From Publishers Weekly:
The six accessible essays in this richly illustrated volume--companion to an exhibit at the Phoenix Art Museum and the Indianapolis Museum of Art--examine John Ruskin's activities as Victorian art critic and moral sage. Ruskin scholar Robert Hewison explores how the critic's encounter with paintings by Renaissance masters led to his loss of religous faith. Brown University professor George Dandow scrutinizes the sermonizing language with which Ruskin urged readers to sharpen their own perceptive powers. Yale art historian Casteras discusses Ruskin's creation in 1871 of a utopian guild to govern Saint George's Museum in Sheffield, England. Other essays deal with Ruskin's high aspirations for modern art, his passion for geology and his drawings, which were a stimulus to his thought. Nearly 180 plates (40 in color) show paintings by Ruskin himself as well as by Edward Burne-Jones, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, J.M.W. Turner and others.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal:
"To see clearly is poetry, prophecy, and religion--all in one." Ruskin's guiding belief is well served in this catalog for the exhibition entitled "The Art of Seeing: John Ruskin and the Victorian Eye," organized by the Phoenix Art Museum. Considered by many to be the greatest tastemaker of his age, Ruskin strove in his writings to instill a respect for craftsmanship and reverence for historical moments. The six essays offered here explore Ruskin's "evangelical prose," drawings, fascination with the natural world, clashes with the scientific community, and critical response to the art of his time. Selected to complement the essays, 179 illustrations--40 in color--of works by Turner, Burne-Jones, Rossetti, John Millais, and Ruskin himself are well reproduced. Highly recommended for fine art collections.
- Joseph Hewgley, Nashville P.L.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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