), a principle which gave his works a grandeur of gusto equal to the most highly acclaimed antiques. Relative to which tradition, Lomazzo, who wrote about painting at the same time, has this remarkable passage (vol. I, book I):

And because in this place there falleth out a certain precept of Michelangelo much for our purpose, I will not concede it, leaving the further interpretation and understanding thereof to the judicious reader. It is reported, then, that Michelangelo once upon a time gave this observation to painter Marcus di Siena his scholar: that he should always make a figure pyramidal, serpent-like and multiplied by one, two, and three. In which precept (in my opinion) the whole mystery of art consists. For the greatest grace and life that a picture can have is that it express motion, which the painters call the spirit of a picture. Now there is no form so fit to express this motion as that of the flame of fire, which, according to Aristotle and the other philosophers, is an element most active of all others because the form of the flame makes it most apt for motion. It has a conus or sharp point with which it seems to divide the air, so that it may ascend to its proper sphere. A picture having this form will be most beautiful.

Many writers since Lomazzo have, in the same words, recommended observing this rule as well without comprehending the meaning of it, for unless it were known systematically, the whole business of grace could not be understood. Charles Alphonse du Fresnoy, in his Art of Painting, says: large flowing, gliding outlines which are in waves, give not only a grace to the part, but to the whole body; as we see in Antinous, and in many other antique figures: a fine figure and its parts ought always to have a serpent-like and flaming form. Naturally those sort of lines have I know not what of life and seeming motion in them, which very much resembles the activity of the flame and the serpent. Now if he had understood what he had said, he could not, speaking of grace, have expressed himself in the following contradictory manner. But to say the truth, this is a difficult undertaking, and a rare gift, which the artist rather receives from the hand of heaven than from his own industry and studies.But Roger de Piles, in his

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