Abstract

This paper focuses on the chosen ekphrases (i.e. literary descriptions of visual works of art) which can be found on the pages of the treatises on painting and architecture written by John Ruskin, one of the most influential Victorian critics. However, these detailed and suggestive passages did not only serve the complementary purpose of illustrating the train of thought of the art connoisseur who was sharing his impressions from the continental tour with the readers. The style of word paintings also owes much to Ruskin’s intended lesson in astute observation, regarded as a necessary precondition to understanding the world, and his self-appointed function as a moralist who foresaw the danger of the spiritual decline looming over England. For this reason, first the critic’s notions of truth and nature will be discussed to elucidate the importance of clear perception in Ruskin’s writings. Then the ekphrases will be analyzed, paying special attention to their language which reveals the roles assumed by the critic. Simultaneously, references to the sources of Ruskin’s style, the Bible and ancient rhetoric, will have to be made.

Highlights

  • “Ruskin started preaching when he was 221...” – M

  • The interrelations with the biblical and classical tradition will be investigated in order to complete the background to the evocative word paintings of the Victorian critic

  • Some of them came under harsh criticism as those who desperately strove after picturesque qualities in their canvases, “casting all (...) aside to attain those particular truths of tone and chiaroscuro, which may trick the spectator into a belief of reality” (Ruskin 1905a, p. 74)

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Summary

Introduction

“Ruskin started preaching when he was 221...” – M. Even if the critic feels forced to give the painter credit for certain achievements, like being the first to paint sunshine in misty air, it is immediately counterbalanced with a long enumeration of bluntly expressed charges: “His false taste, forced composition, and ignorant rendering of detail have perhaps been of more detriment to art than the gift he gave was of advantage, I know of no other instance of a man's working from nature continually with the desire of being true, and never attaining the power of drawing so much as a bough of a tree rightly”

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