John Ruskin
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
John Ruskin 1819-1900, English critic and social theorist. During the mid-19th cent. Ruskin was the virtual dictator of artistic opinion in England, but Ruskin's reputation declined after his death, and he has been treated harshly by 20th-century critics. Although it is undeniable that he was an extravagant and inconsistent thinker (a reflection of his lifelong mental and emotional instability), it is equally true that he revolutionized art criticism and wrote some of the most superb prose in the English language.
Early Life
Educated by his wealthy, evangelical parents, Ruskin was prepared for the ministry, and until 1836 he spent his mornings with his domineering mother, reading and memorizing the Bible. In 1833 the family went on the first of its many tours of Europe, and the boy ardently studied nature and painting. His stay (1836-40) at Oxford resulted in his winning the Newdigate Prize for poetry and in his determining not to enter the ministry. A breakdown of health in 1840 forced him to travel.
Critic and Reformer
The first volume of Ruskin's Modern Painters appeared in 1843. This work started as a defense of the painter J. M. W. Turner and developed into a treatise elaborating the principles that art is based on national and individual integrity and morality and also that art is a "universal language." He finished the five volumes in 1860. The Seven Lamps of Architecture (1849) applied these same theories to architecture. In 1848, Ruskin married Euphemia Gray, a beautiful young woman with social ambitions; the union, which apparently was never consummated, was annulled in 1854, and Mrs. Ruskin subsequently married the painter John Everett Millais.
From his position as the foremost English art critic, Ruskin in 1851 defended the work of the Pre-Raphaelite group. His third great volume of criticism, The Stones of Venice (1851-53), maintained that the Gothic architecture of Venice reflected national and domestic virtue, while Venetian Renaissance architecture mirrored corruption. About 1857, Ruskin's art criticism became more broadly social and political. He wrote Unto This Last (in Cornhill Magazine, 1860) and Munera Pulveris (in Fraser's Magazine, 1862-63). These works attacked bourgeois England and charged that modern art reflected the ugliness and waste of modern industry.
Ruskin's positive program for social reform appeared in Sesame and Lilies (1865), The Crown of Wild Olive (1866), Time and Tide (1867), and Fors Clavigera (8 vol., 1871-84). Many of his suggested programs—old age pensions, nationalization of education, organization of labor—have become accepted doctrine. He was made the first professor of art in England (Slade professor, Oxford, 1870) and his lectures were well attended. His multifarious activities broke down his health, however, and in 1878 he suffered his first period of insanity. Recurrences of unbalance became more frequent, though some of his greatest prose, the autobiography Praeterita (1885-89), was written in the lucid intervals.
Bibliography
See his works (39 vol., 1903-12); M. Lutyens, The Ruskins and the Grays (1972); biographies by P. Quennell (1949), E. T. Cook (2 vol., 1911; repr. 1969); T. Hilton (2 vol., 1985-2000); studies by J. Evans (1952, repr. 1970), J. C. Sherburne (1973), J. L. Bradley (1984), and J. L. Spear (1984).
Author not available, RUSKIN, JOHN.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Italian counterpoint: Henry James and John Ruskin in Florence.
Victorian Newsletter; 3/22/2004; Swafford, Kevin; 6115 words
; Though the brilliant and often controversial art criticism and social commentary of John Ruskin loomed large in the minds of many nineteenth-century Americans and western Europeans, Henry James boldly proclaimed in his essay Italy Revisited that Ruskin would never be fruitfully read in Florence
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Crisis? What crisis?(is art criticism on the decline?)(Editorial)
Art Monthly; 5/1/2006; 950 words
; The debate about the supposed terminal decline of art criticism is beginning to resemble that concerning the even more protracted demise of painting. In both cases, while the stricken patient lies stretched out on the operating table, surrounded by surgeons desperately searching for vital signs,
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RUSKIN'S MASTERWORK RENDERED ACCESSIBLE
The Boston Globe; 6/8/1988; Robert Taylor, Globe Staff; 563 words
; MODERN PAINTERS, by John Ruskin; abridged and edited by David Barrie. Knopf. 656 pp. $45. No great art critic has written as much twaddle as Ruskin. He contradicts himself, he is wrong, fretful, inconsistent. "Instead of a garden of delight the reader finds a sort of assize court in perpetual
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The A-Z of Ruskin A hundred years ago today, John Ruskin, one of the greatest thinkers of his time, died at home in the Lake District. His prophetic views on art, society and ecology are still at work in the world.
The Independent - London; 1/20/2000; Kevin Jackson; 1580 words
; A is for Art John Ruskin (1819-1900) was a man of almost bewilderingly various talents. He was, among other vocations, an artist and draughtsman, a geologist, an economist, a poet, a numismatist, a student of many aspects of the natural world from meteorology to what we would now call ecology, a
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The Arts: Narrow view of a broad mind In his long life the visionary Victorian John Ruskin was many things (including misleading and possibly mad) and passionately interested in a vast range of subjects. But you won't learn that from the Tate's exhibition marking the centenary of his death. By Tom Lubbock
The Independent - London; 3/14/2000; Tom Lubbock; 1216 words
; John Ruskin died 100 years ago. He's not as forgotten as he once was. There are quite a few books about him, even a few books by him, in print. But I guess the great Victorian art critic, sage and prophet still stands as a bit of a loony: the sex problems, the amateur road-building projects, the
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Ruskin's power.
American Scholar; 3/22/2003; Rose, Phyllis; 4096 words
; John Ruskin, the nineteenth-century British writer with the most wide-ranging influence on contemporary thought, has gone unread for a long time. His ideas have lived through the words of other writers while his own works are ignored. Their style suited an age that found the fortymile-per-hour
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Ruskin, Venice, and the Fate of Beauty.(Critical Essay)
The Southern Review; 6/22/2001; DONOGHUE, DENIS; 10134 words
; IN THE POSTSCRIPT OF THE PREFACE to his translation of The Bible of Amiens, Proust brings forward a consideration of Ruskin that, if true, would reduce our appreciation of his work. He quotes from The Stones of Venice the passage that comes immediately after Ruskin's assertion that the shrine of
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Art Criticism and Art Education
Studies in Art Education; 10/1/2000; Howell, John; 1648 words
; Art Criticism and Art Education Wolff, T., & Geahigan, G. (1997). Urbana: University of Illinois Press. 352 pages, ISBN 0-252-02314-5. An early impetus for art educators to move to a discipline-based perspective was Bruner's (1960) proposal that educators look to methods employed by experts in
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The moral intuition of Ruskin's "Storm-Cloud".(John Ruskin, The Storm-Cloud of the Nineteenth Century)(Critical Essay)
Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900; 9/22/2005; Day, Brian J.; 6986 words
; John Ruskin's 1884 lecture The Storm-Cloud of the Nineteenth Century is perhaps the best-known piece of nineteenth-century environmental writing by an English author, a reputation canonized in our own time by the influential Norton Anthology of English Literature, which excerpts a significant
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There goes the judge in today's art criticism.(Knight Ridder Newspapers)
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 4/7/2004; Romano, Carlin; 1114 words
; Byline: Carlin Romano ``What Happened to Art Criticism by James Elkins; Prickly Paradigm Press ($10) Even in the everyone's a victim era, critic abuse remains a crime unrecognized by courts or social-service agencies. These days it takes place mainly in short forms such as e-mail and voice mail. (
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