According to him, it misleads painters, as for instance Diirer, to see and represent nothing in the human face but the skull. The artist should " take every sort of view of animals, in fact, except one — the butcher's view. He is never to think of them... Congressional Serial Set - Page 6761892Full view - About this book
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1893 - 816 pages
...painters, as for instance Diirer, to see and represent nothing in the human face but the skull. Tin-, artist should " take every sort of view of animals,...eyes, but it is better still to know, for instance, how the male and female skeleton differ; why the kneecap follows the direction of the foot during extension,... | |
| John Ruskin - 1906 - 788 pages
...grasp, or cling, or trot, or pat, in their paws and claws. He is to take every sort of view of them, in fact, except one, — the Butcher's view. He is never to think of them as bones and meat. Thirdly. — In the representation of their appearance, the knowledge of bones and meat, of joint and... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1893 - 778 pages
...hindrance, but a degradation, and has been essentially destructive to every school of art in which it lias been practiced.'' According to him, it misleads painters,...eyes, but it is better still to know, for instance, how the male and female skeleton differ; why the kneecap follows the direction of the foot during extension,... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1892 - 676 pages
...art in which it has been practised." According to him, it misleads painters, as for instance Durer, to see and represent nothing in the human face but...eyes, but it is better still to know, for instance, how the | male and female skeleton differ ; why the kneecap j follows the direction of the foot during... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1893 - 862 pages
...been intrusted with this important duty in Berlin? Finally, do we not possess excellent compendiums of anatomy specially adapted to the use of artists?...eyes, but it is better still to know, for instance, how the male and female skeleton differ; why the kneecap follows the direction of the foot during extension,... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1893 - 784 pages
...veneration of a Lessiug, and who lays down the law with even more assurance — Mr. John Buskin — explicitly forbids his pupils the study of anatomy...eyes, but it is better still to know, for instance, how the male and female skeleton differ; why the kneecap follows the direction of the foot during extension,... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1892 - 698 pages
...art in which it has been practised." According to him, it misleads painters, as for instance Dürer, to see and represent nothing in the human face but...eyes, but it is better still to know, for instance, how the male and female skeleton differ ; why the kneecap follows the direction of the foot during... | |
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