A Text-Book of the History of Painting

Chapter 1

Chapter 11,120 wordsPublic domain

AMERICAN PAINTING

POSTSCRIPT

INDEX

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LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

Velasquez, Head of Æsop, Madrid _Frontispiece_

1 Hunting in the Marshes, Tomb of Ti, Saccarah

2 Portrait of Queen Taia

3 Offerings to the Dead. Wall painting

4 Vignette on Papyrus

5 Enamelled Brick, Nimroud

6 " " Khorsabad

7 Wild Ass. Bas-relief

8 Lions Frieze, Susa

9 Painted Head from Edessa

10 Cypriote Vase Decoration

11 Attic Grave Painting

12 Muse of Cortona

13 Odyssey Landscape

14 Amphore, Lower Italy

15 Ritual Scene, Palatine Wall painting

16 Portrait, Fayoum, Graf Collection

17 Chamber in Catacombs, with wall decorations

18 Catacomb Fresco, S. Cecilia

19 Christ as Good Shepherd, Ravenna mosaic

20 Christ and Saints, fresco, S. Generosa

21 Ezekiel before the Lord. MS. illumination

22 Giotto, Flight into Egypt, Arena Chap.

23 Orcagna, Paradise (detail), S. M. Novella

24 Lorenzetti, Peace (detail), Sienna

25 Fra Angelico, Angel, Uffizi

26 Fra Filippo, Madonna, Uffizi

27 Botticelli, Coronation of Madonna, Uffizi

28 Ghirlandajo, Visitation, Louvre

29 Francesca, Duke of Urbino, Uffizi

30 Signorelli, The Curse (detail), Orvieto

31 Perugino, Madonna, Saints, and Angels, Louvre

32 School of Francia, Madonna, Louvre

33 Mantegna, Gonzaga Family Group, Mantua

34 B. Vivarini, Madonna and Child, Turin

35 Giovanni Bellini, Madonna, Venice Acad.

36 Carpaccio, Presentation (detail), Venice Acad.

37 Antonello da Messina, Unknown Man, Louvre

38 Fra Bartolommeo, Descent from Cross, Pitti

39 Andrea del Sarto, Madonna of St. Francis, Uffizi

40 Michael Angelo, Athlete, Sistine Chap., Rome

41 Raphael, La Belle Jardinière, Louvre

42 Giulio Romano, Apollo and Muses, Pitti

43 Leonardo da Vinci, Mona Lisa, Louvre

44 Luini, Daughter of Herodias, Uffizi

45 Sodoma, Ecstasy of St. Catherine, Sienna

46 Correggio, Marriage of St. Catherine, Louvre

47 Giorgione, Ordeal of Moses, Uffizi

48 Titian, Venus Equipping Cupid, Borghese, Rome

49 Tintoretto, Mercury and Graces, Ducal Pal., Venice

50 Veronese, Venice Enthroned, Ducal Pal., Venice

51 Lotto, Three Ages, Pitti

52 Bronzino, Christ in Limbo, Uffizi

53 Baroccio, Annunciation

54 Annibale Caracci, Entombment of Christ, Louvre

55 Caravaggio, The Card Players, Dresden

56 Poussin, Et in Arcadia Ego, Louvre

57 Claude Lorrain, Flight into Egypt, Dresden

58 Watteau, Gilles, Louvre

59 Boucher, Pastoral, Louvre

60 David, The Sabines, Louvre

61 Ingres, Oedipus and Sphinx, Louvre

62 Delacroix, Massacre of Scio, Louvre

63 Gérôme, Pollice Verso

64 Corot, Landscape

65 Rousseau, Charcoal Burner's Hut, Fuller Collection

66 Millet, The Gleaners, Louvre

67 Cabanel, Phædra

68 Meissonier, Napoleon in 1814

69 Sanchez-Coello, Daughter of Philip II., Madrid

70 Murillo, St. Anthony of Padua, Dresden

71 Ribera, St. Agnes, Dresden

72 Fortuny, Spanish Marriage

73 Madrazo, Unmasked

74 Van Eycks, St. Bavon Altar-piece, Berlin

75 Memling (?), St. Lawrence, Nat. Gal., Lon.

76 Massys, Head of Virgin, Antwerp

77 Rubens, Portrait of Young Woman

78 Van Dyck, Portrait of Cornelius van der Geest

79 Teniers the Younger, Prodigal Son, Louvre

80 Alfred Stevens, On the Beach

81 Hals, Portrait of a Lady

82 Rembrandt, Head of a Woman, Nat. Gal., Lon.

83 Ruisdael, Landscape

84 Hobbema, The Water Wheel, Amsterdam Mus.

85 Israels, Alone in the World

86 Mauve, Sheep

87 Lochner, Sts. John, Catharine, Matthew, London

88 Wolgemut, Crucifixion, Munich

89 Dürer, Praying Virgin, Augsburg

90 Holbein, Portrait, Hague Mus.

91 Piloty, Wise and Foolish Virgins

92 Leibl, In Church

93 Menzel, A Reader

94 Hogarth, Shortly after Marriage, Nat. Gal., Lon.

95 Reynolds, Countess Spencer and Lord Althorp

96 Gainsborough, Blue Boy

97 Constable, Corn Field, Nat. Gal., Lon.

98 Turner, Fighting Téméraire, Nat. Gal., Lon.

99 Burne-Jones, Flamma Vestalis

100 Leighton, Helen of Troy

101 Watts, Love and Death

102 West, Peter Denying Christ, Hampton Court

103 Gilbert Stuart, Washington, Boston Mus.

104 Hunt, Lute Player

105 Eastman Johnson, Churning

106 Inness, Landscape

107 Winslow Homer, Undertow

108 Whistler, The White Girl

109 Sargent, "Carnation Lily, Lily Rose"

110 Chase, Alice, Art Institute, Chicago

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GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY.

(This includes the leading accessible works that treat of painting in general. For works on special periods or schools, see the bibliographical references at the head of each chapter. For bibliography of individual painters consult, under proper names, Champlin and Perkins's _Cyclopedia_, as given below.)

Champlin and Perkins, _Cyclopedia of Painters and Paintings_, New York.

Adeline, _Lexique des Termes d'Art_.

_Gazette des Beaux Arts_, Paris.

Larousse, _Grand Dictionnaire Universel_, Paris.

_L'Art, Revue hebdomadaire illustrée_, Paris.

Bryan, _Dictionary of Painters_. _New edition_.

Brockhaus, _Conversations-Lexikon_.

Meyer, _Allgemeines Künstler-Lexikon_, Berlin.

Muther, _History of Modern Painting_.

Agincourt, _History of Art by its Monuments_.

Bayet, _Précis d'Histoire de l'Art_.

Blanc, _Histoire des Peintres de toutes les Écoles_.

Eastlake, _Materials for a History of Oil Painting_.

Lübke, _History of Art, trans. by Clarence Cook_.

Reber, _History of Ancient Art_.

Reber, _History of Mediæval Art_.

Schnasse, _Geschichte der Bildenden Künste_.

Girard, _La Peinture Antique_.

Viardot, _History of the Painters of all Schools_.

Williamson (Ed.), _Handbooks of Great Masters_.

Woltmann and Woermann, _History of Painting_.

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HISTORY OF PAINTING.

INTRODUCTION.

The origin of painting is unknown. The first important records of this art are met with in Egypt; but before the Egyptian civilization the men of the early ages probably used color in ornamentation and decoration, and they certainly scratched the outlines of men and animals upon bone and slate. Traces of this rude primitive work still remain to us on the pottery, weapons, and stone implements of the cave-dwellers. But while indicating the awakening of intelligence in early man, they can be reckoned with as art only in a slight archæological way. They show inclination rather than accomplishment--a wish to ornament or to represent, with only a crude knowledge of how to go about it.

The first aim of this primitive painting was undoubtedly decoration--the using of colored forms for color and form only, as shown in the pottery designs or cross-hatchings on stone knives or spear-heads. The second, and perhaps later aim, was by imitating the shapes and colors of men, animals, and the like, to convey an idea of the proportions and characters of such things. An outline of a cave-bear or a mammoth was perhaps the cave-dweller's way of telling his fellows what monsters he had slain. We may assume that it was pictorial record, primitive picture-written history. This early method of conveying an idea is, in intent, substantially the same as the later hieroglyphic writing and historical painting of the Egyptians. The difference between them is merely one of development. Thus there is an indication in the art of Primitive Man of the two great departments of painting existent to-day.

1. DECORATIVE PAINTING.

2. EXPRESSIVE PAINTING.

Pure Decorative Painting is not usually expressive of ideas other than those of rhythmical line and harmonious color. It is not our subject. This volume treats of Expressive Painting; but in dealing with that it should be borne in mind that Expressive Painting has always a more or less decorative effect accompanying it, and that must be spoken of incidentally. We shall presently see the intermingling of both kinds of painting in the art of ancient Egypt--our first inquiry.