[Redbook10:57][19910512:1718ee](Neoclassicism & Romanticism) ROMANTICISM [continued (42)] [Extracts from source text with ms notes][12th May 1991]
19910512.1718
[continued]
‘The greatest landscape painter of the period, J.M.W. Turner (1775-1851), encompassed both within his art. A truly protean figure, his vast output ranged from the quietest & most intimate moments to the wildest of storms. It is true, as Ruskin remarked, that Turner dwelt on these two extremes rather than on the middle ground, but there is more than exaggeration and showmanship in his work. For in his exploration of effect he moved beyond mere descriptiveness to the discovery of more vivid forms of pictorial equivalents. In his last years in particular he conveyed his atmospherics through the juxtaposition of pure colors and freedom of handling unrivaled before the advent of abstraction.’
*
*{– ibid [Encyclopaedia of Visual Art]: 759}
[Source text continues from last previous ts journal entry]
[continued]
[PostedBlogger20for21042026]