American Painting And Its Tradition, As Represented By Inness, Wyant, Martin, Homer, La Farge, Whistler, Chase, Alexander, Sargent
American Painting And Its Tradition, As Represented By Inness, Wyant, Martin, Homer, La Farge, Whistler, Chase, Alexander, Sargent
Van Dyke, John Charles, 1856-1932
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125), than in the etchings. The decorative arrangement was his view of what art should be and was more or less mani- fested in everything he did. Even the Ten O'clock is more decorative than realistic. The arrangement of the sentences and paragraphs is charming, and whether they mean anything or not is of small importance. Of course Whistler would have objected to being thus hung by his own rope, but he deliberately subordinated the sense of his sentences to their rhythm and tone. People who wr...ite (even art critics) are aware of what constitutes pattern and color in words and they are well pleased that the Ten 0*Clock was not representative but just as it is — that is. Digitized byGoogk 180 AMEBICAN PAINTING decorative and delightful. The painter people, however, seem to regard it as the inspired gos- pel of art and every word of it true. From which one may infer that the artist, when outside of his metier y can look at the wrong thing with that persistence sometimes thought peculiar to the unattached writer.
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