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Volume  Volume1\The Practice Of Painting

Entry#  502.


 Contents: Vol. 1  |  Vol. 2

 

A caution against one-sided study.


HOW, IN IMPORTANT WORKS, A MAN SHOULD NOT TRUST ENTIRELY TO HIS

MEMORY WITHOUT CONDESCENDING TO DRAW FROM NATURE.


Any master who should venture to boast that he could remember all

the forms and effects of nature would certainly appear to me to be

graced with extreme ignorance, inasmuch as these effects are

infinite and our memory is not extensive enough to retain them.

Hence, O! painter, beware lest the lust of gain should supplant in

you the dignity of art; for the acquisition of glory is a much

greater thing than the glory of riches. Hence, for these and other

reasons which might be given, first strive in drawing to represent

your intention to the eye by expressive forms, and the idea

originally formed in your imagination; then go on taking out or

putting in, until you have satisfied yourself. Then have living men,

draped or nude, as you may have purposed in your work, and take care

that in dimensions and size, as determined by perspective, nothing

is left in the work which is not in harmony with reason and the

effects in nature. And this will be the way to win honour in your

art.

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