naturalistic school of painters. What these men
claim is the right of the trained artist to represent
what he himself feels to be pictorial in nature, not
merely what was felt to be so by Turner or William
Hunt, Corot or Daubigny, or indeed by any other
artist however great.
Doubt has recently been thrown on the claims of
Constable to have been the unconscious aj)ostle in
France of this development in modern landscape
painting. It is a remarkable fact that at home,
until lately, his lead was not followed, while in that
country his example exerted an enormous influence.
Regarded in England in his own day as a barbarian,
his great genius is not yet sufficiently recognised by
his countrymen.
It would be absurd to imagine that naturalistic
painting is the only way in which fine pictorial art
is or has been possible, but it has surely claims to
be treated with respect, and to receive careful con-
sideration.
It would appear as if the original impulses from
which all national developments in art sprang into
life have come from alien peoples. Light spread
from Egypt to Phoenicia, from Phoenicia to Greece,
from Greece to Rome. The Renaissance was borne
from Italy to France and England. Japan owed its
art in the first place to China. These are but a
few instances of an almost universal experience. In
all cases the new thought was modified and vivified
by the genius of the country which received it.
At first, doubtless, the novelty and strangeness
attendant on a breaking away from old traditions
were ever received with suspicion and dislike, but
the faith of the new believers in time prevailed, and
the development at length attained the dignity of
being regarded as national. What would Scottish
Architecture have been had it not learned from
France . Do we look with less satisfaction on the
alas ! too few remains that we have seen somethina:
similar abroad ? Ai-e our musicians to shut their
ears to the productions of German genius .? Sir
John Millais himself, in the article already alluded
to, congratulates the sculptors of England that they
have not scrupled to learn from Carpeaux and his
great countryinen. Why should painters be com-
pelled to cling to their insularity ?
The men who are so well abused yield to none in
their admiration of the great aiiists of the past.
What they condemn are the respectable, preten-
tious, commonplace productions, so popular with
the general public, which crowd our galleries and
claim the credit of being if not artistic, certainly
national.
Men of reputation may preach, academies may
neglect, critics may sneer, but this new renaissance
develops despite the clamour. Amid warnings and
reproaches, the man who is true to his intuitions
will continue to paint what he loves, and in the way
he sees it to be beautiful, not what he is told he
ought to love, and in the way some one else has seen
it. Training, however well directed, will not make
an artist, familiarity with the works of genius does
not imply the hidden gift.
From time to time a man appears, often from
among the most unpromising surroundings, who
has something to say which can only be expressed
in pictorial form. He sacrifices everything, over-
comes every obstacle, spares no pains in the endeavour
to acquire a mastery over the means of expression,
through which alone he can reveal himself to those
who can understand his message. He will learn
from every teacher, and seek truth wherever it is to
be found. Whether a native of Scotland, America,
or Italy, he speaks to all the world, for his language
is the universal one which appeals to all who have
the eye to see. James Paterson.
SCULPTURE AT THE GLASGOW EXHIBITION.
IV.
THE work of George Tinworth, if not great,
is most interesting and original. It is a naive
attempt to enter the province of painting without
the aid of atmosphere, to present in sculpture
dramatic incidents treated in a picturesque and
realistic manner. Although in nature an act may
be performed by a company of persons representing
a set of different individualities and views, in
art only the single view of the spectator is to be
considered, and the artist, in order to meet it, must
make ideas and actions converge to a point or
climax, and allow the mind to rest in contemplation
of unity or harmony; but Mr. Tinworth, in his
earnest and eager pursuit of expression throughout
every detail, loses sight of this matter ; on his stage
the dramatis persona: all speak at once, and the
result is a confusing violation of all that is classical
in the art. The Songster, by G. G. Frampton, is
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THE SCOTTISH ART REVIEW