The Life and Work of John Ruskin, 2 tomasHoughton, Mifflin, 1893 |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–5 iš 24
273 psl.
... artists sharing Mr. Ruskin's purse and patience have been invited to share his work , Mr. Stillman showed a ten ... artist might have seen beforehand , that the lines were awk- ward . " Mr. Ruskin never seemed to understand style in ...
... artists sharing Mr. Ruskin's purse and patience have been invited to share his work , Mr. Stillman showed a ten ... artist might have seen beforehand , that the lines were awk- ward . " Mr. Ruskin never seemed to understand style in ...
290 psl.
... artists and laboring men ought to be paid alike . " What he did hold was that in any trade or class the wages should be fixed by a com- monly accepted tariff , and not altered except by common consent . It For those who failed to get ...
... artists and laboring men ought to be paid alike . " What he did hold was that in any trade or class the wages should be fixed by a com- monly accepted tariff , and not altered except by common consent . It For those who failed to get ...
294 psl.
... artists . His dissent from orthodox opinions was not the mere blunder of an ill - informed amateur ; it was a protest against the adoption of certain views which had become fashionable chiefly owing to the popularity of the men who had ...
... artists . His dissent from orthodox opinions was not the mere blunder of an ill - informed amateur ; it was a protest against the adoption of certain views which had become fashionable chiefly owing to the popularity of the men who had ...
314 psl.
... artists . " As a first step the author asked for the elementary rules of draw- ing . For his own contribution he showed the value of the " pure line , " such as he had used in his own early drawings , learned originally from Cruikshank ...
... artists . " As a first step the author asked for the elementary rules of draw- ing . For his own contribution he showed the value of the " pure line , " such as he had used in his own early drawings , learned originally from Cruikshank ...
316 psl.
... artistic treatment of natural form was his require- ment . He admitted that much good work had been done in England and France ; but he felt that modern city life was adverse to a great school of architecture ; modern culture , sated ...
... artistic treatment of natural form was his require- ment . He admitted that much good work had been done in England and France ; but he felt that modern city life was adverse to a great school of architecture ; modern culture , sated ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Abbeville Alps Amiens April architecture artists Brantwood Carlyle Carpaccio Chamouni color Coniston Cook's Studies copies course Denmark Hill Deucalion drawing school early England feeling friends Gallery gave Geneva geology George's Giessbach give Greek guild Herne Hill Hilliard ideal interest John Ruskin July June labor lady Lect lecture letters living London look loved Lucca Lucerne March Martigny Matlock Men's College mind Miss Beever Modern Painters moral Mornex museum never Norton Oxford Paris pencil perhaps Præterita Prof Professor Proserpina published pupil reader Rede Lecture returned Royal Inst Savoy Seascale seemed Sept Severn Sheffield sketch Slade society Stones of Venice teaching things thought tion took ture Turner Unto this Last Venice Verona Vevey W. G. Collingwood Woolwich writing wrote