Lectures on Landscape, by John 
Ruskin 
 
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Title: Lectures on Landscape Delivered at Oxford in Lent Term, 1871 
Author: John Ruskin 
Release Date: December 4, 2006 [EBook #20019] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LECTURES 
ON LANDSCAPE *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Linda Cantoni, and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
LECTURES ON LANDSCAPE 
DELIVERED AT OXFORD
IN LENT TERM, 1871. 
Library Edition 
THE COMPLETE WORKS 
OF 
JOHN RUSKIN 
CROWN OF WILD OLIVE TIME AND TIDE QUEEN OF THE AIR 
LECTURES ON ART AND LANDSCAPE ARATRA PENTELICI 
NATIONAL LIBRARY ASSOCIATION NEW YORK CHICAGO 
[Illustration: BRANTWOOD 
FROM A PHOTOGRAPH] 
 
PREFATORY NOTE. 
These Lectures on Landscape were given at Oxford on January 20, 
February 9, and February 23, 1871. They were not public Lectures, 
like Professor Ruskin's other courses, but addressed only to 
undergraduates who had joined his class. They were illustrated by 
pictures from his collection, of which several are here reproduced, and 
by others which may be seen in the Oxford University Galleries or in 
the Ruskin Drawing School. 
W.G.C. 
 
CONTENTS. 
PAGE 
LECTURE I.
OUTLINE 1 
LECTURE II. 
LIGHT AND SHADE 16 
LECTURE III. 
COLOR 32 
 
LIST OF PLATES 
Page 
Vesuvius in Eruption, by J.M.W. Turner 2 
Near Blair Athol, by J.M.W. Turner 19 
Dumblane Abbey, by J.M.W. Turner 20 
Madonna and Child, by Filippo Lippi 33 
The Lady with the Brooch, by Sir Joshua Reynolds 35 
Æsacus and Hesperie, by J.M.W. Turner 45 
Mill near Grande Chartreuse, by J.M.W. Turner 47 
L'Aiguillette; Valley of Cluses, by J.M.W. Turner 48 
 
LECTURES ON LANDSCAPE. 
 
I. 
OUTLINE.
1. In my inaugural lecture,[1] I stated that while holding this 
professorship I should direct you, in your practical exercises, chiefly to 
natural history and landscape. And having in the course of the past year 
laid the foundational elements of art sufficiently before you, I will 
invite you, now, to enter on real work with me; and accordingly I 
propose during this and the following term to give you what practical 
leading I can in elementary study of landscape, and of a branch of 
natural history which will form a kind of center for all the 
rest--Ichthyology. 
[Footnote 1: "Lectures on Art, 1870," § 23.] 
In the outset I must shortly state to you the position which landscape 
painting and animal painting hold towards the higher branches of art. 
2. Landscape painting is the thoughtful and passionate representation of 
the physical conditions appointed for human existence. It imitates the 
aspects, and records the phenomena, of the visible things which are 
dangerous or beneficial to men; and displays the human methods of 
dealing with these, and of enjoying them or suffering from them, which 
are either exemplary or deserving of sympathetic contemplation. 
Animal painting investigates the laws of greater and less nobility of 
character in organic form, as comparative anatomy examines those of 
greater and less development in organic structure; and the function of 
animal painting is to bring into notice the minor and unthought of 
conditions of power or beauty, as that of physiology is to ascertain the 
minor conditions of adaptation. 
3. Questions as to the purpose of arrangements or the use of the organs 
of an animal are, however, no less within the province of the painter 
than of the physiologist, and are indeed more likely to commend 
themselves to you through drawing than dissection. For as you dissect 
an animal you generally assume its form to be necessary and only 
examine how it is constructed; but in drawing the outer form itself 
attentively you are led necessarily to consider the mode of life for 
which it is disposed, and therefore to be struck by any awkwardness or 
apparent uselessness in its parts. After sketching one day several heads 
of birds it became a vital matter of interest to me to know the use of the
bony process on the head of the hornbill; but on asking a great 
physiologist, I found that it appeared to him an absurd question, and 
was certainly an unanswerable one. 
4. I have limited, you have just heard, landscape painting to the 
representation of phenomena relating to human life. You will scarcely 
be disposed to admit the propriety of such a limitation; and you will 
still less be likely to conceive its necessary strictness and severity, 
unless I convince you of it by somewhat detailed examples. 
Here are two landscapes by Turner in his greatest time--Vesuvius in 
repose, Vesuvius in eruption.    
    
		
	
	
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