virtuous people as characters in his play? Would you not say he
was
missing half of life? Well, of the young artist who paints
nothing but beautiful things, I say he misses one half of the
world.
Do not wait for life to be
picturesque, but try and see life under
picturesque conditions. These conditions you can create for
yourself in your
studio, for they are merely conditions of light.
In nature, you must wait for them, watch for them, choose them;
and, if you wait and watch, come they will.
In Gower Street at night you may see a letter-box that is
picturesque: on the Thames Embankment you may see
picturesquepolicemen. Even Venice is not always beautiful, nor France.
To paint what you see is a good rule in art, but to see what is
worth
painting is better. See life under
pictorial conditions. It
is better to live in a city of
changeable weather than in a city of
lovely surroundings.
Now, having seen what makes the artist, and what the artist makes,
who is the artist? There is a man living
amongst us who unites in
himself all the qualities of the noblest art, whose work is a joy
for all time, who is, himself, a master of all time. That man is
Mr. Whistler.
* * * * * * * *
But, you will say, modern dress, that is bad. If you cannot paint
black cloth you could not have painted
silkendoublet. Ugly dress
is better for art - facts of
vision, not of the object.
What is a picture? Primarily, a picture is a
beautifully coloured
surface, merely, with no more
spiritual message or meaning for you
than an
exquisitefragment of Venetian glass or a blue tile from
the wall of Damascus. It is,
primarily, a
purelydecorative thing,
a delight to look at.
All archaeological pictures that make you say 'How curious!' all
sentimental pictures that make you say, 'How sad!' all historical
pictures that make you say 'How interesting!' all pictures that do
not immediately give you such
artistic joy as to make you say 'How
beautiful!' are bad pictures.
* * * * * * * *
We never know what an artist is going to do. Of course not. The
artist is not a
specialist. All such di
visions as animal
painters,
landscape
painters,
painters of Scotch cattle in an English mist,
painters of English cattle in a Scotch mist, racehorse
painters,
bull-terrier
painters, all are
shallow. If a man is an artist he
can paint everything.
The object of art is to stir the most
divine and
remote of the
chords which make music in our soul; and colour is indeed, of
itself a mystical presence on things, and tone a kind of sentinel.
Am I pleading, then, for mere
technique? No. As long as there are
any signs of
technique at all, the picture is
unfinished. What is
finish? A picture is finished when all traces of work, and of the
means employed to bring about the result, have disappeared.
In the case of handicraftsmen - the
weaver, the potter, the smith -
on their work are the traces of their hand. But it is not so with
the
painter; it is not so with the artist.
Art should have no
sentiment about it but its beauty, no
techniqueexcept what you cannot observe. One should be able to say of a
picture not that it is 'well painted,' but that it is 'not
painted.'
What is the difference between
absolutelydecorative art and a
painting? Decorative art emphasises its material:
imaginative art
annihilates it. Tapestry shows its threads as part of its beauty:
a picture annihilates its
canvas: it shows nothing of it.
Porcelain emphasises its glaze: water-colours
reject the paper.
A picture has no meaning but its beauty, no message but its joy.
That is the first truth about art that you must never lose sight
of. A picture is a
purelydecorative thing.
LONDON MODELS
PROFESSIONAL models are a
purely modern
invention. To the Greeks,
for
instance, they were quite unknown. Mr. Mahaffy, it is true,
tells us that Pericles used to present peacocks to the great ladies
of Athenian society in order to induce them to sit to his friend
Phidias, and we know that Polygnotus introduced into his picture of
the Trojan women the face of Elpinice, the
celebrated sister of the
great Conservative leader of the day, but these GRANDES DAMES
clearly do not come under our
category. As for the old masters,
they
undoubtedly made
constant studies from their pupils and
apprentices, and even their religious pictures are full of the
portraits of their friends and relations, but they do not seem to
have had the inestimable
advantage of the
existence of a class of
people whose sole
profession is to pose. In fact the model, in our
sense of the word, is the direct
creation of Academic Schools.
Every country now has its own models, except America. In New York,
and even in Boston, a good model is so great a rarity that most of
the artists are reduced to
painting Niagara and millionaires. In
Europe, however, it is different. Here we have plenty of models,
and of every
nationality. The Italian models are the best. The
natural grace of their attitudes, as well as the wonderful
picturesqueness of their
colouring, makes them facile - often too
facile - subjects for the
painter's brush. The French models,
though not so beautiful as the Italian, possess a quickness of
intellectual
sympathy, a
capacity, in fact, of understanding the
artist, which is quite
remarkable. They have also a great command
over the varieties of
facial expression, are
peculiarly dramatic,
and can
chatter the ARGOT of the ATELIER as cleverly as the critic
of the GIL BLAS. The English models form a class entirely by
themselves. They are not so
picturesque as the Italian, nor so
clever as the French, and they have
absolutely no
tradition, so to
speak, of their order. Now and then some old
veteran knocks at the
studio door, and proposes to sit as Ajax defying the
lightning, or
as King Lear upon the blasted heath. One of them some time ago
called on a popular
painter who,
happening at the moment to require
his services, engaged him, and told him to begin by kneeling down
in the attitude of prayer. 'Shall I be Biblical or Shakespearean,
sir?' asked the
veteran. 'Well - Shakespearean,' answered the
artist, wondering by what subtle nuance of expression the model
would
convey the difference. 'All right, sir,' said the professor
of posing, and he
solemnly knelt down and began to wink with his
left eye! This class, however, is dying out. As a rule the model,
nowadays, is a pretty girl, from about twelve to twenty-five years
of age, who knows nothing about art, cares less, and is merely
anxious to earn seven or eight
shillings a day without much
trouble. English models
rarely look at a picture, and never
venture on any aesthetic theories. In fact, they realise very
completely Mr. Whistler's idea of the
function of an art critic,
for they pass no criticisms at all. They accept all schools of art
with the grand catholicity of the auctioneer, and sit to a
fantastic young impressionist as
readily as to a
learned and
laborious
academician. They are neither for the Whistlerites nor
against them; the quarrel between the school of facts and the
school of effects touches them not; idealistic and naturalistic are
words that
convey no meaning to their ears; they merely desire that
the
studio shall be warm, and the lunch hot, for all
charmingartists give their models lunch.
As to what they are asked to do they are
equallyindifferent. On
Monday they will don the rags of a beggar-girl for Mr. Pumper,
whose
pathetic pictures of modern life draw such tears from the
public, and on Tuesday they will pose in a peplum for Mr. Phoebus,
who thinks that all really
artistic subjects are
necessarily B.C.
They
career gaily through all centuries and through all costumes,
and, like actors, are interesting only when they are not
themselves. They are
extremely" target="_blank" title="ad.极端地;非常地">
extremelygood-natured, and very
accommodating. 'What do you sit for?' said a young artist to a
model who had sent him in her card (all models, by the way, have
cards and a small black bag). 'Oh, for anything you like, sir,'
said the girl, 'landscape if necessary!'
Intellectually, it must be acknowledged, they are Philistines, but
physically they are perfect - at least some are. Though none of
them can talk Greek, many can look Greek, which to a nineteenth-
century
painter is naturally of great importance. If they are
allowed, they
chatter a great deal, but they never say anything.
Their observations are the only BANALITES heard in Bohemia.