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Harriet Martineau
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John Ruskin ] [
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Fred Yates ]
John
Ruskin (1819-1900)
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John
Ruskin was the adored child of wealthy parents (his father was a sherry
merchant) and was recognised from an early age as a prodigy.
He became one of the leading art critics and social commentators of his
day, possessing an acute sensitivity and judgement allied to a stern Protestant
morality instilled in him by his mother.
Ruskin‘s
artistic judgement is reflected in his championing of the works of J.W.M.Turner
(some of which he bought and hung at Brantwood, his house near Coniston from
1872) and of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, as well as in his architectural
criticism. In his Seven Lamps of
Architecture Ruskin set out to define seven principles: Sacrifice, Truth, Power,
Beauty, Life, Memory and Obedience. In
The Stones of Venice he recorded in lyrical prose the architectural decoration
that he felt was in danger of extinction. Ruskin believed that the beauty of medieval architecture
arose from the pleasure the workman took in his craft, a view which William
Morris and the Arts and Crafts movement took up and developed.
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Following
a period in which his writing focused upon controversial economic issues, as in
Unto This Last, Ruskin was elected the first Slade Professor of Fine Art at
Oxford. His Guild of St. George
extended the range of his teaching through his monthly Fors Clavigera: Letters
to the Workmen and Labourers of Great Britain.
By the time he attacked the work of the painter Whistler in Fors
Clavigera, his mental health was causing grave concern, and he was excused from
giving evidence in the Whistler libel case in 1878 on medical grounds.
He won but was
awarded damages of only a farthing! The Armitt has many of Ruskin's letters
surrounding this notorious court case.
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| However, supported by his secretary
W.G.Collingwood,
Ruskin continued to
write and to play an active, if intermittent, role in the defence of the Lake
District until his death in 1900. |
John
Ruskin - Brantwood
The Coniston home of John Ruskin from 1872 to his death in 1900. The house
is filled with Ruskin's drawings and watercolours together with much of his
original furniture, books and personal items.
[ Abraham
Brothers ] [
Armitt Sisters ] [
Arnolds ] [ Herbert
Bell ] [ J W
Brunskill ] [
Collingwood Family ] [
W E Forster ] [
William Green ] [
Alfred Heaton Cooper
] [ John Kelsick ] [
Harriet Martineau
] [ Charlotte Mason
]
[ Beatrix Potter ]
[ William Payne ] [
J B Pyne ] [
Canon Rawnsley ] [
The Romans ] [
John Ruskin ] [
Kurt Schwitters ]
[ Josefina de
Vasconcellos ] [
Charles Walmsley ] [
Fred Yates ]
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