| Fred Newton Scott, Joseph Villiers Denney - English language - 1897 - 394 pages
...and objects of a picture. It is not the huddling together of miscellaneous studio properties — a dummy, a vase, a rug here, and a sofa, a fireplace,...relation, proportion, color, light; and there must be a skilful uniting of all the parts into one perfect whole. — JC VAN DYKE : How to Judge of a Picture,... | |
| Fred Newton Scott, Joseph Villiers Denney - English language - 1897 - 424 pages
...picture. It is not the huddling together of miscellaneous studio properties — a dummy, a vase, a vug here, and a sofa, a fireplace, a table there; it is...relation, proportion, color, light; and there must be a skilful uniting of all the parts into one perfect whole. — J. €. VAN DYKE : Horn to Judge of a... | |
| American Library Association, American Library Association. Conference - Library science - 1900 - 716 pages
...the proportionate arranging and unifying of the different features and objects of a picture. . . . There must be an exercise of judgment on the part...relation, proportion, color, light ; and there must be a skilful uniting of all the parts into one perfect whole." In a bulletin as in a picture there must... | |
| Photography - 1902 - 616 pages
..." typographer." There is a proportionate arrangement and unity of the different parts of the group, an exercise of judgment on the part of the artist as to the fitness of position, as to harmony of relation, proportion, color, light, and a skilful uniting... | |
| Tuley Francis Huntington - English language - 1904 - 412 pages
...spectacular play; it is not taking a real group from nature and transplanting it upon canvas. There must be exercise of judgment on the part of the artist as...relation, proportion, color, light; and there must be a skilful uniting of all the parts into one perfect whole. — JC VAN DYKE, How to Judge of a Picture,... | |
| Frank Albert Waugh - Landscape gardening - 1905 - 184 pages
...the proportionate arranging and unifying of the different features and objects of a picture. . . . There must be an exercise of judgment on the part...relation, proportion, color, light; and there must be a skilful uniting of all the parts into one perfect whole. John C. Van Dyke. Unity and coherence are... | |
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