The Art and Craft of Drawing
The Art and Craft of Drawing
The Art and Craft of Drawing
Public Library
DATE DUE
MAX
PUVIS DK CHAVANNKS
JJthogrttfh />y Eugene Cttrricn"
DRAWING
BY VERNON BLAKE
viii PREFACE
upon art, upon its meaning, and upon its methods, than as
a craftsman's book of reference. Indeed, I have more than
once in its pages referred the reader to other works should
he require more detailed information on any special point.
On the whole I have tried to include in these pages informa-
tion not readily accessible elsewhere, and have omitted such
facts as may be found with ease in existing text- books.
VERNON BLAKE.
LES BAUX, October 1926.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE vii
I. INTRODUCTION i
3109 b
x TABLE OF CONTENTS
V. PERSPECTIVE 103
Artificiality, symbolism, assumption. Light and shade. Altamira. Ex-
perimental perspective. Method of setting out perspective. European
perspective. Binocular vision. Leonardo. Foreshortening. Accuracy,
Mental attitude. Proportions. Volumes in recession. Axes of
volumes. Michael-Angelo. Far East. Ku K'ai Chih. Chinese
perspective. Zen Buddhism. Impermanence of form. Defects of
European perspective. Multiple view-points. Whistler. Several
perspective systems in one drawing. Perspective of shadows. Drawing
by shadows.
TABLE OF CONTENTS xi
INDEX 405
ERRATA
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Giraudon . . . . . 5J 28
15, 1 6, 17. Two diagrams of arms copied from Hatton ; and one by
26. 27, 28, 29. Diagrams of experimental perspective apparatus 107, 109
30, 31. Diagrams showing relation between a squared-out ground-plan
39- - - ' I2 5
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS xv
71. ' Arhat' with serpent. The Saint Vanavisi, by Mou-hsi 200
55 -Z-
75. Position of the bones in the right arm of the study by Degas . 229
76. Diagrams of planes and volumes in the right arm of the study
by Degas . . . . . .229
77. Horsemen from the Parthenon Frieze. Brit. Mus. . face 246
85. Diagram of transition of main rhythm from back to front of body . 287
Windsor . . . . 288-9
96. Old man's head. Leonardo da Vinci. Photogr. Broun et Cie 298
xvi LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
1 02. Study of arms and torso. Michael- Angelo. Photogr. Alinari 320
Figs. 6, 23^ 43, 70 and 7 1 arc reproduced from Grossc : Das Ostasiatischff
Tuschbild by permission of the publisher, Bruno Cassirer, Berlin, and figs, 4 and
1 23 are reproduced from Kokka by permission of the Kokka Co., Tokyo.
2 RUSKIN
EQUILIBRIUM 3
of Form I will treat later in its proper place. Third, and last,
I fear we must place a puritan prudery far removed from the
spirit of fair Hellenic days, when the athlete's frame was
almost worshipped for the glorious balance of its detailed
mass, powerful yet fraught with grace, a bright gleaming
symbol of the measure of ourselves, glad vanquisher of things
beside a hyacinth sea ; when, too, was worshipped that con-
jugate meeting of extremes, a woman's form, now flower-
like in shrinking frailty, now magnificent as lasting archi-
tecture, yet again, glad with light gaiety of youth and
Artemisian liberty. No, Mr. Ruskin, you praised unstintedly
the mantling tints of Turner, the glory of his evening skies,
his fatalist rendering of the steadfast mystery of the Alps ;
you did work, even great work, in freeing the people from
convention's thraldom ; you were a preacher of better things,
but of better things that you yourself understood but dimly.
A revolutionist, you had the faults and the qualities of your
calling. Erasmus thinks ; the narrower Luther evangelizes.
8 PSEUDO-SCIENCE
CEZANNE 9
3109 C
12 THE TAO
5th. King ying wei tche : Arrange the lines and attribute to
The most cogent reason for this failure was that, once on
the confines of Central Asia, Greece found herself in presence
of a most redoubtable adversary ; a great and even then
highly organized aesthetic barred her progress, an aesthetic
more openly abstract than her own, hence more fitted to the
metaphysical east where it had its birth. No more than the
Greek does the Chinese aesthetic close the door to nature
study, on the contrary, as we have seen above, it teaches
profound delving in search of the hidden secrets that govern
the natural world ; but, characteristically Asiatic, it leaves
aside the mediate logos of Greece, whence has sprung the
long theory of European science, and passes straightway to
an intuitive metaphysic that would at the cost of one sole
hypothesis eliminate the unravelling of the physical complex*
8,
*s
bo
We cannot help but feel that the Chinese position is the more
essentially artistic, if indeed such a phrase have a meaning.
20 EGYPTIAN ART
PLASTER
GREEK ART 21
Recapitulation
Artistic anatomies fail to give the student a just idea of the relative con-
structional importance of the facts dealt with ; the combination of two or
more anatomic facts to make one aesthetic fact is hardly ever indicated. Figure-
drawing is the best method of study even for those not devoting themselves
finally to it. Ruskin's praise of nature study and condemnation of anatomy is
incoherent. Ignorance is not an asset of art, nor is knowledge baneful. Just
and ordered choice is at the base of artistic execution. Equilibrium should be
established among all the parts of a work of art. A great work is integral in
its nature. Finish is added fact. Knowledge is not a cause of decadence,
though it may be a concomitant of the end of ascendance. We are obliged to
help out by anatomical knowledge where the Greeks succeeded more intui-
tively ; art was then nearer daily life. Cezanne was an uncouth artist seer.
Modern pseudo-science in art is a cause of inefficiency. The present moment
is an important period of aesthetic change. The insidious influence of the
ideals of the Far East on modern European Art is more and more marked.
An explanation is given of the Chinese aesthetic doctrine of the Tao, or
universal moulding essence, the universal harmony which it is the aim of
Chinese Art to suggest through the external appearance of things. The Six
Painting Laws of Sie Ho are quoted. The draughtsman should strive to display
the sense of universal rhythm through the particular rhythm of the model.
An explanation of the Six Laws is given. The meeting of the Greek and
Chinese ideals. The want of figure art among the Celtic and Germanic
races is remarked. Greek Art, like Greek religion, may be termed non-meta-
physical art.
II
IMPORTANCE OF SPONTANEITY 25
3109 E
26 ART A SYMBOLISM
unified, or vast as an ocean, or full with the fullness of flesh,
or circled like wings ; or, darting forth, it is elegant ; or,
rapid and violent, it is as an arrow. Sometimes it runs, rich,
from a fountain afar off making cascades, weaving mists over
the skies, casting itself upon the earth where those who fish
are calm and at ease. Grass and trees look upon it with joy,
and are even as sweet veiled women . . * veiled with mist.
Again as sunlight floods the valley it is radiant, sparkling
with delight. Such are the living aspects of water,
Louvre
essential of perfected art ; but that, this basic fact apart, there
is difference enough of type between the imagination of the
painter and that of the sculptor.
Many painters such as, for example, Ingres whose .' Bai-
gneuse ' might be translated without change into equally satis-
fying marble make use of a style of drawing which attaches
them closely to the confraternity of sculptors, but the greater
number grade off towards a more or less total elimination of
the precise formal element, and supply its lack by charm of
colouring, or mystery of light and shade. The more emotional
an artist is in a disordered way the less use will he have
for the precision of formal expression. Where in this descend-
ing scale of formal precision shall we say that drawing ceases
to be drawing ? It is obviously impossible to say ; though the
difference between the precise shapes of Ingres and the
fluidity of the * Mountain after a Summer Shower ' (Fig. 4),
attributed to Kao Jan Hai or Mi Fu, is more than patent.
Yet the eastern landscape in no way gives us the impression
of being the work of a poor draughtsman, as indeed it is
not. Why should this be ? A sense of balance of mass and
of rhythmic contour need not of necessity express itself with
the uncompromising exactitude of a Grecian vase drawing,
with the faultless precision of a Leonardo silver-point. Power
and knowledge need not always be pressed into the front
rank, they may be gracefully dissimulated, modestly veiled,
hidden behind a seeming indifference to their worth, and we
feel with ease what inspired Kwo Hsi to state that a mountain
deprived of clouds and mist would be even as springtime
bereft of her flowers. The danger lies in relying upon the
lack of precision of an enveloped technique (seep. 2 52 ^Relation
in Art)) to hide ignorance of constructional fact and rhythm.
An ill-armed critic may be led astray by this deceit, but fully
instructed scrutiny detects the fraud. The road to masterly
drawing is long and arduous even for the unusually gifted.
3 o MEANING OF DRAWING
indeed only by them may Its higher paths be trodden. But even
moderate success demands much long and tedious work, much
direct vanquishing of difficulties that the faint-hearted avoid
by some plausible technical trick ; few, very few have the
courage to pursue the struggle year after long year.
IMITATION OF NATURE 31
the fashion to imitate the liberties that they took with form
without first being assured of either the possession of William
Blake's very complete information, or of Van Gogh's super-
intense contact with vitality, the super-acute sensitiveness of
a real madman. A deliberate imitation of the irregularities
of such men falls at once to the grade of a cold and painful
caricature. Before we try to reproduce one of the hurried
notes that Rodin used to make from the moving model, it
would be as well to assure ourselves that we could also repro-
duce the modelling of the * St. Jean ', and show as considerable
an acquaintance with the facts of construction. There is
suppression of fact on account of ignorance, and there is
another kind of suppression that may come from intention,
or from circumstance. The two types of suppression or
modification may seem alike to the uninstructed ; in reality
they are far apart. The liberties that great draughtsmen, at
different epochs and for different ends, have taken with
natural form will, of course, be noted throughout this book.
To say that exact copying of the model never has con-
stituted and never will great drawing is no exaggeration.
The precise reporting of facts, so necessary to worthy scientific
research, must be eschewed in art. At the same time I would
proclaim the need of study as exact on the part of the artist
as on the part of the scientist. The differentiation between
the two thinkers comes later ; even then is it as great as many
would have us think ? The scientist classes the results of his
observation, attaches word labels to his findings, and proceeds
to induce from his accumulated facts certain general laws
stated in verbal form. The artist also in his own way classifies
the results of his observations, realizes though not verbally
the compelling necessities of natural phenomenal appearance,
and then by the light of his understanding of great universal
laws, he modifies the complex aspect of nature, simplifies that
aspect in certain ways, so that the modification itself becomes
FIG. 5. PUGILLATORE
38 DECORATIVE INTENT
'.v.J
MICHAEL-ANGELO 39
40 A SHEET OF STUDIES
>
v ;/
FIG. 7. DRAWINGS BY MICHAEL-ANGELO
Shows compositional arrangement of sheet. British Museum
BY MICHAEL-ANGELO " 4 i
3109 G
42 ANALYSIS OF
accents in a drawings belong as much to the compositional
arrangement as they do to the exigencies of local form
rendering. All the same it will be perhaps more convincing
if I give a diagrammatic sketch showing the main facts made
evident by the foregoing analysis. The diagram will, I trust,
explain itself, will demonstrate sufficiently well the really geo-
metric and mechanical basis of what at first glance appears
to be only an emotionally contorted pose. I might point out,
as an extra indication of the truth of our examination, how
Michael-Angelo had first sketched in the profile of the right
calf at A. On second thoughts he brought it back to D, now
lying on BC, thereby gaining in simplicity of design and
reticence more than he lost in intensity of movement.
o
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W)
Q
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O
^
pq
WANG WEI'S WATERFALL 43
'Recapitulation
RECAPITULATION 47
conceive his pose contemporaneously with his background ; for the picture is
but one thing. The sculptural precision of Ingres is compared with the
fluidity of expression in the decorative value painting of a * Mountain after
a Summer Shower ', attributed to Mi Fu. Knowledge should exist, but may be,
should be, suppressed and concealed. Faulty execution is the result of faulty or
incomplete conception. One of the reasons for the existence of the plastic
arts is to supplement the inefficiency of categoric thought. The exact degree
to which imitation of Nature is to be carried is discussed. Modifications of
normal natural appearance are generally (or should be) the unconscious result
of the artist's producing personality. iThe emotional modifications that Van
Gogh brought to form are mentioned. The modifications of Cezanne are often
due to a striving after stability. It is useless to copy the modifications brought
to
form by Van Gogh, by^ Cezanne,, by William Blake ; all modification that
we bring must be the direct product of our own personality. Exact copying
of the model cannot constitute great drawing. The scientist classifies the results
of his observations and induces from them a natural law. The artist uncon-
sciously classifies his observations and imagines a conditioning of form to
suggest
the result of his classification. Painting or drawing which does not suggest
in this manner may belong to craft, but not to art. We cannot state exactly
what modifications can be lawfully made in natural form. The original artist
invents his novel modification. In that lies his originality. Matisse stated that
it is better to modify proportions than to destroy compositional balance. Is
it not better to fulfil both desiderata ? The left leg of the Pugillatore is one
and a half inches shorter than the right for compositional reasons. The back-
stretched leg of the * Subiaco * figure is as much too long. Primitive arts often
owe interest to deformation. It is dangerous to attach too much importance
to technique. Technique is allied to species of composition. Michael-Angelo
composes even when dealing with a sheet of studies. Lines and values vary
in intensity according to the needs of the composition. The Waterfall by
Wang "Wei is examined and found to fulfil similar conditions with regard to
intensity of line and type of line in relation to compositional data. The plastic
expression of abstract ideas is discussed. A curious drawing by Luca Cambiaso
in which rigid geometrical volumes are used is examined to a slight degree.
The suitability of such geometric rigidity in combination -with that type of
composition is questioned. Method of drawing must be in harmony with
method of composition
Ill
TECHNICAL METHODS
SHUN TIDINESS - 49
3109 H
METHODS OF BRUSH-HOLDING S i
52 METHODS OF BRUSH-HOLDING
UNSEEN' DRAWING 53
*
The curse of artistic instruction is the academic system
which obliges drawings to be done in a certain way, on paper
of certain dimensions, perhaps already bearing the school
stamp. To leave out some part of the model in order to
realize some superior arrangement would of course not be
allowed. Liang K'ai's cutting of both figures by the edge of
the paper would certainly be forbidden (Fig. 6) ; his utiliza-
tion of only the lower part of the paper would be considered as
a method of escaping the necessity to make a drawing of the
size that the all-important person, the examiner, had in mind.
The very facts that made of Liang K'ai a great master would
debar him even from competing in such an examination.
* But \ it will often be argued, c such an examination is not
intended for artists ; it is only meant for students.' Students
of good behaviour as judged by the rules set up by a bureau-
cratic assembly, or perchance students of art ? All one's
life one remains a student of that inexhaustible subject. When
may one be said to cease to be a student ? Laws there may
CORRECT OBSERVATION 57
3109
5 8 ACCURACY OF VISION
62 SIZE OF DRAWINGS
is not quite correct, for we also use the model, as did Rodin
so largely, as a source from which to draw natural poses, that
we should be at a loss to arrange for ourselves. Rodin's
method and an excellent one it is was to allow the model
to move freely about the room. When some pose that took
the sculptor's fancy presented itself, he either called to the
model not to move, or he made a rapid note from the momen-
tary mobile impression that he had received. I cannot en-
courage this kind of work too much, even from the start.
It is the best training one can have in rapid comprehension
of essentials, in rapid estimation of aesthetic worth of pose
and composition, in, briefly, the most fundamental and rarely
attained qualities of the artist. You must not be discouraged
by many hundred failures, but work steadily on, making
a point each time of recognizing at least one reason why the
last drawing proved a fiasco : You had omitted to notice just
the angle that the shoulders made with the pelvis ; you had
not seized on and fully felt the rhythmic forward balance of the
head on the neck and shoulders ; the exact angle of recession
of that foreshortened leg had not been estimated, and so on.
Always watch the model at the moment he or she takes
up or relinquishes a pose or gets upon or down from the
stage. It is just then, and during the rest, that you will
generally notice the most unexpected and beautiful move-
ments. Frequently in drawing classes I have hardly drawn
during the. pose (so often stupid and academically trite) and
have reserved myself for rapid noting during the rest. At an
art school in London where I went once or twice recently to
keep my hand in, without exception the students (?) behaved
in an exactly opposite manner. The moment the pose was
finished they turned their backs on the model and began
talking among themselves, innocently oblivious of the fact
that they thereby declared themselves wholly unfitted for the
career they had chosen, and showing that they had chosen it,
64 MOVING MODEL
mainly because they had not chosen some other, such as account
keeping or pharmaceutical chemistry. Study the model ?
Delight in rhythmic cadence of motion ? Note for future use
truth of movement ? Not a bit of it ! They were there to learn
to make a drawing from * the life * which should satisfy the
omniscient gods called the examiners of the Board of Edu-
cation, who are, as every one knows, so many acclaimed
geniuses, who know all that is to be known concerning
' drawing from the life ', and who consequently cannot com-
mit errors in ordering instruction of future artists. By the
by, I wonder what are the examiners' distinguished names.
The high-water mark of stupidity was touched when an
officious ass stepped forward in one class to shroud with a
dressing-gown the descending movements of the female
model at the end of the pose ! We had been allowed to gaze
fixedly at her naked self for three-quarters of an hour ; but
see her get down from the throne ? Never ! How improper !
I ask you what form of emasculated art, to be absorbed
together with afternoon tea in the drawing-room, can proceed
from such an atmosphere. Could there be a better method
of turning the student aside from the way of true progress ?
As I said above, the British drawing master made me lose
seven years of valuable study ; last year I found on returning
to England after twenty-five years' absence the same negation
of artistic sense and conditions. In England the model is
hidden from sight while he or she dresses or undresses, so
one misses all the interesting movements that result from the
various acts. Remember the soldiers putting on their
trousers in the famous battle cartoon of Michael-Angelo, if
you wish to see what may be extracted from such movement.
Now, I repeat, so important is the point, the system is all
wrong. The student is taught to attach value to a tidily
produced drawing, and not to the sum of real knowledge he
acquires. How to make a drawing is taught, and not how to
MEASUREMENTS ANTI-ARTISTIC 65
' The veritable facts of form ' ; but not all facts concern-
ing form are of equal value. A very delicate discrimination
must be exercised in collecting and classifying them. An
example of a class of information which always seems to
promise utility and so rarely proves to be of any practical use
is the numerical study of proportions. Mr. Hatton says :
' The artist rarely or never uses the tabulated proportions
which always appear so useful and prove so inapplicable/
Great artists, Leonardo da Vinci, Albrecht Durer in chief,
worked tediously at establishing proportions, sagely decided
whether a figure should be eight or only seven and a half
heads high. To think that such work could be of use to art
was an error of the nascent science of the time. Exact
measurements of the body are useful to anthropologists, to
comparative ethnologists, but an artist can safely leave them
aside. Especially so can the draughtsman ; not only does the
flexibility of the body disturb their application at every
moment, but the introduction of foreshortening renders
them at once quite inapplicable. But there is a yet more
cogent reason for ignoring them. One of the factors of
aesthetic expression is the harmonious co-ordination of con-
stituent parts. Each artist creates his own type of co-ordina-
tion, it is special to himself, it is his own personal language.
Some artists, for example Henri Matisse, have of recent years
gone so far as to consider that the proportions of the body
should be modified to an unlimited degree according to the
needs of the decorative arrangement of the whole picture ;
that is, if the composition demand it for completion of
balance, an arm should be doubled in length. I cannot help
thinking that this again is only a half truth. If the excellence,
if the significance of the composition be taken to be successful,
3109 K
66 PROPORTIONS
RHYTHM 67
68 LENGTH OF LINE
INDIVIDUALITY 69
yo METHOD OF ENLARGING
METHOD OF ENLARGING
71
Go
72 FANCY METHODS
Recapitulation
Each tool is adapted to a particular use 5 charcoal to light and shade studies ,
pencil to line drawing. The total intention of a work must always be present
to the artist's mind during execution. From this comes homogeneity of execu-
tion. No finish should be attempted by beginners. Finish comes from complete
knowledge. Finish without complete knowledge is tidiness and trick. Point
instruments should be held vertically to the paper. The sloping European
method of holding pen or pencil is hostile to good drawing. The methods of
brush-holding in Ancient Egypt, in Greece, in the Extreme Orient, are
described. My own way of holding a short pencil is described. Occasional
drawing from the model without looking at the paper is recommended, because
it encourages following the rhythm of the form uninterruptedly. The drawing
does not matter ; what one learns from studying the model while making the
drawing matters. General instruction is of great use to an artist. There is
a joy in properly handling the tool > invention should lie rather in the move-
ment of the tool than in the resulting drawing where it appears as a result of
the movement Academic prescriptions of methods of making drawings for
RECAPITULATION 73
3109 L
74 RECAPITULATION
IV
MASS EQUILIBRIUM
ANALYSIS OF A DRAWING
77
I am not talking of the defects or qualities of the drawing,
my theme is an examination of the mental acts that led to its
production. I can but suppose the nature of these acts in
the case of another, though I can suppose them with very
tolerable certainty ; in my own 1 can affirm them, having
many times and oft ' watched ' myself at work. 1 Let us return
to the drawing.
1 c Dans tous ces exemples je me suis autant que possible cite moi-meme, par cette
seule raison qu'en fait de raisonhements et de precedes intellectuels je serai
bien plus
sur de ce que j'avancerai en racontant ce qui m'est arrive qu'en inter pretant ce
qui
a pu se passer dans Tesprit des autres.' Claude Bernard, Introduction a la
Mtdecine
explrtmentale.
78 ANALYSIS OF A DRAWING
8o RECESSIONAL MODELLING
MODELLING IN CLAY 81
1 Not quite, though, if we take into consideration the conical pencil of rays e
from *
the e/e.
3109 M
82 SURFACE RHYTHM
86 GRAVITATION
STABILITY 87
88 PERSPECTIVE SURFACES
3109
1 It should be noticed that I have introduced the word ' representational '. I
intend
it to forestall objections that may put forward works of art into which enter
multiple
perspective schemes. See, for example, p. 126. I am here dealing with a European
* study ' from life.
VOLUMES IN PERSPECTIVE 91
92 INEFFICIENT SOLIDITY
FIG. 22. Group from red chalk drawing ' Doux Pays ' 5 by Puvis de
Chavannes
PUVIS DE CHAVANNES 93
94 RETICENT DRAWING
ARABESQUE 95
9 6 MOU-HSI'S KWAN-YIN
FT"" 7
3109
98 OPPOSITIONAL EQUILIBRIUM
Michael-Angelo .
**
Recapitulation
102 RECAPITULATION
piece drawing, and to various other defects, owing to its immobility. Beginners
do not yet know enough to benefit by its real and invaluable teaching. Con-
tinually * feel * in your work the action of gravity, feel that your pencil is
being
drawn downwards. Many lessons of architectural stability are to be learnt
even from the second-rate art of the Greek vases. A number of facts are
represented in a single line. The suggestion of the perspective surface on which
a figure is seated is made by subtle modifications of the flattened buttock line.
Modification pf perspective is frequently carried out by draughtsmen who fail
to give directly the impression of solidity in order to prevent easily observed
perspective facts from clashing with badly observed but more subtle facts.
The stable posing of mass has always formed a part of successful works of art
at all times. The suggested line of gravitational attraction on the centre of
gravity may be looked on as a compositional factor ... as may be the equally
imaginary line of eye-glance. The reticence of Puvis de Chavannes is studied,
and his neglect of tricks as means of obtaining certain results. To stability must
be added the factor of arabesque. A figure by Mou-hsi is examined. A
stability is obtained by curve-equilibrium instead of the rectilinear equilibrium
of
Europe. Gravity is counteracted by the cohesion of matter (which would seem
to be only another manifestation of the same phenomenon). Living natural
form is the result of the struggle between growth and gravitation. The human
body is a machine 5 its surface not being hidden by fur, it affords us the best
model for study of refinements of change. Michael-Angelo has employed the
most violent forms of distorted equilibrium. Aesthetic balance is not an exact
reproduction of mechanical balance. Many factors, both real and suggested,
both suggestive of realities and suggestive of abstractions enter into aesthetic
balance. Intentional discords can be introduced into mechanical equilibrium.
V
PERSPECTIVE
io 4 TONE MODELLING
1 See p. 200.
3 For many years I have had the intention of visiting Altamira, but have not yet
done so. I have not examined the original drawings. Owing to circumstances they
cannot be photographed in an intelligible way. Doubtless M. 1'Abbe Breuil's copies
are . . . ' improved '. However, my conclusions are not based on examination of
these
reproductions alone, but are the general outcome of acquaintance with other
original
palaeolithic engraving and sculpture.
*,
JC ^
i I
g s
' <
<U u- t
S I
o o
J?
1 See Vasari.
3109 . P
a*
p*
03
<D
*s
FIG. 27.
FIG. 28.
FIG. 29.
ii2 PREPARATION OF
A GROUND-PLAN
113
HOT 12 on ]_tne
FIG. 30.
\ c b i 1 i : ! | 1 i ! ' i Ti i V
FIG. 31.
3109 Q
n 4 LIMITATIONS OF
n6 ARCH IN PERSPECTIVE
LEONARDO DA VINCI
117
n8 INTUITIVE PERSPECTIVE
1 20 FORESHORTENING
much to the right or the left of it. Alas, the model is not
immobile ! Even if the draughtsman's observations be
impeccably made (and how often are they ?) their value is
entirely destroyed by the fact that they have not been made
simultaneously. The slightest error in such linear observa-
tion of volume in recession brings with it the equivalent of
a very large error in suggested perspective volume. As the
artist's mind has not been entirely preoccupied with the
conception of this volume, or, I should say, generally not
occupied with its conception at all, when his flat linear
accuracy fails him, nothing remains to fall back upon. If,
on the other hand, we look at the model's arm as an arm with
whose form we are generally acquainted, and then proceed
to throw this form back in recession into the depths of the
paper, only, so to say, taking hints from the actual appearance
of the model's arm from our position ; then, victims of our
own illusion, we push a real arm back into the paper, and
any mistake which would mean an alteration in volume, or
in volume direction, is instinctively avoided, it c feels ' wrong.
No drawing is accurate, we may certainly say that no drawing
should be accurate, also it is quite obvious that no drawing
can be accurate, for the complexity of Nature will always
surpass our powers of imitation. A great draughtsman
chooses, eliminates, exaggerates, simplifies, according to the
dictates of his genius. The usual ' linear ' measurement
method of drawing counts on accuracy for its success ; it
should count on comprehension. When we comprehend the
shapes that we are putting into perspective, and the special
conditioning of the perspective into which we are putting
them, we have no more need of accuracy in dimensions. This
is why Michael-Angelo can take such marked liberties with
the proportions of his models, and yet remain the greatest
master of foreshortening. Many of his formulae, such as
unnaturally small hands following on hypertrophied deltoids,
3109
AXES OF VOLUMES
123
FIG. 35. Diagram of arm volumes. FIG. 36. Diagram of arm directions.
124 MICHAEL-ANGELO
FIG. 38. Diagram of arm construction. FIG. 39. Diagram of arm construction.
...*
The artists of the Far East have often been accused of
ignoring perspective. There is here a misunderstanding, the
word perspective is used with a lack of precision. In the
adjoining group (Ku K'ai Chih (?) fourth century A.D.) the
artist can scarcely be accused of being ignorant of perspective.
There are, it is true, no straight lines already existing in the
picture which enable us to establish a perspective system
rigidly, yet one feels intensely the surface of the receding
Aground on which the figures are kneeling. It would be quite
easy, with a little experimenting, to establish on it our
u 1
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Th
Assyrian bas-relief
3109 S
1 30 EUROPEAN SCIENCE
think we see are solid, possess their three dimensions ; but their
co-ordination one with another is generally of the vaguest,
hiatuses quite analogous to those in a Chinese painting are
frequent. As soon, or almost as soon, as Europe seriously
turned her attention to the production of a painting art which
should differ from the purely decorative ambition of Byzan-
tine things, she developed perspective as we know it, a logical
concatenation of observed physical facts, based, it is true, on
an inexact, or only approximately exact, hypothesis, that of
monocular vision. Positive practical Europe from the first
aimed at the rendering of appearances as they are ; art was
from the first to be imitative ; now and then it dragged a
little abstraction, a little philosophy, a little idealism along
with it, but it always remained divorced from the great
problems of the universe ; they were made over to science
in the main, and to little encouraged philosophy. Not so art
in China ; there representation of objects has always been
subsidiary to suggestion of abstract idea ; no Chinese paint-
ing is void of obvious and recognized symbolism ; thus the
tiger is the symbol of the Terrestial Principle, the bamboo
that of Wisdom, the pine-tree evokes a vision of Will-power
and Life, the flowering plum-tree combines the vigour of Life
with the grace of Knowledge, or rather again of the principle
of Wisdom itself, so it becomes the image of Virgin Purity.
Then how can a people who attach in the first place so great
an importance to such conceptions as that of the Tao, who
in the second have submitted to Buddhistic creeds which
teach the passing of all forms, the illusion that the universe is,
how can that people place the interest of its art in the repro-
duction of transitory shapes ? Shapes are to the Chinese
artist as words are to the poet, without them he cannot express
himself, but it is not the words that matter, it is the idea
behind them that he expresses by their aid. All the better
then, if by some dream quality he can deprive his shapes of
you can hardly see clearly anything else but this small object ;
that everything round it fades off into ever-growing im-
precision. If we are really desirous of painting the appear-
ance of things, why is this effect not always reproduced in all
pictures ? In our perspective we assume a motionless mono-
cular view-point, and then deliberately paint, all over the
surface of the canvas, detail just as c finished up ' as though
the eye (and consequently the point of sight) were exactly
opposite each point of the canvas in turn. We are hopelessly
in contradiction with ourselves. Then notice that not only
are objects to the right and left of the object we are looking
at fixedly (which becomes thus the point of sight) seen
indistinctly, but that low horizontal lines, such as that of the
near edge of the table on which it may be placed, have a
distinct tendency to curve upwards ; indeed all lines whether
vertical, horizontal, or inclined, seem to tend to arrange
themselves in a circular way round the limits of the visual
field. Why is this effect not reproduced when we assume an
unvarying monocular point of sight ? (It is not very easy to
perceive things without looking at them. People who have
not trained themselves to command the automatic reflex act
of directing the visual axis according to the dictates of the
attention will find considerable difficulty in carrying out this
experiment. Also it should be remarked that the longer one
fixes one's vision on the point of sight the more curved do
the perimetric lines seem to become.) The elaboration of
one sole point of interest is often done in sketching, the rest
of the sketch being left flou and imprecise. I think I am
right in saying that the artist often instinctively makes the
elaborated point lie on the visual axis of his perspective
scheme. In this way, as in others, sketches may be said to
be more ' true ' than finished work. Here again we frequently
meet with artists, especially water-colour painters, who adopt
a method of work based on a combination of undecided
i 3 4 WHISTLER
136
SHADOWS
&
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J.-.t'*'
SHADOWS 137
i 3 8 SHADOWS
SHADOWS 139
i 4 o DRAWING BY SHADOWS
1 42 RECAPITULATION
RECAPITULATION 143
theory. The artists of the Far East have been accused of ignoring perspective.
Perspective is an essential part of the composition of a group of Ku K'ai Chih,,
fourth century A. D. The hypothesis of monocular vision which is at the base
of European calculated perspective is false. The perspective used by an artist
in Europe is a compromise. That used in China is neither more nor less of
a compromise ; it is only a different one. Chinese perspective is a descendant
of superposed bas-relief perspective convention. Superposed perspective con-
tented the Assyrians, but to a less degree the more artistic Egyptians. Chinese
kakemono perspective has often three or more points of view, the resulting
perspective schemes are co-ordinated by deft interposition of water or mist.
The ideal of abstract suggestion dominates in Chinese Art, representation is
avoided, hence scientific perspective has not been encouraged. All shapes are
transitory, teaches Zen Buddhism, why then attach importance to the im-
permanent ? Shapes to the artist are as necessary as words to the poet ; without
them expression is not possible. But the words are not the poetry, the shapes
are not art. Of recent times less importance has been attached to perspective.
It is easy to realize to what an extent perspective is a convention. Fix an object
with the eye, only a small field of vision remains clear. Yet we finish up
a canvas often right to the frame. To see such finish it is necessary to use a
very
large number of view-points. We do not see Nature so finished at one glance,
but we are brought up to think that a picture should be so produced ; a
perfectly gratuitous convention, as gratuitous as the Chinese conventions.
Whistler experimented on fixing some point of minor interest and vaguely
perceiving the rest of the picture. At least two perspectives are employed in
one of the figures of this book. This complexity is not evident until pointed
out. It is often forgotten that shadows obey perspective laws. Cast shadows,
not lying parallel to the picture plane, vanish like all other parallels to a
vanish-
ing point. A receding shadow becomes narrower as it recedes. It is most
important to draw shadow shapes correctly when employing them. This is in
no contradiction with the doctrine of mass-shape conception. The shape of
the mass must be conceived before its shadow is understood and thrown into
perspective. Whether we suggest the existence of the mass by an outline or
by an outlineless shadow the underlying need of mass conception is the same.
The way of suggesting it is a subsequent convention that we adopt.
VI
THE MAIN MASSES OF THE HUMAN BODY
149
for example, except for the mechanical construction of the body. The
150 PELVIS
152
SACRAL TRIANGLE
triangle i, 2, 3 (Figs. 58, 59, 60, 61) ; all three points are
subcutaneous, and so visible. When modelling It is as well
to begin by establishing this triangle firmly and definitely,
154
THORAX
155
158 MICHAEL-ANGELO
3109 Y
1 62 BACKBONE ROTATION
1 64 STRUCTURAL ENSEMBLE
1 66 LINCOLN CATHEDRAL
from a single brain, except the west front and possibly the
upper part of tower and spire. We have no such homo-
geneous design in our medieval cathedrals. The French were
less conservative, perhaps less penurious ; their Gothic archi-
tects were iconoclasts ; no French architect could have
allowed such frightful solecisms to remain as disfigure our
cathedrals to the purist's eye, and endear them to the artist '.
This is why I have chosen to reproduce a view of Salisbury
Cathedral vaunted as an example of homogeneous work.
Homogeneous work would seem to mean to Mr. Bond work
of the same style, belonging to the same period. Again the
underlying idea of tidiness and general conformity to evident
rule reveals itself, to the damage of that higher and more
difficult type of conformity to plastic law which enabled
French architects to marry successfully styles separated by
centuries. I have no hesitation in writing what I have just
written, for Mr. Bond finishes his paragraph by the enlighten-
ing phrase : c and endear them to the artist '. Again the tacit
assumption appears that art is necessarily a disordered and
irrational affair, for it should be noticed that the artist is
cited in strong opposition to the ' purist '. Now all this" is
quite beside the point in the case of the higher forms of
architecture. What is essential to great work is first of all
just such a homogeneous growing together of all the com-
ponent volumes as we have seen reproduced by Rembrandt
with fine mastery in the nude-drawing recently examined.
The details may or may not be of the same style, a Renais-
sance chapel can without harm be welded to an ogival
cathedral provided that balance of mass, intention of eloquent
mass arrangement, and coherent mass organization be
observed. It is neither defect nor quality in the Parthenon
that all Its parts belong to the same style (do they ? for the
metope sculpture is a very Different type of work from that
of the panathenaic frieze) ; it should be no defect in the
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NATIONAL MENTALITY
176 RECAPITULATION
Recapitulation
RECAPITULATION 177
VII
VALUES
1 82 TIDINESS
SCRIBBLING 183
*****
Many years ago I realized that understanding of construc-
tion and appreciation of breadth of effect took complete
precedence over technical methods. At that time I adopted
what may be called a scribbling method of drawing from the
model, or indeed of drawing anything. I determined that
tidiness of execution, or trick of execution, should have no
FIG. 68. Rough pen drawing from the model by the Author
OBSERVATION
185
Bb
3109
1 86 PROGRESSIVE FINISH
Now the careful reader will remark that these two counsels
are to a slight extent irreconcilable. We can well paint a
sketch of a subject in quite a few dozen brush-strokes, even
in a single dozen, and, at the same time, in order that it shall
remain satisfying after those few dozen strokes, some of them
must be devoted to indicating, say, a few branches. I can
only reply once more that art is neither a matter of rule nor
of pure and simple knowledge, though both play a more
considerable part in it than many people are inclined to
admit. Note the above rules, and violate them, whenever
your aesthetic sense prompts you to do so ; violate them, but
do not forget them. And this last saying applies to all the
good rules that have ever been propounded. Violate them
because your aesthetic sense prompts you to violate them ;
but do not violate them out of impatience to make your
sketch look nice as soon as possible. It may look nice as
soon as possible, but you may be sure that it is doing so at
the cost of future and genuine excellence.
* serious work ' which may have shown some promise at the
start failed to progress, stopped short, then rapidly became
indistinguishable from the clever trickery, in exchange for
which commerce handed over the necessary bank-note. It
is even impossible to teach according to the accepted school
programme and to retain one's artistic personality. Little by
little, even if he begin well, the teacher becomes infected by
1 92 ADJUSTMENT OF VALUES
3109 c c
when It should be the only thing which does not interest him ;
for he should pay undivided attention to the study of the
model, his drawing hardly serving as more than a method
of fixing his attention in turn on every part of that model.
It may also serve as a practical demonstration of what he does
not yet know, and consequently has to study further. But
It should not serve as a thing to be corrected and tidied up, as
It certainly will If he make a finished up * tone ' drawing on
white paper such as the Academy used to prescribe. When
we are quite sure that we know how to observe values correctly
we may play that kind of trick with them, but no sooner.
...** .*
Should the first lesson In value observation be given from
Nature? Should it be given from some master's management
of values ? I hesitate. Perhaps a long series of experiments
alone can decide which Is the better method of instruction In
actual practice. In these pages I am almost obliged to adopt
the second method, not being able to give a demonstration
before the model or In presence of a natural landscape. The
first thing to notice is that within certain limits the more
restrained the variety of values employed, the more aestheti-
cally satisfying (ceteris partbus) Is the work. Three values
only enter into the value scheme of the Rembrandt repro-
duced in Fig. 62 : Light (figure, edge of model-stand, palm,
drapery, and light on the piece of furniture (?) to the left ) ;
Half-tone (top left corner, and behind the figure at the
height of the knees) ; Dark (all the rest of the picture, and
the pen lines). Also notice that these three values cover three
continuous areas in the arabesque of the composition ; they
are not scattered about, here and there, in small Isolated
patches. Between the thighs of the nude Rembrandt has
avoided using a brush-tint, in order to keep the impression
of one simple area of light, even when a half-tint was really
needed. The result of this Is great c breadth ' of effect, never
an unsatisfactory element in art work. In this drawing Rem-
brandt is true to his usual formula of centralizing the light
on the principal area of interest, which he then, here, renders
still more interesting by the pattern of the graphic pen lines.
198 MOU-HSI
\ - \ * ^
FIG. 71. ' Arhat ' with serpent. The Saint Vanavasi
By IMou-hsi. About 1250
3109 * D d
than ever the English have done. But the view-point there Is
entirely different. In England good workmanship Is sought
and praised for Itself, praised for certain tidy and satisfactory
qualities It possesses, and there the matter ends. In China
things are quite otherwise, workmanship is looked on only
as a means of shadowing forth the abstract, the intangible";
as such a means It Is excellent when well done, but excellent
as a means only, not as an end. The Chinese position is
homogeneous and coherent, and may be summed up as
follows : The aim of art is the rendering of the Intangible
permeating spirit of Nature. Part of the method of this
rendering is to be found in the artist's technical statement, In
his way of painting, in his way of producing relations among
the units he manipulates. His WAY of manipulating units
may be analogous to the WAY ( way ' is one of the meanings
of Tao, see p. 12) of Nature's manipulation of her units,
to her way of producing relations. The artist takes, though
not by any means casually, the units he employs from already
existing Nature and manipulates them anew^for his aim is not
to produce an imitation of the impression that we receive from
the organisation of Nature^ but to suggest to us the laws which
preside over that organisation ; the existence of which laws is
suggested to us by the manifestation of that organisation. These
laws he, in turn, suggests to us by the organisation of his picture.
The view-point is totally different from that of England.
***
It Empty It Doubt
The reader will be still more surprised when told that the
Chinese literary authorities are agreed in seeing in this poem
an allusion to the dangers which menace a State.
JL M fr
' Shop ! ' the, evil is out, betrayed by the very word em-
ployed. How many English artists can plead * Not guilty', to
the charge of having considered saleability while constituting
their technique ? On the other hand, can we accuse Monet in
his younger days of having made that calculation ? Art and
commerce are irreconcilable enemies, except in so far as suc-
cessful general commercial conditions are perhaps necessary
2o8 ART AND COMMERCE
3109 E e
* Befdre going to .press the same accusation of e mere words ' has again been
tendered
by 'a Royal Academician '. ' '
212, COPYING
CONCENTRATION 2 1 7
Recapitulation
2 1 8 RECAPITULATION
those values into a pictorial scheme. I have also defined the study of values as :
The study of the relations of the various quantities of light with which the
artist deals. We see objects by means of the light either emitted by them or
reflected from them. Light and shade is but a comparatively recent artistic
invention. It is useless to ask a beginner to execute a finished drawing. One
may obtain a much better knowledge of his capacities from a rapid sketch. Way
of understanding must always take precedence over way of executing in matters
artistic It is better to * scribble * from the model, when one is as yet un-
furnished with sufficient knowledge, than to attempt to do a * tidy ' drawing
based on insufficient knowledge. As knowledge increases the drawing will
become more accurate. Do not fall back on careful execution of easy detail
to hide your fundamental ignorance. It is a good rule (but not an inviolable
rule) to keep a picture continually in such a state that it may be left oft 7 at
any
moment and yet will be aesthetically satisiactory. Solid representation and
values often unite to form but one aesthetic problem. The palette of the painter
is more restricted in extent of value scheme than is Nature. He is obliged
to adopt what is approximately a proportional transcript of the natural series,
though considerable divergence may be allowed from this theorem. The evil
practice of compelling students to make what are supposed to be full value studies
on a white paper background is to be condemned, satisfactory work on such lines
demands complicated transposition. The student obtains a meretricious result
by learning a trick for doing it. The value scheme of great masters is always
very simple* The whole picture usually falls into three or four marked groups
of values. Three values only enter into the Rembrandt drawing reproduced
Rembrandt centres on light. This is not always so, Mi Fu (Fig. 4) centres on
dark accents. The charm of reticence of expression is exemplified in the
Chinese school of monochrome painting. The variability of Mou-hsi's
technique is commented on, and the doctrine of the Zen mentioned. Attention
is drawn to the perfect welding in this school of both line and value technique.
The union of the two methods is much more complete there than in European
pen and brush drawings. Chinese and Japanese consider all forms of imitation
as inferior art. The causes of error in value estimation are reviewed, and
methods of avoiding error are discussed. Value relation is one of the weakest
parts of British painting. The Impressionists attached importance to observa-
tion 5 the method of painting was indifferent to them. To be careless of method
is in itself a -method. To the Chinese the aim of art is to render the intangible
permeating spirit of Nature, and not her transient appearances ; though these
transient appearances may be used as means of rendering the permanent
essence. This position is totally different from that of the Anglo-Saxon. A
language is a gigantic work of art at which a whole people works, and it is
the best expression of the ideals of that people. English, French, Chinese, and
Japanese poetry are compared. The aesthetic conditioning of Far, Eastern art
is discussed. It consists first in a concise juxtaposition of elements, each
beautiful in itself. Behind this is a background of harmonious philosophical
RECAPITULATION 2 1 9
VIII .
' '
[Again in conducting his work to its end the sculptor has to make many
contours for each figure in the round, on account of the fact that the grace
of such a figure from every side results from them, and the contours in question
are nowise to be made if not from the inter-agreement of relief and hollow,
which last he cannot place with truth if he does not place himself in such
a way that he may see the concavities and reliefs limited by the (surrounding)
air which is in contact with them. But this indeed brings no additional trouble
to the workman, considering that he, like the painter, has true knowledge of
all the limits (contours) of things as seen from whatever side, which knowledge
is always within the power of the painter as it is within the power of the
sculptor (the painter, as the sculptor, is always capable of possessing that
knowledge).]
[But the sculptor, having to take away material where he wishes to establish
the intervals between the muscles, and to leave material where he wishes to
establish the reliefs of these muscles, he cannot generate (make or construct)
them beyond having simply put down their length and breadth if he does
not shift,* himself, from side to side, either stooping, or raising his point of
view
(as may be needful), in order that he may see the true height of the muscles (of
the muscular relief) and the true depth of the intervals between them, arid
these are estimated by the sculptor in such and such a point, and by this method
of contours they are corrected, otherwise he will never be able to place properly
thfe limits (contours) or figure (general appearance of each part) of his pieces
of sculpture.] i
3109 Gg
226 CONVEXITIES
sensitive. All the bony Fl< Y 3 '- ^grammati c section of the body
228 EXAMINATION OF
British Museum
A DEGAS DRAWING
229
has curved his outline round this mass and then momentarily
straightened it out at the place where the first phalanx of the
bone, but when the finger is bent the skin itself forms a
swelling intermediate between the joints. This also the
sensitive line of Degas has noted, as it has again the three
planes of the ' sky-line ' of the knuckle. It would be fas-
tidious to describe the fineness of observation to this detailed
extent over the whole of this drawing, but I cannot too
strongly recommend the student to go over it patiently,
millimetre by millimetre, seeking as he goes, the real reason
of every, however slight, modification of line or of shadow
form. He will not only gain from such work a very large
amount of constructional and anatomical knowledge, but he
will arrive at a clear understanding of what differentiates the
seemingly careless draughtsmanship of a great draughtsman
from the really careless drawing of one of his superficial
imitators. At the same time I will continue to make a larger
analysis of this very interesting drawing ; but before so
4oing I must ask leave to say that I chose the drawing at the
British Museum and had it photographed without the faintest
idea of making this detailed examination of it ; and indeed,
even now, I am writing straight ahead, going on from one
thing to the other as the photograph lying on the table
before me suggests each new sentence, and as, in my present
examination of it, I learn more and more about its subtleties.
I had primarily selected the drawing as a specimen of
moderately recent French drawing about which I should
certainly find occasion to make a few remarks. At the first
glance, and without any attentive study, I had decided that
it was a good drawing, that it would suit my purpose ; at
that moment I devoted no more attention to it. Why I say
all this is to point out that any really fine drawing would
have served just as well as the present one for a similar
analysis. On seeing the drawing I automatically and at once
decided that it was good ; what we are now doing is finding
put why it is good ; I also know that any drawing which
1 Also, of course, the teres minor, and the supra- and infra-spinati.
2 4 o RODIN
FLATTENING 245
1 My books closed down upon the name of Paphos, by sole genius it pleases me to
choose a ruin blessed with innumerable foam beneath the far-off hyacinth of its
trium-
phal days.
246 BALANCE
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which Wycherley has borrowed his " Country Wife ", with
the true spirit of original genius, is, in my judgement, the
masterpiece of Moliere. The set speeches in the original
play, it is true, would not be borne on the English stage,
nor indeed on the French, but that they are carried off by
the verse.' Alas, poor Moliere ! ... or is it ? Alas, poor
Hazlitt ! For him the character of Orgon must be probable.
Hazlitt recognizes no other art than imitation. Unhappy
author of 'La Dame a la Licorne 3 , unhappy Euphronios
for his group is scarcely probable, scarcely should we
take it for a photograph from life 1 Hazlitt falls back on,
to him, the only possible explanation : the set speeches of
F&cole des Femmes are in verse.
248 SHAKESPEARE
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MISUNDERSTANDING 251
252 TOULOUSE-LAUTREC
Oxford University
254 INGRES
CARRlfeRE 255
256 MATISSE'
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*' Matisse greatly lightened and clarified his colour in after years.
3109 L 1
SUPPLENESS 261
264 RECAPITULATION
*? Recapitulation
RECAPITULATION 265
then new invention, chiaroscuro. The more plastically valid line of Euphronios
is compared with the slightly eloquent line of Rembrandt. The Greek mind
was used to thinking in real, tangible masses, clearly limited. It never occurred
to the Greeks to lose a part of the reality in mystery. The vision of effect that
we have learnt since the days of Leonardo to accept, is deleterious to the
true architectural spirit. Mural decoration should not * hollow out ' the wall,
should not destroy its surface. Puvis de Chavannes recalls the wall surface to
us by certain skilful flattenings in the composition. But flattening must not
be the thin aplastic result of plastic incompetence. Formal expression may be
said to be a very restrained and particular use of the expressive medium itself,
of the very way in which the thing is done, to give to the result an enhanced
expressive value. Balance is the basis of all great art. Movement in art never
attains to the same heights as repose. Hazlitt failed to understand the ideal of
Moliere. Moliere dealt in types, hence in abstractions. Hazlitt complains
such abstractions are improbable characters. Necessarily ; for abstract art is not
imitative. The names of the characters of Moliere have entered into the national
vocabulary ; thoseof Shakespeare have not. Because the Shakespearean characters
are not of universal application, they are individually complex and are not
typical
as those of Moliere. We quote lines from Shakespeare, we quote characters from
Moliere. Though French Impressionism claimed to be a return to Nature it
was really only a new convention. The clean-cut quality of French art is com-
pared with the more complex and even confused thought manifested in Italian
art. Toulouse-Lautrec is cited as an example of drawing intermediate between
the greater French work and that which is the particular forte of the modern
nation chic illustration work. The clever suggestion of modelling in the
Toulouse-Lautrec is pointed out. Ingres attains to an admittedly higher level ;
though we are not always sure that he immediately conceived his third dimension.
The frontispiece by Eugene Carriere is now examined. He is recognized
as a descendant of Rembrandt. Rodin, Carriere, and Degas were probably those
who possessed the greatest knowledge of anatomical construction during the
first decade of this century. Carriere' s acceptation of more modern things is
noted. His method of * correcting ' in class is described 5 it consisted of a
series
of general discourses which took as starting-point some student's error or
omission. Though Carriere might have been a great modeller, he would not
have been a great sculptor. The nature of the special rhythm that he adopted
is discussed, and its fitness to the representation of the suppleness of flesh is
brought forward. This rhythm is a direct transcription of the plastic emotion
he felt before the model. Manet, on the contrary, was more sensitive to colour
rhythm. Delicate modifications of the sweeping rhythms are noticed j they lend
a measure, a reticence, to a technique that would otherwise be too special. But
the supple representation is really based on understanding of volumes and planes.
This lithograph has been chosen as affording an easily visible distinction between
knowledge of Nature and its application in an aesthetic way. His technique may
be slightly too evident The emotional value of his work is not discussed.
3109 Mm
IX
CONSTRUCTION OF THE HUMAN FRAME
all the rest of the matter included in these pages is the result
of prolonged studying of masterpieces, of laborious co-
ordination, of reflection before the living model, of anatomi-
cal study, of varied technical experiment with a view to
finding out the result of eliminating or of exaggerating such
and such an element. I have no hesitation in saying that the
greater part of so-called art instruction is worse than useless ;
it engages the student in an evil way. The trouble is that
it is not even sufficient to be a marked personality in the
history of art in order to be a good instructor. I have taken
certain ideas concerning drawing from Van Gogh ; I havp
been myself considerably influenced by his work ; I have, in
short, * learnt ' much from him. But can we accept, or rather,
could we have accepted Van Gogh as a professor of drawing ?
And in the same way Cezanne, who has had such an enor-
mous influence on modern draughtsmanship, could we have
counted on him for complete instruction in it ? Such an
artist as, for example, Jean Dupas is deeply indebted to his
precursor Cezanne ; but he is a student of the Beaux-Arts
school, he has introduced into his work many things which
I feel sure C6zanne would not have communicated to him.
Bearing all these points in mind I have striven in these pages
to put forward fundamental facts in as general a way as
possible, in such a way as may allow the student to choose
any aesthetic direction which he may feel himself justified
in taking, or, I should say, in taking up the direction which is
natural to him. To what extent have I succeeded ? I have
often heard it said that a man is a good professor although he
is not a good executing artist. I simply do not believe it.
I have often listened to the instructive criticisms of lauded
instructors, and have been amazed at the erroneous instruc-
tion given. It is generally tidily presented with conviction,
and the student not possessing knowledge enough himself to
judge the instruction correctly spreads praise of the instructor.
272
THE TROCHANTER
MAIN FACTS
273
3109
274 PLANES
2 8o LATISSIMUS DORSI
FIG. SpA. Showing constructional rectangular volume (CR) formed by the fasciculi
of the latissimus dorsi which ascend from the superior posterior iliac spine in
con-
junction with the obliques and the transversalis (for clearness' sake the external
oblique
(EO) alone is shown). This volume is distinctly marked on all antique statues; its
posterior border is marked by the erector spinae mass (EE).
3109
o o
GRAPHIC STATEMENT
283
was drawn. Let us start down from the knee and analyse
the work. Immediately below the fibula-head
marking, and just inside it, a short line shows
the start of the tibia shaft. Then the story is
taken up by a line which enables us to place
the tibialis anticus. But Michael-Angelo found
that he was trending too far inwards for the
general rhythm of the limb, so he stops short
and takes up again with a fragment of line
some sixty-fourth of an inch more to the outer
side. The eye now, on looking at the drawing,
imagines a rhythmic direction midway be-
tween the two, and continues, contented, to
follow the subsequent organization. At this
point Michael-Angelo harks back, leaves the
essential line of bony construction, and, so to
speak, hangs to it the projecting mass of the
gastrocnemius (in reality the edge of the soleus
probably, but the gastrocnemius or great calf
muscle, from our point of view, dominates the
situation). This projecting mass being a volume
that one may isolate and surround, he instinc-
tively feels himself tempted to surround it
with an oval movement of the pen, remounting
towards the two lines just mentioned. He,
however, soon descends again with an uninter-
rupted motion of the pen and c writes a state-
ment * concerning the lower part of the tibialis
anticus muscle which again brings him too far
over to the left ; so, this muscular volume
once sufficiently suggested, he returns to the
telling of the shape of the fibula profile, here
only (or almost only) covered by tendons, though the peronei
brevis and tertius have something to say in the matter. It is
When you have been over the whole body in this way,
with an artistic anatomy beside you, you will find yourself
possessed already of a very considerable quantity of aesthetic
knowledge of the constructional facts of the human frame.
What you must avoid is to say : Ah ! That is a clever way
of indicating the toes, I will go and do likewise. There is no
' way * of doing these things. The c way ' is invented at the
moment of drawing as a representation of the observed
organization of the masses . . . which is not at all the same
thing. Yet almost all draughtsmen (see p. 168) make this
profound error. The hierarchic method of drawing handed
on from generation to generation in ancient Egypt or in
China belongs to another category of aesthetic. We have no
such hierarchy ; our aesthetic aim is different ; I am for
the moment speaking to modern European students.
FOOT CONSTRUCTION
287
actual profile of the limb farther down, first in the tendon and
mass. In the back view of the thigh, one feels how the masses
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3109
masses are not really set back into the paper a considerable
distance behind the breasts. How far we are from the flatness
of the usual drawing ; and how well this fulfils Leonardo's
desideratum : * The primary object of painting is to show a
body in relief. . . .*
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EYE FORESHORTENING
conceived as cavities filled by the spherical form of the eye-
ball, which may be looked on as a subsequent addition to the
constructional essentials. The same method of modelling in
clay may be adopted for the eyes as for the stomach (see
p. 289). Of course the eyebrows form other masses markedly
"detached from the other planes in the Leonardo, more subtly
of head. The rectangular form of the frontal < strokes ' the forms in that
plane should, however, be borne in mind. . , T j , - -
301
surfaces, flat where they come into contact when the eye
is closed. It should also be remembered that the lens of
the eye, being slightly in relief on the otherwise spherical
surface, slightly pushes up the eyelid at that place, conse-
quently the highest light falls
just over the iris. Leonardo's
drawing of eyes is remarkable.
The different forms should be
studied on such a drawing as this
or on that of a head of a woman
in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.
I remember years ago copying it
carefully myself. On the Greek
head we see how the forms round ,
the inner lachrymal gland sud-
denly turn sharply forward.
The drawing of an eye is a very
delicate affair ; it is nothing but
a series of shapes continually
presented in the most varying
degrees of foreshortening. To
describe them in words would
take up an undue space ; the
student should carefully grasp
the solid meaning of every in-
dication in the accompanying
Leonardo (Fig. 96), and then
tell himself that this complex
series of shapes must be thrown into the necessary scheme of
perspective. I wonder how many draughtsmen think of fore-
shortening and perspective schemes while they are drawing
the detail of an eye. Not many, I fear, if I may judge from
the results. And do not let me be thought to be unnecessarily
minute. It is precisely this taking of pains to maintain the solid
illusion throughout the detail which gives life and truth to the
result. In a hurried sketch very few of these elements can be
introduced, but those which are introduced must be subject to
the exigencies of their solid state ; they must not contradict it.
If, for example, in rapid painting, only the high light on the
lid over the iris can be dealt with, whether the artist is
acquainted with all the facts of ocular construction or not ;
whether or not he mentally and rapidly subordinates these
facts to the perspective view he is taking of the model will
make all the difference to the truth and livingness of his result.
Thought and knowledge behind the brush-stroke are always
evident. Feeling the solid relief of the eyeball he will
automatically place his single brush-mark in such a way as
rather to exaggerate than to diminish the plastic modelling ;
one realizes that, in spite of the summary expression a learned
impulse governs the brush. Herein lies almost all the differ-
ence between the rapid sketch of the master and that of the
amateur or inferior artist. Every one is dimly aware of this
difference, but few are critics highly enough trained to place
a finger exactly on the reasons of the difference. In my
most hurried study it is no exaggeration to say that I use
all rny knowledge of the form. The fatigue so quickly
experienced in this type of work, the fatigue that is so much
greater in later life than in student days, comes from the
fact that during such short intervals of time, perhaps three
or five minutes for a drawing, one is dealing with a very
considerable store of knowledge, a store which could not
have been handled thirty years before, because it did not
then exist.
Mouths, too, are so often drawn fiat upon the paper. The
different volumes of the lips must be as carefully thrown into
perspective, must be as carefully foreshortened as a leg or an
arm. Because a form is small the rules of foreshortening are
not to be cast overboard ; yet most people do so. Need I
FORESHORTENING 303
detail the two volumes of the lower lip clearly seen in the
Leonardo (Fig. 96), the median upper lip volume and its
two accompanying lateral drooping shapes ? Need I call
attention to the fact that the whole charming cupid-bow
design is curved backwards, which, in the case of any three-
quarter view, throws all one-half of the mouth into quite
violent foreshortening, a foreshortening which makes it
necessary to mark out properly the far limit of the upper
median mass where it probably hides a small part of the lip
surface lying just beyond it ? A volume of the lip merits its
limiting line just as much as does the shoulder of a mountain
which hides from us forms within the hollow lying beyond
its mass. How often is this very evident fact realized ?
Foreshortening is everywhere. The day before I wrote these
lines some one said apropos of the accompanying drawing
(Fig. 100) : c What a very difficult piece of foreshortening
that leg must have been! ' As a matter of fact it was not at all
difficult to manage. The whole thing was clear and evident,
the parts of the forms were frankly hidden or seen. What is
difficult to manage and the almost universal failure to do
so is the proof of it is to treat the continually varying fore-
shortening round the spherical surface of the eye, or properly
to foreshorten the shapes along the side shall we say ? of a
torso. That is why all great figure-draughtsmen have made
so many torso studies, for they realize the need of accurate
drawing within the actual outside profile of the figure, the
drawing between the median line of a normally standing
figure and the profile of the side. On quitting the median
line there is little or no foreshortening ; then by varying de-
grees according to the shape, the ribs, the digitations of the
great serratus, perhaps the latissimus dorsi, have to be thrown
into ever-increasing perspective. But in the treatment of
such spatial delicacies the inexpert eye neither detects
errors nor the accompanying illogical lack of homogeneity
3 o 4 ANALYSIS OF A STUDY
.*
Fig. i oo may be worth a moment's study. The unusual
pose gives an additional occasion to understand the bony
pelvic mass. The anterior superior iliac spine stands out in
a most marked way. We can easily imagine the position of
the other spine hidden by the model's right thigh I
imagined it myself when making the drawing a few days
ago the rectangular 4 ground-plan ' of the pelvic volume
when clothed with its muscles is very evident, if we imagine
a line drawn across and tangent to the profile of the buttocks.
The positions of the pubic spines can easily be fixed and their
relations to the superior spines be seen. The line joining the
superior spines and that joining the pubic spines arte parallel
to one another and parallel to the line tangent to the buttocks
that we have just mentioned. The way in which the roughly
cylindrical volumes of the thighs come out of the pelvic mass
is obvious, and the whole solid volume of the pelvic mass,
seen from below, is easily understood in this particular
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INTERSECTIONS 305
the cylindricity of the neck ; and the mass of hair over the
ear is just the right degree nearer to us than is the face profile.
The eyelid volume is perfectly well indicated and takes its
place on the general spherical shape of the head. This is one
of the qualities rare to find in drawing. The special attention
which Rodin has paid to the contour in the stomach region
should be noticed. The base of the ribs,, the prominence of
the iliac crest, the transition from the pelvic to the thigh
volume have all in turn appealed to his knowledge of con-
struction, and, in spite of hasty execution, have reclaimed
two or three returns of the pencil, so natural was it to him to
realize their importance,
s s
The touch of high light over the lens of the eye is most
distinct in the Carri&re, as is that marking of the subcutaneous
bone of the nose, which is less evident in the very careful
modelling of the Leonardo. In the Carrikre it is in more
marked contrast with the fleshy modelling of the nose-tip.
Carri&re notes the exact limit of the bone, the cartilaginous
middle part of the nose being of a softer modelling. In the
Leonardo the difference of modelling is hardly perceptible.
It is in such matters of sensitiveness that I find Carrifere
a more instructive anatomist than Leonardo.
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Fig. 102 shows the relation of the arm to the trunk un-
usually well. Michael-Angelo was evidently intent on making
a study of the junction of the arm with the torso, so in that
part of the drawing only has he hatched the form (I have
not written shaded, for the hatchings are not indications of
shadow but of plane direction ; some of the darkest touches
being on the upper surfaces, whereas the * shading ' on the
under sides of the reliefs indicates a top lighting). We see
from this drawing how intensely he realized that the arm does
not leave off at the arm-pit, or somewhere on the deltoid.
3109 T t
used to illustrate this point. One sees the souci of this move-
ment of form betrayed in the four or five lines which indicate
the curved shape of the external oblique (just above the hip).
The lower line of the muscle is the continuation of the same
pen-stroke as was used to suggest, possibly, the last floating
rib. Michael- An gelo was so imbued with the continuity of
all the forms up and down and all round the body, that he
found himself irresistibly compelled to continue this pen-
stroke. At first it was the indication of a form in the middle
of the back. It went on in such a way that it became possible
to co-ordinate it with the subsequent shapes of the front of
the body. He is so exercised about them, even while drawing
the middle of the back, that he does not wait to take his pen
off the. paper (the hitch in the line corresponding to no
natural form, but simply to the necessity of commencing the
under profile of the external oblique a little lower down)
before proceeding to carry the rhythm forward to where it
necessarily disappears round the front of the figure. The
solitary line below and to the right is a noting of part of the
stable sacral triangle of which I have so often spoken. At
the same time it contains in its lowest part a suggestion of
the gluteal volume, and so a commencement of the pelvic
pose. It should be noticed that in a study of a fragment, like
this by a master, great care is always taken to indicate the
placing in space of the subsequent undrawn mass. In this
drawing the front line of the neck is hooked backwards,
while the right-hand profile, of which hardly an eighth of
an inch exists in the original drawing, is carefully finished
off in such a way that it is quite clear that the undrawn head
is turned to the right almost to its limit of deflection from the
normal position, and that its vertical axis makes an angle of
some 30 with the true perpendicular. The plane of the face
is about parallel with that of the paper. All these data are
to be deduced from the way in which the last lines of the
The thumb and the ball of the thumb are however exceed-
ingly mobile relatively to the rest of the hand ; that is of
course why I drew attention rather to their connexion with
muscular forms of the forearn^than with the more rigid con-
struction of the skeleton. As the hand and arm are not called
upon, in man, to support the weight of the body, this design,
lighter and more supple than that of the ankle region fulfils the
needs of the situation. The mass of the eight carpal bones
which for our purposes we may look on as one is shown
in the Michael-Angelo studies reproduced in Figure 105 ;
especially in the less-shaded study to the right. The carpals
with the heads of the metacarpal bones are the cause of the
oval light extending a little way down the back of the hand
from the wrist. This mass of the carpals is in close conjunc-
tion with the end of the radius (at the wrist the ulna, the
important bone at the elbow, has already dwindled to an
almost negligible quantity). It must be understood that only
flexure and a limited side-to-side movement take place at
the wrist, hence any turning movement of the hand^ of pronation
or of supination^ of turning the palm downward or upward
is necessarily accompanied by complete changes in the modelling
of the forearm., owing to the rotation of the radius round the
ulnar, which rotation tends to make or unmake a spiral
arrangement of the muscles and tendons.. It is these muscles,
the extensors and flexors, which govern the movements of
the fingers, except those of separating and bringing together
which are governed by the small muscles in the body of the
hand. We thus see another reason for considering hand and
forearm as closely associated. Indeed, the movements of the
fingers are the very raison d'etre of most of the forearm
muscles. These fingers are in their simplest expression a
Rather for their interest than for any clear Idea of their
instructive utility I am reproducing a page of hand studies
from the Mangwa of Hukusai. They are at least suggestive
of a field of hand-pose almost unexploited In Europe. Their
expressiveness cannot be denied. I trust my readers will not
use against me the evident violations on the part of Hukusai
of some of the rules, concerning finger construction that I
have just advanced. In spite of his so-called realism that so
provoked the adverse criticism of the Japanese critics, Hukusai
had behind him all the tradition of Japanese art, a tradition
which consists in a complete plastic system of interworking
modifications brought to the natural form, or at least to the
natural form as we perceive it. The modifications brought
to the finger construction by Hukusai are of the same nature
as those brought to all the rest of a Japanese drawing. A
Hukusai hand which, as It is, excites our admiration, would
appear ludicrous if attached to an arm drawn by Michael-
Angelo or Leonardo. The Far Eastern artist deals in a
succession of curved surfaces rather than in an arrangement
of planes, also his hypotheses concerning perspective are not
at all the same as ours (see'p. 1 28). It would thus be unreason-
able to apply my statements made on p. 92 to his work, or,
inversely, to use the success of his work in orde^ to disprove
the truth of my statements made for the use of European
students and not for Japanese, to whom I should hesitate to
dictate in spite of considerable study of their work, unless It
be to cry out against an unfortunate and mistaken tendency
that they are displaying to imitate our artistic failures and
incompleteness. One thing may be studied from the
Hukusai drawings ; a clear marking out of the main volumes ;
and a caricatural simplification of the forearm may well be
turned to European account, If the necessary modifications
328 DRAPERY
But there is a more evident and 'cogent reason for the study
of the nude before draping it. Drapery hangs free from
certain supports. Let us consider a standing figure simply
draped with a fairly soft material. The folds will hang free
from the shoulders behind to the heels, will hang free unless
slightly pushed out by the buttocks. If the figure stoops
forward the folds will only hang free from the buttocks to
the heels ; along the back the drapery will lie close and very
possibly foldless. Now surely it is evident that before we
can draw the surfaces of suspension and their edges from
which the folds take nascence, we must be able to draw
the underlying nude. Not only that, but we must be able
carefully to construct the rhythmic relation between the
placing of, say, the shoulder surface of suspension and the but-
tock surface which perhaps pushes out and modifies the
direction of the folds. But this means nothing else than
knowing how to draw the nude, it is the eternal refrain of
this book. When you are a master of plastic rhythmic relation
you are a great draughtsman. If you ignore the establish-
ment of rhythmic relationship between the several parts of
your work, however little you may deviate from the rhythmic
placing that you might have conceived but did not, your
work becomes negligible, does not count. Skill or tidiness
or both may deceive the ill-advised critic, but will deceive
him only ; the clever brush-work of a Sargent will remain
clever brush-work, while the painting of Manet remains to
be respected in spite of its many shortcomings ; Manet
remains as a personality without whom one can no longer
write the history of the development of art, because he
brought to art a novel study of the fundamental rhythms of
natural appearance. Sargent dealt out to us the brush-
trickery of an illustrator, fitted out with much superficial
theft from the aforesaid Manet. If the surfaces of suspension
of your drapery are not carefully co-ordinated in their
3109 U
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1
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and the diagonal from the left knee to the right foot. The
rest is variations played on the main theme, to which we must
perhaps add the plane lying on the floor. It should be noticed
that the forms of the knees are quite evidently suggested,
as is the shape of the upper surface of the right thigh (of
the model).
3 3 2 RECAPITULATION
'Recapitulation.
RECAPITULATION 333
anatomical plates from Vesalius are reproduced. They show the solid shapes
of the different parts. The arm system includes the shoulder-blade and the
collar-bone. We may study Michael-Angelo without imitating his formula of
violent contrast. The cylindrical neck appears conical from one view. The
skull is a sphere balanced on the spinal column. The face is an addition.
Greek, Italian, and Japanese formulae of face representation are compared.
The Greek formula was very succinct yet naturally satisfying. The Japanese
was ideally (but less naturally) satisfying. The Leonardo exceedingly detailed.
The scheme of construction by mass of the face is given, and discussed. It is
essential to throw all parts even the smallest of a drawing into perspective.
Mouths and eves are too often drawn * flat ', without perspective. Evident
foreshortening is comparatively easy, in spite of the common belief. It is very
difficult to render the subtle foreshortening of the * interior * modelling. One
of the author's drawings is analysed in the light of anatomical construction,
and reasons given for modifications in the line. The author's direct line shows
clearly the exact working of his thought and emotion. In drawing we maintain
a continuous balance between : (a) type knowledge 5 () knowledge acquired
at the moment ; (r) aesthetic judgement concerning modification to be
brought, here, to type ; (d) use of results of those three in light of aesthetic
aim and decorative exigencies. Drawings of masters should be carefully
analysed from constructional point of view. Rhythm is the success of Rodin's
drawings. The frontispiece by Carriere is discussed ; it is naturalistic though
very personal in technique. The rhythms are very natural ones exaggerated,
they are not those of Japan. The old man by Leonardo is compared with the
Puvis de Chavannes by Carriere, who was less preoccupied with glyptic notions
than was Leonardo. Leigh ton failed to recognize glyptic construction, his
* sculpture * is unsculptural. The hatching of many of the Renaissance
drawings is not shading but indication of plane direction. The continuity of
formal rhythm from back to front is well shown in the Michael-Angelo
reproduced. It is necessary when making an incomplete study to indicate the
direction of the subsequent masses not drawn. Pronation and supination of
the hand change the forms of the forearm. The knuckles must lie in linear
perspective. Some hand studies by Hukusai are reproduced, in them the main
volumes are clearly marked. Some slight studies by Michael-Angelo are
reproduced to show how simple was the basal conception to which he super-
added complexity. Draped figures cannot be satisfactorily drawn without
complete knowledge of the nude. The artist who only learns 'just enough ',
who spares his pains, is no artist. An underlying scheme of simplicity must be
sought in drapery. The most multiple folds are conceived on a relatively
simple scheme. Freedom of line is important in drapery. Drapery falls from
determined surfaces and points of suspension.
LANDSCAPE-DRAWING
OJ
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* See Fig. 117 of present volume, and plate facing p. 288 in Relation in Art.
3109 x x
From this bridge we may learn one of the best lessons that
C&sanne can teach us ; we may learn theprecise choice of the
important note in solid rendering* This he made with
unerring instinct. Whatever else failed him, that did not.
It is due to the insensitiveness to plastic values which persists
final twigs that bear the leaves. Then again the active and
passive elements (see p. 351) will be symbolized by light and
shade ; so what we take for an amusing design is to the
informed critic a complex series of interwoven symbols
balanced among themselves by the eternal laws of plastic
equilibrium ; symbolic intention and beauty of form and
tint go hand in hand. And what a lesson in the sole saying :
If the spirit of the artist be not alert, the result is failure
(It ten ichi boku ni chiu o su beki) !
to recall the shape of the Chinese character sin (j\j>) the heart,
with the accompanying suggestiveness of the meaning of the
character ; fifthly, it is perhaps allowable to add the very
choice made of the object represented such a choice is indeed
' an artistic unreality ' the pine symbolizing longevity, the
bamboo rectitude, the plum-blossom fragrance and grace, the
stork and the tortoise again long life, and so on through a
formidable symbolistic list. That then is the use to the
Japanese artist of such * copybooks ' of painting methods.
He, unlike us, sets out to deal with a very complete science
of the language of drawing, a language of which he has to
learn both vocabulary and syntax to avoid seeming absurd
to people capable of reading it ; there must be an inten-
tional fitting together of all the parts, otherwise his work
will bear a dangerous resemblance to the poetic message of :
c The owl and the pussy-cat went to sea in a beautiful pea-
green boat ; ' or to the intense meaning of the coherence con-
cerning (or not concerning) c the great Panjandrum with the
little round button atop * ; it will seem nearly as ridiculous as
do those imitation Chinese characters that some enterprising
European shopkeeper has had drawn for him by a European
artist in order to affix them to packets of tea. An uninformed
theft of fragments of Japanese or Chinese technique with a
view to engrafting them into European work is just about
as dangerous an experiment. Their artificialities have, in
their native lands, a secular justification in the innumerable
threads which bind them to a symbolism which is one with
the philosophical and religious creeds. Exiled to Europe,
torn from these associations which are natural to them and
are the very causes of their inception, they become meaning-
less affectations, more or less amusing to the eye, but which
more or less shock our desire of naturalism fundamentally
dear to us but which it is the special aim of the Japanese to
avoid as far as possible.
cu
not in the same river, we are and we are not/ Let us not
forget that a like stationary suggestion of movement inspires
the greatest Greek statuary. Oft recurring in this Far
Eastern painting, so different from ours, is a torrent which
bursts, impetuous, from a rocky gorge, to pause awhile in
widespread stillness at the mountain's foot ; or the same
symbolism may assume the form of a lake's immense extent
(Fig. 43), stretching to distant and to mist-veiled hills ;
again, elsewhere, an unquiet sea will strive against the rocks.
These and like symbols form the soul and very animating
force of extreme Asian art.
'Recapitulation
The nude is the best school for landscape-drawing 5 the separation into
figure and landscape-drawing is seductive but misleading. At all periods figure
and landscape-drawing methods are analogous. Great landscape painters dealt
in the figure. It is a mistake to suppose that because a man excels in one
direction, his achievements in another must be necessarily negligible. Often
* artists ' are successful in one branch, not because they have mastered the
difficulties of the subject, but because they have worked out a way of * doing it
'.
RqpoJbrandt, a figure painter, was a great landscape artist. In the Rembrandt
reproduced, a curious * bas-relief effect is obtained ; this is discussed.
Stability
is necessary in landscape. A comparison is made between the * dream ' tech-
nique of the later Turners, and the realistic and material technique of Cfoanne.
The aim of Turner was to reproduce infinite complexity. To this the
geometric doctrine of C&anne would have been harmful, Cfeanne's choice
of the important plastic note ? which renders solidity, is extolled^ and a slight
RECAPITULATION 353
examination of the reproduction is made. The relations between its parts are
pointed out. Quotations of Cezanne's condemnations of aesthetic controversy
are given. The abstract symbolic intentions of Japanese painting are touched
on ; the desire to find everywhere analogies with the stated trinity of Heaven,
Earth, and Man. Attention is called to the influence of place and wind on
tree-shapes. The Japanese consider that for the moment we must take on the
personality of the subject we are drawing. We must be careful of taking
isolated fragments from a complete system such as ^ Japanese Art. Artistic
unreality is mixed with inartistic reality. The aims of Japanese art are classi-
fied. The reason of one of the Japanese conventions is given. The abstract
nature of Eastern art attracts the advanced aesthete to whom the European
ideal seems severely limited. Lack of third-dimensional composition is given
as the reason for the inefficiency of an Italian drawing which is reproduced.
Total co-ordinate rhythmic relation is the corner-stone of art. The arrange-
ment of the planes in a Claude drawing is analysed, they are about eight in
number, separate yet co-ordinate. Claude showed remarkable appreciation
of recessional foliage mass. Errors are less evident in landscape-drawing than
in figure-work, but none the less deny a first place to the work. It is difficult
to
class a drawing of a bird on a bamboo-stalk executed by Su Kuo as decoration
or as landscape. We see the inutility of trying to define * stylization * in tech-
nique, for, while being supremely decorative, this drawing is intensely natura-
listic in handling. We are obliged to fall back on abstract and esoteric methods
of classing works of art. All others fail in practice. Perhaps at the base of
the so often expressed approval of combinations of water and steady land, may
lie some uncodified sense of the Taoist opposition of the cosmic principles of
Tang and Yin. Is not Art a union of inter-relation and antithesis ?
z z
XI
' PRIMITIVE ' DRAWING
a These two volumes have appeared in English form published by Messrs, Allen
& Unwin.
anatomist may be found who will restrain his ire before the
c Harpy Tomb *. It is on such elements of our own per-
sonalities that we call, when we wish to appreciate the value
of c primitive * art, outcome of * prelogical * mentality.
1 Cf. also the Monte Bego figures of doubtful period. See p. 371.
Who shall affirm or who shall deny that the men of Alta-
rnira did not believe some such beautiful mythology ? All
that remains to us of their creeds, their mental attitudes, are
the now fast fleeting rhythms of the cave wall-drawings. Had
the Tahitians disappeared, unknown, long ages ago, less still
would have remained across the revolving years to tell us
that once they too had conceived a mythology of so fine
a grade.
But this is not the only point of view open to the aesthetic
appreciator. Let us adopt another, from which we may
quite easily find ourselves saying with Browning that there
is something too coldly perfect, something too purposely
abstracted on certain postulated lines, something too slightly
human which hangs about the Olympian tranquillity of
Grecian marble. Browning implores us instead to exclude
from our art this worship of * perfection ' and to replace it
by study of the very imperfections themselves of mankind.
Reflect again one moment. What are we now asked to do ?
Instead of using a magnificent external representation of
typified form of the body as the almost unique base of the
rhythms which we are to use in our work of art, we are told
3109 3 A
* Is this reported correctly? Very possibly. The use of the idea of reproduction
would then seem not quite foreign. As usual there would be an undefined inter-
mingling of the reproductive and of the simply * indicative * method. It is
generally
useless to apply our categoric precisions to * primitive * ideas.
inferior artist, the c illustrator \ the man who, fitted out with
a mediocre mind, has learnt to make a * correct * drawing,
as he might have learnt to make a * correct * table, lacks in
interest for us very possibly because, having met it many
times and oft, that type of mind has no novelty with which
to hold our attention. When it comes to ethnological study
and its comparative psychology, perhaps even the transcrip-
tion of the most commonplace example of the type may not
be devoid of interest, for it is tremendously removed from
our own type. If this be at all true it becomes still more
difficult to establish an absolute scheme of artistic excellence.
Such estimation will become strictly a question of relation
not only among the elements of the work of art, but one of
relation between the work of art and the spectator. 1 The
judgement of the spectator will be considerably influenced
by the intellectual interest which he may take in the type of
mentality portrayed, by the plastic mode of thought mani-
fested in the work, and he will be tempted to pay insufficient
attention to what may be termed the absolute value of the
artist's aesthetic outlook. This absolute value is, of course,
gauged by reference to a general balancing up of all the
aesthetic outlooks ; much in the same way as there is a world-
wide standard of par exchange, although perhaps the
exchange value of no actual currency is exactly at par. To
this intellectual appreciation must be brought the necessary
emotional modification, that subconscious movement of the
spirit without which neither artistic execution nor artistic
criticism is valid.
his work, which, if they are not exactly those which I should
have used myself and how can they be if they are to express
a mind form different from my own ? still they are far from
meaningless, and are even interesting and sympathetic to me.
Because these rhythmic arrangements disclose a governing
mind form which may even be displeasing to me as an indi-
vidual, used to certain social conventions and to certain modes
of thought, I, as an artist, must not declare the aesthetic
expression, these rhythmic arrangements, bad on account of
the nature of the story which they tell or suggest.'
the body only plays the part of support to the symbol of the
face, hence of the individual. There is even no thickness to
the head. Why should there be ? The possibility of the
future child is quite sufficiently evoked without it. 1 One
might say that a headless torso study by Rodin is at the
aesthetic antipodes from the Ashanti statuette, Rodin being
interested above all in reproducing appearances of parts of
Nature.
127
FIG. 128
FIG, 129
FIG. 130
ASHANTI STOOLS
3109 3 B
within their reach. In the Middle Ages art was much more
popularly distributed precisely on account of the more
c mystic ' and less ' logical ' state of the mass, who had not
yet been taught to confound art and photographic produc-
tion, and to whom the unnatural shape of a Chartres figure
was not yet a matter for ridicule, likeness not having yet
displaced symbolic suggestion. A figure on Chartres Cathe-
dral may in a way be said to come intermediately between
the spiral traced by the Australian on the churinga conse-
crated to the frog and so indicating a frog and the com-
pletely representational painting of Velasquez. The Chartres
figure is partly * like ', and partly a decorative indication
intended to bring to mind some known fact connected with
the religion to which the Cathedral is consecrated. Rhythm
and suggestion are all that a mind as yet primitive and not
yet expecting photographic accuracy demands from art, and
curiously enough it is precisely to those rudimental terms
that prolonged study of aesthetics tends to bring us back,
after we have traversed the unprofitable stretch of imitative
art.
Then again the very word * simultaneously ' loses its till
now accepted significance. Superpose this consideration upon
that just advanced and reflect upon the curious mental posi-
tion that such concepts engender.
Recapitulation
RECAPITULATION 393
XII
CONCLUSION
But this keen love of beautiful things was a creed too fine
and free, a creed still too remote, too aristocratic, to subsist ;
it dwindled and almost died amid the heavier splendour
of Rome ; it stayed but as the faintest memory, when the
uncouth horde, fathers of future domlnators of the globe,
swept down upon the classic world. What had the hard-headed
practice of Germanic peoples to do with abstractions of belief,
with intangible harmonies of form? Art sank towards the
naivetes of Byzantium*
1 The Hellene . * . conceived all things in measure of himself and endowed his
temples with perfect proportions ; til thereip was grace, harmony, restraint, and
wisdom. La R&o/tt its Jagis, Anatolc France,
********
3 F
402 GREECE AND FLORENCE
INDEX
359
aesthetic, Chinese, see China
misunderstood 6, 279
antique versus nude i, 85, 164
antithesis 355, 3667, 390
arabesque 28, 75, 95, 373, 382
architecture 27, 88, 106, 163-74, 243,
400
archaic 198
Eastern 183
nature of 26
Cambiaso, Luca 44
40 6
INDEX
cartoon 64, 71
Celtic 19
passim
aesthetic 11-17, *9> 23-6, 42, 104,
passim
architecture 42
perspective 125-31
nature of 27, 3 5
compromise 234
concentration 57, 63, 217
conception 28, 46, 159, 169
concision, Chinese 350
conformity and homogeneity 168
Constable 183
by Carriere 8, 255
Cross, Edmond 208
Cubism 9, 32, 145, 381
Darwm 358
decadence 398
37*> 403
407
size of 62, 70
-paper 57
dreams 129
drudgery 56
Duccio 402
Dupas, Jean 269
Diirer, Albrecht 65
enlarging, method of 70
environment 243
ephemeral 338
equilibrium 3, 66, 75-101, 98, 256, 276
Erasmus 3
esprit 239
essential 4
ethnology 375
expression, aesthetic 37
intentional 91
flexion 147, 154
Florence 34, 400-2
Jiou 30, 129, 133
fluidity 29
foliage 3 3 5, 345-6
foreshortening 1205, 221, 300, 303
form 3, 65, 238, 246, 249-^51, 342
formal expression 246, 2495 1 passim
Fra Angelico 399
France, Anatole, La Rtvolte des Anges
39 8 .
France, literary and other references 2,
252, 311
Frappie*, Le*on 366
freedom, IQ.I
fresco 71, 193
frontispiece 254
Fujita 127
'Futurists 135
Gandhara 18
genius 147
Giotto 2, 4, 401-2
3*8
Godoshi 334
Gothic 165-75
graphic statement 283
gravitation 86-87, 96-8, 220, 308.
Greco, El 32
Greece 68, 361, 367, 399, 402, see
Greek
Qreek aesthetic 1,7, 18, 20, 68, 175, 299,
3*3* 3,6 2
4 o8 INDEX
half-tint 196
harmony 381
Hazlitt 246
Hesiod 241
Hina 359
illustration 187
245, 249
262
Kakemono 128-9
English 2
Swiss 2
landscape-drawing i 29, 82, 197, 243,
334-52
language 203-6
Lanson 247
Leighton 319
Levy-Bruhl 354
block 188
literature and plastic art 173
Loremo di Crcdi 94
Luther 3
Luxembourg 259
Titian 187
Maillol 259, a8i
INDEX
409
Mallarme 245
mannerism 168
Mangwa 326
Mantegna 213
Margaritone 383
of artist 374
primitive 35492
memory, plastic 267
3S9>40i
moving 63
modelling 84-5, 221-7
in clay 55, 8 1
modem art 7, 9, 21, 32, 39, I45> 2 55~7>
381, 399
3109 3
naturalism 19
Nicholson 182
35
7, 380, passim
Parkinson 364
way of holding 50
pencil 51
Persia 42, 131, 235
personality 233, 248
Assyrian 128
classic 242
410
INDEX
perspective continued
Egyptian 90
Persian 131
ideas 270
memory 267
Chinese 205
Japanese 205
pointillists 208
point of sight no, 133
Pollaiuolo 211
art 354-92
process-block 189
profile 254
Rabelais 248
racial ideal 173
relief 223
Sargent 329
6 Sasabonsam * 373
Scandinavia 19
scenery, English 2
French 2
Swiss z
INDEX
411
shadows 136-42
Shubun 129
Sie* Ho 12-17
sight, point of 1 10, 1 33
Signorelli 401
simplification 191
sketch 234
spontaneity 25
squaring out 70
Subiaco 36
Sufi 42
Taaroa 359
Tahiti 105,357-60
Tao 11-17, 3i 130, 202, 363
tools 48
totemism 355
Toulouse-Lautrec 252
tracing 7 1
trees 334~49
Tuileries 174
waves 8 5
ANATOMICAL INDEX
3I3 .
abductor Indicis 229
pollicis 323
acetabulum 271
acromion process 234
Adam's apple 297
anatomy i, 230, 279-304
breast 292
buccinator 316
calcaneum 359
carpal 60
collar-bone 296
haunch 1 59
heel 307
hip 1 59
humerus 60, 2279, 296
capitellum 227
joints 148
414
ANATOMICAL INDEX
patella 288
296, 305
phalangeals 325
Poupart's ligament 293
proportions 347, 65 et seqq^ 80, 85, 384
pubic spine 154, 304, 308
sartorius 287
semi-tendinosus 277
skull 298
soleus 296
320
3*1
trachaea 297
triceps 234
ulnar 228
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