British painting in the 17-18th centuries (Британская живопись 17-18 вв.)
1) Some Famous Illuminated Manuscripts. 
      It is usual to regard English painting as beginning with the Tudor 
period and for this are several reasons.  Yet the fact remains that 
painting was practised in England for many hundred years before the first 
Tudors came to the throne. 
      The development of the linear design in which English artists have 
always excelled can be traced back to the earliest illuminations 
brilliantly evolved in irish monastic centres and brought to Northumbria in 
the seventh century.  Its principal feature is that wonderful elaboration 
of interlaced ornament derived from the patterns of metal-work in the 
Celtic Iron Age, which is to be found in the Book of Kells and Lindesfarne 
Gospel, its Northumbrian equivalent. 
      The greatest achievement in Irish manuscript illumination, the Book 
of Kells is now generally assigned to the late eighth or early ninth 
century.  The Book of Kells is a manuscrept of the gospes of rather large 
size(33*24 cm)written on thick glazed vellum. Its pages were originally 
still larger; but a binder, a century or so ago, clipped away their 
margins, cutting even into edges of the illuminations.  Otherwise the 
manuscript is in relatively good condition, in spite of another earlier 
misadventure.  The great gospel, on account of its wrought shrine, was 
wickedly stolen  in the night from the sacresty of the church and was found 
a few months later stripped of its gold, under a sod.  Finally the 
manuscript passed to trinity college, where it is today. 
      No manuscript approaches the book of kells for elaborate 
ornamentation.  A continuous chain of ornamentation runs through the text. 
The capitals at the beginning of each paragraph--two, three, cour to a page- 
-are made of brightly coloured entwinements of birds, snakes, destorted men 
and quadrupeds, fighting or performing all sorts of acrebatic feats.  Other 
animals wander about the pages between the lines or on top of them. 
      The thirteenth century had been the century of the great cathedrals, 
in which nearly all branches of art had their share.  Work on these immense 
enterprises contunued into the fourteenth century and even beyond, but they 
were no longer the main focus of art.  We must remember that the world had 
changed a great deal during that peiod.  In the middle of the twelfth 
century Europe was still a thinly populated continent of peasants with 
moasteries and baron's castles as the main centres of power and learning. 
But a hundred and fifty years later towns had grown into centres of trade 
whose burghers felt increasingly independent of the poweof the Church and 
the fuedal lords.  Even the nobles no longer lived a life of grim seclusion 
in their fortified manors, but moved to the cities with their comfort and 
fashionable luxury there to display their wealth at the courts of the 
mighty.  We can get a very vivid idea of what life in the fourteenth 
century was like if we remember the works of Chaucer, with his knights and 
squires, friars and artisans. 
      The love of fourteenth-century painters for graceful and delicate 
details is seen in such famous illustrated manuscripts as the English 
Psalter known as Queen Mary's Psalter(about 1310).  One of the pages shows 
Christ in the temple, conversing with the learned scribes.  They have put 
him on a high chair, and he is seen explaining some point of doctrine with 
the characteristic gesture used by medieval artists when they wanted to 
draw a teacher.  The scribes raise their hands in attitude of awe and 
astonishment, and so do Christ's parents, who are just coming on to the 
scene, looking at each other wonderingly.  The method of telling the story 
is still rather unreal.  The artist has evidently not yet heard of Giotto's 
discovery of the way in which to stage a scene so as to give it life. 
Christ is minute in comparison with the grown-ups, and there is no attempt 
on the part of the artist to give us any idea of the space between the 
fugures.  Moreover we can see that all the faces are more of less drawn 
according to one simple formula, with the curved eyebrows, the mouth drawn 
downwards and the curly hair and beard.  It is all the more surprising to 
look down the same page and to see that another scene has been added, which 
has nothing to do with the sacred text.  It is a theme from the daily life 
of the time, the hunting of ducks with a hawk.  Much to the delight of the 
man and woman on horseback, and of the boy in front of them, the hawk has 
just got hold of a duck, while tow others are flying away.  The artist may 
not have looked at real boys when he painted the scene above, but he had 
undoubtedly looked at real hawks and ducks when he painted the scene below. 
 Perhaps he had too much reverence for the biblical narrative to bring his 
observationn of actual life into it.  He preferred to keep the two things 
apart:  the clear symbolic way of telling a story with easily readable 
gestures and no distracting details, and on the margin of the page, the 
piece from real life, which reminds us once more that this is Chaucer's 
century.  It was only in the cours of the fourteenth century that the two 
elements of this art, the graceful narrative and the faithful observation, 
were gradually fused.  Perhaps this would not have happened so soon without 
the influence of Italian art. 
                         2) 16th and 17th Centuries. 
      When Henry VII abolished Papal authority in England in 1534 and 
ordered the dissolution of the monasteries in 1536 he automatically brought 
to an end the tradition of religious art as it had been practised in the 
middle ages and in monastic centres.  The break was so complete that 
painting before and after seem entirely different thing, in subject, style 
and medium.  The local centres of culture having vanished, the tendency of 
painting to be centralized in London and in the service of the court was 
affirmed.  Secular patronage now insisted on portraiture, and the habit 
grew up of useng foreign painters--an artificial replacement of the old, 
international interchange of artists and craftsmen.  Yet the sixteenth 
century was the age of Humanism which had created a new interest in the 
human personality. 
                 3)  Painting In The 16th --17th Centuries. 
      In the sixteenth century Holbein came to England, bringing with him a 
much more highly developed pictorial tradition with a much fuller sense of 
plastic relief.  Holbein himself was a supreme master of linear design; he 
could draw patterns for embroidery and jewellery as no one else, but he 
never entirely sacrificed the plastic feeling for form to that, and in his 
early work he modelled in full light and shade.  Still, it was not 
difficult for him to adapt himself somewhat to the English fondness for 
flat linear pattern.  Particularly in hes royal portraits, e.g. the 
portrait of Henry VIII, we find and insistence on the details of the 
embroidered patterns of the clothes and the jewellery, which is out of key 
with the careful modelling of hands and face. 
      Finally, by Elizabeth's reign almost all trace of Holbein's plastic 
feeling was swept away and the English instinct for linear description had 
triumphed completely. 
      But the English were not left long in peace with their linear style. 
Charles I, who had travelled abroad was bound to see that Rubens 
represented a much higher conception of art than anything England 
possessed, and invited him over.  He was followed by Van Dyck, who came to 
stay.  And although he too could not help feeling the influence of the bias 
of English taste and learned to make his images more flatly decorative and 
less powerfully modelled, than had been his wont, none the less, he set a 
new standard of plastic design, and this was carried on by Lely.  Lely was 
not a great artist, but he was thoroughly imbued with the principles of 
three demensional plastic design.  Though his portraits lack psychological 
subtlety, and fail to reveal clearly the sitter's individuality, they are 
firmly and consistently constructed. 
      Kneller of the next generation caried on the same tradition. 
      What of native English talent? The approach of the Civil war stripped 
away the polish and brought out a sterner strain of character no less in 
the aristocratic opponents.  In the realism with which he depicted the 
militant Cavalier, William Dobson(1610-46) marks a breakaway from Van 
Dyckian elegance.  Born in London, Dobson comes suddenly into prominence in 
royalist Oxford after the Civil War had broken out. 
      The painting of Endymion Porter, thefriend and agent of Charles I in 
the purchase of works of art, is generally accounted Dobson's masterpiece. 
The most striking aspect of the work is its realism.  Though Endymion 
Porter is portrayed as a sportsman who has just shot a hare, there is a 
stern look about his features which seems to convey that this is wartime. 
      The solemnity of the times is also reflected in the portraiture 
produced during the Commonwealth period and one would naturally expect an 
even greater refection of elegance than that of Dobson during the Puritan 
dominance.  Indeed a prospect of unsparing realism is set out in Cromwell's 
admonition--to "remark all these ruffness, pimples, warts" and paint " 
everything as you see in me". 
      The corresponding painter to Dobson  on the Parliamentary side, 
however, Robert Walker, was a much less original artist and still closely 
imitated Van Dyck's graceful style. 
      A number of other portrait painters are of interest by reason of 
their subjects.  John Greenhill (c. 1644--76) is of some note as one of the 
first artists to depict English actors in costume.  John Riley (1646--91) 
was an artist  whose work is distinguished by a grave reticence.  In 
succession to Lely he painted many eminent people, including Dryden, and 
some minor folk, as for example the aged housemaid Bridget Holmes.  He was 
described by Horace Walpole as "one of the best native painters who have 
flourished in England". 
                      4)  Painting In The 18th Century. 
      The eighteenth century was the great age of British painting.  It was 
in this  period that British art attained a distinct national character. 
In the seventeenth century, art in Britain had been dominated largely by 
the Flemish artist, Anthony van Dyck.  In the early eighteenth century, 
although influenced by Continental movements, particularly by French 
rococo, British art began to develop nindependently.  William Hogarth, born 
just before the turn of the century, was the first major aritst to reject 
foreign influence and establish a kind of art whose themes and subjects 
were thoroughly British.  His penetrating, witty portrayal of the 
contemporary scene, his protest against social injustice and his attack on 
the vulgtarities of fashianable society make him one of the most original 
and significant of British artists. 
      Hogarth was followed by a row of illustrious painters:  Thomas 
Cainsborough, with his lyrical landscapes, "fancy pictures" and portraits; 
the intellectual Sir Joshua Reynolds, who painted charming society 
portraits and became the first president of the Royal Academy; and George 
Stubbs, who is only now being recognized as an artist of the greatest 
visual perception and sensitivity.  There are many others, including Wright 
of Derby, Wilson, Lawrence, Ramsay, Raeburn, Romney, Wheatley, and the 
young Turner. 
                        5)  Satirical Genre Painting 
                       5.1) William Hogarth(1697--1764) 
      William Hogarth was unquestionably one of the greatest of English 
artists and a man of remarkably individual character and thought.  It was 
his achievement to give a comprehensive view of  social life within the 
framework of moralistic and dramatic narrative.  He produced portraits 
which brought a fresh vitality and truth into the jaded profession of what 
he called "phizmongering".  He observed both high life and low with a keen 
and critical eye and his range of observation was accompanied by an 
exceptional capacity for dramatic composition, and in painting by a 
technical quality which adds beauty to pictures containing an element of 
satire of caricature. 
      A small stocky man with blunt pugnacious features and alert blue 
eyes, he had all the sharp-wittedness of the born Cockney and an insular 
pride which led to his vigorous attacks on the exaggerated respect for 
fereign artists and the taste of would-be connoisseurs who brought over (as 
he said) "shiploads of dead Christs, Madonnas and Holy Families" by 
inferior hands.  Thereis no reason to suppose he had anything but respect 
for the great Italian masters, though he deliberately took a provocative 
attitude.  What he objected to as much as anything was the absurd 
veneration of the darkness produced by time and varnish as well as the 
assumption that English painters were necessarily inferior to others.  A 
forthrightness of statement may perhaps be related to hes North-country 
inheritance, for his father came to London from West-morland, but was in 
any case the expression of a democratic outlook and unswervingly honest 
intelligence. 
      The fact that he was apprenticed as a boy to a silver-plate engraver 
has a considerable bearing on Hogarth's development.  It instilled a 
decorative sense which is never absent from his most realistic productions. 
 It introduced him to the world of prints, after famous masters or by the 
satirical commentators of an earlier day.  It is the engraver's sense of 
line coupled with a regard for the value of Rococo curvature which governs 
his essay on aesthetics, The Analysis of Beauty. 
      As a painter Hogarth may be assumed to have learned the craft in 
Thornhill's "academy", though his freshness of colour and feeling for the 
creamy substance of oil paint suggest more acquaintance than he admitted to 
with the technique of his French contemporaries.  His first success as a 
painter was in the "conversation pieces" in which his bent as an artist 
found a logical beginning.  These informal groups of family and friends 
surrounded by the customary necessariesof their day-to-day life were 
congenial in permitting him to treat a pictureas astage.  He was not the 
inventor of the genre, which can be traced back to Dutch and Flemish art of 
the seventeenth century and in which he had contemporary rivals.  Many were 
produced when he was about thirty and soon after he made his clandestine 
match with Thornhill's daughter in 1729, when extraefforts to gain a 
livelihood became necessary.  With many felicities of detail and 
arrangement they show Hogarth still in a restrained and decorous mood.  A 
step nearer to the comprehensive view of life was the picture of an actual 
stage, the scene from The Beggar's Opera with which he scored a great 
success about 1730, making sveral versions of the painting.  Two prospects 
must have been revealed to him as a result, the idea of constructing his 
own pictorial drama comprising various scenes of social life, and that of 
reaching a wider public through the means of engraving.  The first 
successful siries:  "The Harlot's Progress, " of which only the engraving 
now exist, was immediately followed by the tremendous verve and riot of 
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