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Picturesque

Picturesque is an aesthetic ideal introduced into English cultural debate in 1782 by William Gilpin in Observations on the River Wye, and Several Parts of South Wales, etc. Relative Chiefly to Picturesque Beauty; made in the Summer of the Year 1770, a practical book which instructed England's leisured travellers to examine "the face of a country by the rules of picturesque beauty". Picturesque, along with the aesthetic and cultural strands of Gothic and Celticism, was a part of the emerging Romantic sensibility of the 18th century.

A view of the Roman Campagna from Tivoli, evening by Claude Lorrain, 1644–1645

The term "picturesque" needs to be understood in relationship to two other aesthetic ideals: the beautiful and the sublime. By the last third of the 18th century, Enlightenment and rationalist ideas about aesthetics were being challenged by looking at the experiences of beauty and sublimity as non-rational. Aesthetic experience was not just a rational decision – one did not look at a pleasing curved form and decide it was beautiful; rather it came naturally as a matter of basic human instinct. Edmund Burke in his 1757 A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful argued that the soft gentle curves appealed to the male sexual desire, while the sublime horrors appealed to our desires for self-preservation.[1] Picturesque arose as a mediator between these opposed ideals of beauty and the sublime, showing the possibilities that existed between these two rationally idealised states. As Thomas Gray wrote in 1765 of the Scottish Highlands: "The mountains are ecstatic […]. None but those monstrous creatures of God know how to join so much beauty with so much horror."[2]

Historical background and development edit

 
The Chancel and Crossing of Tintern Abbey, Looking towards the East Window by J. M. W. Turner, 1794

The picturesque as a topic in discourse came up in the late Renaissance in Italy where the term pittoresco began to be used in art writing as seen with Italian authors such as Vasari (1550), Lomazzo (1584), and Ridolfi (1648).[3] The word is applied to the manner of depicting a subject in painting, roughly in the sense of "non-classical" or "painted non-academically" in a similar way as Dutch painters discussed developments in painting in the seventeenth century as "painter-like" (schilder-achtig).[4] Highly instrumental in the establishing of a taste for the picturesque in northern Europe was landscape painting, in which the realism of the Dutch played a significant role. This cannot be seen separate from other developments in Europe.

Claude Lorrain (1604–1682) was a well-known French painter, who had developed landscape painting in Rome, like Poussin (1594–1665). Both painters worked in a somewhat stiff, mannered style, with a focus on archaeological remains and towering pine trees, followed by several Dutchmen who had also traveled to Rome. Soon, deviating from the classical ideal of perfection in beauty epitomized by healthy, towering trees, landscape painters came to discover the sublimity of the withered old tree; the two withered oaks by Jan van Goyen (1641) are a well-known example. For those who tried to find an answer to the classicism of French landscape painting, the lonely spruce at a wild cataract that caught the sublimity of nature became a recurring theme, most explicitly expressed by Jacob van Ruisdael. This painter painted picturesque garden scenes that can be seen as early representations of picturesque gardens in Europe.[5] Similar landscape naturalism in English gardens emerged within cultural spheres around William and Mary from which the discussion on the picturesque in the English landscape took hold.[6]

In England the word picturesque, meaning literally "in the manner of a picture; fit to be made into a picture," was a word used as early as 1703 (Oxford English Dictionary), and derived from French pittoresque and the Italian pittoresco. Gilpin's Essay on Prints (1768) defined picturesque as "a term expressive of that peculiar kind of beauty, which is agreeable in a picture" (p. xii).

The pictorial genre called "Picturesque" appeared in the 17th century and flourished in the 18th. As well as portraying beauty in the classical manner, eighteenth-century artists could overdo it from top to bottom. Their pre-Romantic sensitivity could aspire to the sublime or be pleased with the picturesque. According to Christopher Hussey, "While the outstanding qualities of the sublime were vastness and obscurity, and those of the beautiful smoothness and gentleness", the characteristics of the picturesque were "roughness and sudden variation joined to irregularity of form, colour, lighting, and even sound".[7] The first option is the harmonic and classical (i. e. beauty); the second, the grandiose and terrifying (i. e. the sublime); and the third, the rustic, corresponding to the picturesque and connecting qualities of the first two options. This triple definition by Hussey, although modern, is true to the concept of the epoch, as Uvedale Price explained in 1794. The examples Price gave for these three aesthetic tendencies were Handel's music as the sublime, a pastorale by Arcangelo Corelli as the beautiful, and a painting of a Dutch landscape as the picturesque.

During the mid 18th century the idea of purely scenic pleasure touring began to take hold among the English leisured class. This new image disregarded the principles of symmetry and perfect proportions while focusing more on "accidental irregularity," and moving more towards a concept of individualism and rusticity.[8] William Gilpin's work was a direct challenge to the ideology of the well established Grand Tour, showing how an exploration of rural Britain could compete with classically-oriented tours of the Continent.[9] The irregular, anti-classical ruins became sought-after sights.

Picturesque-hunters edit

 
An Artist Studying from Nature by Claude Lorrain 1639
 
Villa Doria park in Albano Laziale

Picturesque-hunters began crowding the Lake District to make sketches using tinted portable mirrors to frame and darken the view, known as claude glass, and named after the 17th century landscape painter Claude Lorrain, whose work William Gilpin saw as synonymous with the picturesque and worthy of emulation. These new tourists had something of the big-game hunter about them and they boasted of their encounters with savage landscapes. Picturesque-hunters tried to "capture" wild scenes, and "fixed" them as pictorial trophies in order to sell them or hang them in frames on their drawing room walls.[10] Gilpin asked: "shall we suppose it a greater pleasure to the sportsman to pursue a trivial animal, than it is to the man of taste to pursue the beauties of nature?"[9]

Gilpin differentiated picturesque from the Edmund Burke category of the beautiful in the publication Three Essays: On Picturesque Beauty, on Picturesque Travel, and on Sketching Landscape. Gilpin expounded on his experience when traveling the landscape to search for picturesque nature.[11]

In 1815 when Europe was available to travel again after the wars, new fields for picturesque-hunters opened in Italy. Anna Brownell Jameson wrote in 1820: "Had I never visited Italy, I think I should never have understood the word picturesque", while Henry James exclaimed in Albano in the 1870s: "I have talked of the picturesque all my life; now at last I see it".[12]

The Far East in the discourse on the picturesque edit

 
Kew Gardens, built by William Chambers 1761
 
Map of Parc des Buttes Chaumont 1867, built according to plans by Adolphe Alphand

Though seemingly vague and far away, the Far East, China and Japan, played a considerable role in inspiring a taste for the picturesque. Sir William Temple (1628–1699) was a statesman and essayist who traveled throughout Europe. His essay Upon the Gardens of Epicurus; or Of Gardening, in the Year 1685 described what he called the taste of the "Chineses" [sic] for a beauty without order.

Among us [Europeans], the beauty of building and planting is placed chiefly in some certain proportions, symmetries, or uniformities; our walks and our trees ranged so as to answer one another, and at exact distances. The Chineses scorn this way of planting, and say, a boy, that can tell an hundred, may plant walks of trees in straight lines, and over-against one another, and to what length and extent he pleases. But their greatest reach of imagination is employed in contriving figures, where the beauty shall be great, and strike the eye, but without any order or disposition of parts that shall be commonly or easily observed: and, though we have hardly any notion of this sort of beauty, yet they have a particular word to express it, and, where they find it hit their eye at first sight, they say the sharawadgi is fine or is admirable, or any such expression of esteem. And whoever observes the work upon the best India gowns, or the painting upon their best screens or purcellans, will find their beauty is all of this kind (that is) without order. (1690: 58)

 
Pope's villa at Twickenham, showing the grotto, from a watercolour produced soon after Alexander Pope's death

Alexander Pope in a letter of 1724, refers to Temple's Far East: "For as to the hanging Gardens of Babylon, the Paradise of Cyrus, and the Sharawaggi's of China, I have little or no Idea's of 'em"; a few years later Horace Walpole mentions that "I am almost as fond of the Sharawaggi, or Chinese want of symmetry, in buildings, as in grounds or gardens" (1750). Imaginations of Far Eastern irregularity and sharawadgi returns frequently in the eighteenth and nineteenth century discourse.

Multiple authors have attempted to trace the etymology of sharawadgi to various Chinese and Japanese terms for garden design. Two Chinese authors suggested the Chinese expressions saluo guaizhi "quality of being impressive or surprising through careless or unorderly grace" (Chang 1930)[13] and sanlan waizhi "space tastefully enlivened by disorder" (Ch'ien 1940).[14] E. V. Gatenby (1931) proposed English sharawadgi derived from Japanese sorowaji (揃わじ) "not being regular", an older form of sorowazu (揃わず) "incomplete; unequal (in size); uneven; irregular".[15] S. Lang and Nikolaus Pevsner (1949) dismissed these two unattested Chinese terms, doubted the Japanese sorowaji, and suggested that Temple coined the word "sharawadgi" himself. These authors placed Temple's discovery in the context of upcoming ideas on the picturesque.[16] P. Quennell (1968) concurred that the term could not be traced to any Chinese word, and favored the Japanese etymology. Takau Shimada (1997) believed the irregular beauty that Temple admired was more likely characteristic of Japanese gardens, owing to the irregular topography upon which they were built, and compared the Japanese word sawarinai (触りない) "do not touch; leave things alone". Ciaran Murray (1998, 1999) reasons that Temple heard the word sharawadgi from Dutch travelers who had visited Japanese gardens, following the Oxford English Dictionary that enters Sharawadgi without direct definition, excepting a gloss under the Temple quotation. It notes the etymology is "Of unknown origin; Chinese scholars agree that it cannot belong to that language. Temple speaks as if he had himself heard it from travellers". Ciaran Murray emphasizes that Temple used "the Chineses" in blanket reference inclusive of all Oriental races during a time when the East-West dialogues and influences were quite fluid. He also wanted to see similarity between sharawadgi and a supposed southern Japanese Kyūshū dialect pronunciation shorowaji.[17] Wybe Kuitert, a notable scholar of Japanese garden history placed sharawadgi conclusively in the discourse that was on in the circles around Constantijn Huygens a good friend of William Temple, tracing the term as the Japanese aesthetic share'aji (洒落味、しゃれ味) that belonged to applied arts – including garden design.[18]

Temple misinterpreted wild irregularity, which he characterized as sharawadgi, to be happy circumstance instead of carefully manipulated garden design. His idea of highlighting natural imperfections and spatial inconsistencies was the inspiration for fashioning early 18th-century "Sharawadgi gardens" in England. The most famous example was William Kent's "Elysian field" at Stowe House built around 1738.

Temple's development of fashionable "sharawadgi" garden design was followed by Edmund Burke's 1757 A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful. Burke suggested a third category including those things which neither inspire awe with the sublime or pleasure with the beautiful. He called it "the picturesque" and qualified it to mean all that cannot fit into the two more rational states evoked by the other categories. A flurry of English authors beginning with William Gilpin and followed by Richard Payne Knight, Uvedale Price, and Humphrey Repton all called for promotion of the picturesque.

Gilpin wrote prolifically on the merits of touring the countryside of England. The naturally morose, craggy, pastoral, and untouched landscape of northern England and Scotland was a suitable endeavor for the rising middle classes, and Gilpin thought it almost patriotic to travel the homeland instead of the historically elite tour of the great European cities. One of the major commonalities of the picturesque style movement is the role of travel and its integration in designing one's home to enhance one's political and social standing. A simple description of the picturesque is the visual qualities of Nature suitable for a picture. However, Lockean philosophy had freed Nature from the ideal forms of allegory and classical pursuits, essentially embracing the imperfections in both landscapes and plants. In this way the idea progressed beyond the study of great landscape painters like Claude Deruet and Nicolas Poussin into experimentation with creating episodic, evocative, and contemplative landscapes in which elements were combined for their total effect as an individual picture.

 
Illustration of Wentworth Woodhouse, South Yorkshire after proposed landscaping

The picturesque style in landscape gardening was a conscious manipulation of Nature to create foregrounds, middlegrounds, and backgrounds in a move to highlight a selection of provocative formal elements—in short the later appropriation of Humphrey Repton. It is unique that an idea on applied design (Sharawadgi) was diffused, which resulted in a typology of gardens that served as a precursor for the picturesque style. These aesthetic preferences were driven by nationalistic statements of incorporating goods and scenery from one's own country, framing mechanisms which dictate the overall experience, and a simultaneous embracing of irregular qualities while manipulating the "natural" scenery to promote them. The importance of this comparison lies in its location at the beginning of modernism and modernization, marking a period in which Nature was allowed to become less mathematically ordered but where intervention was still paramount but could be masked compositionally and just shortly after technologically as in Adolphe Alphand's Parc des Buttes Chaumont and Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux's Central Park.

Picturesque architecture edit

 
A drawing of Cullen's showing use of perspective

In the 1930s and 1940s the editor Hubert de Cronin Hastings used the Architectural Review in his attempt to popularize modern architecture in Britain. Authors who published in the Architectural Review include Paul Nash, John Piper, James Maude Richards, John Betjeman, Nikolaus Pevsner, and Gordon Cullen. Cronin Hastings combined the different landscape philosophies of surrealism, abstraction, neo-romanticism, and rationalism under the heading picturesque. Cronin Hastings advanced his urban planning philosophy as Townscape. In 1944 he published "Exterior Furnishing or Sharawaggi: The Art of Making Urban Landscap".[19]

Notable works edit

  • William Combe and Thomas Rowlandson published an 1809 poem with pictures called The Tour of Doctor Syntax in Search of the Picturesque which was a satire of the ideal and famously skewered Picturesque-hunters.
  • William Gilpin, Three Essays: On Picturesque Beauty; On Picturesque Travel; and on Sketching Landscape: to which is Added a Poem, On Landscape Painting was published in London, 1792.
  • Christopher Hussey, The Picturesque: Studies in a Point of View, 1927 focused modern thinking on the development of this approach. The picturesque idea continues to have a profound influence on garden design and planting design.
  • Richard Payne Knight, An Analytical Inquiry into the Principles of Taste, soon followed, and went into several editions that the author revised and expanded.
  • Uvedale Price, An Essay on the Picturesque, as Compared with the Sublime and the Beautiful; and on the Use of Studying Pictures, for the Purpose of Improving Real Landscape, revised. edition London, 1796.
  • Humphry Repton applied picturesque theory to the practice of landscape design. In conjunction with the work of Price and Knight, this led to the 'picturesque theory' that designed landscapes should be composed like landscape paintings with a foreground, a middle ground and a background. Repton believed that the foreground should be the realm of art (with formal geometry and ornamental planting), that the middleground should have a parkland character of the type created by Lancelot "Capability" Brown and that the background should have a wild and 'natural' character.
  • John Ruskin identified the "picturesque" as a genuinely modern aesthetic category, in The Seven Lamps of Architecture.
  • Dorothy Wordsworth wrote Recollections of a Tour Made in Scotland, A. D. 1803 (1874) considered a classic of picturesque travel writing.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ James Buzard: "The Grand Tour and after (1660–1840)". In: The Cambridge Companion to Travel Writing (2001), p. 45.
  2. ^ Glenn Hooper: "The Isles / Ireland: the wilder shore". In: The Cambridge Companion to Travel Writing (2001), p. 176.
  3. ^ Sohm, Philip (1991). Pittoresco: Marco Boschini, his critics, and their critiques of painterly brush-work in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Italy. Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 88–196.
  4. ^ Bakker, Boudewijn (1995). "Schilderachtig: Discussions of a Seventeenth-Century Term and Concept". Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art. 23 (2/3): 147–162. doi:10.2307/3780826. ISSN 0037-5411. JSTOR 3780826.
  5. ^ Wybe Kuitert (November 2017). "Spruces, pines, and the picturesque in seventeenth-century Netherlands". Studies in the History of Gardens & Designed Landscapes. 38 (1): 73–95. doi:10.1080/14601176.2017.1404223. S2CID 165427133.
  6. ^ Richardson, Tim (2011). The Arcadian Friends. London: Penguin Books. pp. 31–32.
  7. ^ Hussey, Christopher (1927). The picturesque: studies in a point of view. London and New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. p. 16.
  8. ^ Taylor, Nicholas (1973). The Victorian City: Images and Realities. London and Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 432–433.
  9. ^ a b Glenn Hooper (2001). "The Isles/Ireland". In The Cambridge Companion to Travel Writing.
  10. ^ Malcolm Andrews (1989): The Search for the Picturesque, p. 67.
  11. ^ Danijela Bucher; Miriam Volmert, eds. (2019). European Fans in the 17th and 18th Centuries: Images, Accessories, and Instruments of Gesture. De Gruyter. p. 154. ISBN 9783110661736.
  12. ^ James Buzard: "The Grand Tour and after (1660–1840)". In: The Cambridge Companion to Travel Writing (2001), p. 47.
  13. ^ Chang, Y.Z. "A Note on Sharwadgi", Modern Language Notes 45.4 (1930), pp. 221–224.
  14. ^ Ch'ien, Chung-shu. "China in the English Literature of the Seventeenth Century," Quarterly Bulletin of Chinese Bibliography 1 (1940), pp. 351–384.
  15. ^ Gatenby, E. V. "The Influence of Japanese on English", Studies in English Literature 1 (1931), pp. 508–520.
  16. ^ Lang, S. and Nikolaus Pevsner. "Sir William Temple and Sharawadgi", The Architectural Review, 106 (1949), pp. 391–392.
  17. ^ Murray, Ciaran (1999). Sharawadgi: The Romantic Return to Nature. Austin and Winfield.
  18. ^ Wybe Kuitert "Japanese Art, Aesthetics, and a European discourse - unraveling Sharawadgi" Japan Review 2014 ISSN 0915-0986 (Vol.27)Online as PDF 2017-03-18 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Stephen Kite (2022). Shaping the Surface: Materiality and the History of British Architecture 1840-2000. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 128. ISBN 9781350320673.

External links edit

  • John Macarthur The Picturesque: architecture, disgust and other irregularities
  • George P. Landow, "Ruskin on the Picturesque"
  • Landscape Style of Repton, Price and Knight
  • Pictures and Poetry. Debunking the Bunk: An Examination of Picturesque Influence, by Keith Waddington. A Masters Thesis at Concordia University.

picturesque, molly, album, album, aesthetic, ideal, introduced, into, english, cultural, debate, 1782, william, gilpin, observations, river, several, parts, south, wales, relative, chiefly, beauty, made, summer, year, 1770, practical, book, which, instructed, . For the MOLLY album see Picturesque album Picturesque is an aesthetic ideal introduced into English cultural debate in 1782 by William Gilpin in Observations on the River Wye and Several Parts of South Wales etc Relative Chiefly to Picturesque Beauty made in the Summer of the Year 1770 a practical book which instructed England s leisured travellers to examine the face of a country by the rules of picturesque beauty Picturesque along with the aesthetic and cultural strands of Gothic and Celticism was a part of the emerging Romantic sensibility of the 18th century A view of the Roman Campagna from Tivoli evening by Claude Lorrain 1644 1645The term picturesque needs to be understood in relationship to two other aesthetic ideals the beautiful and the sublime By the last third of the 18th century Enlightenment and rationalist ideas about aesthetics were being challenged by looking at the experiences of beauty and sublimity as non rational Aesthetic experience was not just a rational decision one did not look at a pleasing curved form and decide it was beautiful rather it came naturally as a matter of basic human instinct Edmund Burke in his 1757 A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful argued that the soft gentle curves appealed to the male sexual desire while the sublime horrors appealed to our desires for self preservation 1 Picturesque arose as a mediator between these opposed ideals of beauty and the sublime showing the possibilities that existed between these two rationally idealised states As Thomas Gray wrote in 1765 of the Scottish Highlands The mountains are ecstatic None but those monstrous creatures of God know how to join so much beauty with so much horror 2 Contents 1 Historical background and development 2 Picturesque hunters 3 The Far East in the discourse on the picturesque 4 Picturesque architecture 5 Notable works 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistorical background and development edit nbsp The Chancel and Crossing of Tintern Abbey Looking towards the East Window by J M W Turner 1794The picturesque as a topic in discourse came up in the late Renaissance in Italy where the term pittoresco began to be used in art writing as seen with Italian authors such as Vasari 1550 Lomazzo 1584 and Ridolfi 1648 3 The word is applied to the manner of depicting a subject in painting roughly in the sense of non classical or painted non academically in a similar way as Dutch painters discussed developments in painting in the seventeenth century as painter like schilder achtig 4 Highly instrumental in the establishing of a taste for the picturesque in northern Europe was landscape painting in which the realism of the Dutch played a significant role This cannot be seen separate from other developments in Europe Claude Lorrain 1604 1682 was a well known French painter who had developed landscape painting in Rome like Poussin 1594 1665 Both painters worked in a somewhat stiff mannered style with a focus on archaeological remains and towering pine trees followed by several Dutchmen who had also traveled to Rome Soon deviating from the classical ideal of perfection in beauty epitomized by healthy towering trees landscape painters came to discover the sublimity of the withered old tree the two withered oaks by Jan van Goyen 1641 are a well known example For those who tried to find an answer to the classicism of French landscape painting the lonely spruce at a wild cataract that caught the sublimity of nature became a recurring theme most explicitly expressed by Jacob van Ruisdael This painter painted picturesque garden scenes that can be seen as early representations of picturesque gardens in Europe 5 Similar landscape naturalism in English gardens emerged within cultural spheres around William and Mary from which the discussion on the picturesque in the English landscape took hold 6 In England the word picturesque meaning literally in the manner of a picture fit to be made into a picture was a word used as early as 1703 Oxford English Dictionary and derived from French pittoresque and the Italian pittoresco Gilpin s Essay on Prints 1768 defined picturesque as a term expressive of that peculiar kind of beauty which is agreeable in a picture p xii The pictorial genre called Picturesque appeared in the 17th century and flourished in the 18th As well as portraying beauty in the classical manner eighteenth century artists could overdo it from top to bottom Their pre Romantic sensitivity could aspire to the sublime or be pleased with the picturesque According to Christopher Hussey While the outstanding qualities of the sublime were vastness and obscurity and those of the beautiful smoothness and gentleness the characteristics of the picturesque were roughness and sudden variation joined to irregularity of form colour lighting and even sound 7 The first option is the harmonic and classical i e beauty the second the grandiose and terrifying i e the sublime and the third the rustic corresponding to the picturesque and connecting qualities of the first two options This triple definition by Hussey although modern is true to the concept of the epoch as Uvedale Price explained in 1794 The examples Price gave for these three aesthetic tendencies were Handel s music as the sublime a pastorale by Arcangelo Corelli as the beautiful and a painting of a Dutch landscape as the picturesque During the mid 18th century the idea of purely scenic pleasure touring began to take hold among the English leisured class This new image disregarded the principles of symmetry and perfect proportions while focusing more on accidental irregularity and moving more towards a concept of individualism and rusticity 8 William Gilpin s work was a direct challenge to the ideology of the well established Grand Tour showing how an exploration of rural Britain could compete with classically oriented tours of the Continent 9 The irregular anti classical ruins became sought after sights Picturesque hunters edit nbsp An Artist Studying from Nature by Claude Lorrain 1639 nbsp Villa Doria park in Albano LazialePicturesque hunters began crowding the Lake District to make sketches using tinted portable mirrors to frame and darken the view known as claude glass and named after the 17th century landscape painter Claude Lorrain whose work William Gilpin saw as synonymous with the picturesque and worthy of emulation These new tourists had something of the big game hunter about them and they boasted of their encounters with savage landscapes Picturesque hunters tried to capture wild scenes and fixed them as pictorial trophies in order to sell them or hang them in frames on their drawing room walls 10 Gilpin asked shall we suppose it a greater pleasure to the sportsman to pursue a trivial animal than it is to the man of taste to pursue the beauties of nature 9 Gilpin differentiated picturesque from the Edmund Burke category of the beautiful in the publication Three Essays On Picturesque Beauty on Picturesque Travel and on Sketching Landscape Gilpin expounded on his experience when traveling the landscape to search for picturesque nature 11 In 1815 when Europe was available to travel again after the wars new fields for picturesque hunters opened in Italy Anna Brownell Jameson wrote in 1820 Had I never visited Italy I think I should never have understood the word picturesque while Henry James exclaimed in Albano in the 1870s I have talked of the picturesque all my life now at last I see it 12 The Far East in the discourse on the picturesque edit nbsp Kew Gardens built by William Chambers 1761 nbsp Map of Parc des Buttes Chaumont 1867 built according to plans by Adolphe AlphandMain article Sharawadgi Though seemingly vague and far away the Far East China and Japan played a considerable role in inspiring a taste for the picturesque Sir William Temple 1628 1699 was a statesman and essayist who traveled throughout Europe His essay Upon the Gardens of Epicurus or Of Gardening in the Year 1685 described what he called the taste of the Chineses sic for a beauty without order Among us Europeans the beauty of building and planting is placed chiefly in some certain proportions symmetries or uniformities our walks and our trees ranged so as to answer one another and at exact distances The Chineses scorn this way of planting and say a boy that can tell an hundred may plant walks of trees in straight lines and over against one another and to what length and extent he pleases But their greatest reach of imagination is employed in contriving figures where the beauty shall be great and strike the eye but without any order or disposition of parts that shall be commonly or easily observed and though we have hardly any notion of this sort of beauty yet they have a particular word to express it and where they find it hit their eye at first sight they say the sharawadgi is fine or is admirable or any such expression of esteem And whoever observes the work upon the best India gowns or the painting upon their best screens or purcellans will find their beauty is all of this kind that is without order 1690 58 nbsp Pope s villa at Twickenham showing the grotto from a watercolour produced soon after Alexander Pope s deathAlexander Pope in a letter of 1724 refers to Temple s Far East For as to the hanging Gardens of Babylon the Paradise of Cyrus and the Sharawaggi s of China I have little or no Idea s of em a few years later Horace Walpole mentions that I am almost as fond of the Sharawaggi or Chinese want of symmetry in buildings as in grounds or gardens 1750 Imaginations of Far Eastern irregularity and sharawadgi returns frequently in the eighteenth and nineteenth century discourse Multiple authors have attempted to trace the etymology of sharawadgi to various Chinese and Japanese terms for garden design Two Chinese authors suggested the Chinese expressions saluo guaizhi quality of being impressive or surprising through careless or unorderly grace Chang 1930 13 and sanlan waizhi space tastefully enlivened by disorder Ch ien 1940 14 E V Gatenby 1931 proposed English sharawadgi derived from Japanese sorowaji 揃わじ not being regular an older form of sorowazu 揃わず incomplete unequal in size uneven irregular 15 S Lang and Nikolaus Pevsner 1949 dismissed these two unattested Chinese terms doubted the Japanese sorowaji and suggested that Temple coined the word sharawadgi himself These authors placed Temple s discovery in the context of upcoming ideas on the picturesque 16 P Quennell 1968 concurred that the term could not be traced to any Chinese word and favored the Japanese etymology Takau Shimada 1997 believed the irregular beauty that Temple admired was more likely characteristic of Japanese gardens owing to the irregular topography upon which they were built and compared the Japanese word sawarinai 触りない do not touch leave things alone Ciaran Murray 1998 1999 reasons that Temple heard the word sharawadgi from Dutch travelers who had visited Japanese gardens following the Oxford English Dictionary that enters Sharawadgi without direct definition excepting a gloss under the Temple quotation It notes the etymology is Of unknown origin Chinese scholars agree that it cannot belong to that language Temple speaks as if he had himself heard it from travellers Ciaran Murray emphasizes that Temple used the Chineses in blanket reference inclusive of all Oriental races during a time when the East West dialogues and influences were quite fluid He also wanted to see similarity between sharawadgi and a supposed southern Japanese Kyushu dialect pronunciation shorowaji 17 Wybe Kuitert a notable scholar of Japanese garden history placed sharawadgi conclusively in the discourse that was on in the circles around Constantijn Huygens a good friend of William Temple tracing the term as the Japanese aesthetic share aji 洒落味 しゃれ味 that belonged to applied arts including garden design 18 Temple misinterpreted wild irregularity which he characterized as sharawadgi to be happy circumstance instead of carefully manipulated garden design His idea of highlighting natural imperfections and spatial inconsistencies was the inspiration for fashioning early 18th century Sharawadgi gardens in England The most famous example was William Kent s Elysian field at Stowe House built around 1738 Temple s development of fashionable sharawadgi garden design was followed by Edmund Burke s 1757 A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful Burke suggested a third category including those things which neither inspire awe with the sublime or pleasure with the beautiful He called it the picturesque and qualified it to mean all that cannot fit into the two more rational states evoked by the other categories A flurry of English authors beginning with William Gilpin and followed by Richard Payne Knight Uvedale Price and Humphrey Repton all called for promotion of the picturesque Gilpin wrote prolifically on the merits of touring the countryside of England The naturally morose craggy pastoral and untouched landscape of northern England and Scotland was a suitable endeavor for the rising middle classes and Gilpin thought it almost patriotic to travel the homeland instead of the historically elite tour of the great European cities One of the major commonalities of the picturesque style movement is the role of travel and its integration in designing one s home to enhance one s political and social standing A simple description of the picturesque is the visual qualities of Nature suitable for a picture However Lockean philosophy had freed Nature from the ideal forms of allegory and classical pursuits essentially embracing the imperfections in both landscapes and plants In this way the idea progressed beyond the study of great landscape painters like Claude Deruet and Nicolas Poussin into experimentation with creating episodic evocative and contemplative landscapes in which elements were combined for their total effect as an individual picture nbsp Illustration of Wentworth Woodhouse South Yorkshire after proposed landscapingThe picturesque style in landscape gardening was a conscious manipulation of Nature to create foregrounds middlegrounds and backgrounds in a move to highlight a selection of provocative formal elements in short the later appropriation of Humphrey Repton It is unique that an idea on applied design Sharawadgi was diffused which resulted in a typology of gardens that served as a precursor for the picturesque style These aesthetic preferences were driven by nationalistic statements of incorporating goods and scenery from one s own country framing mechanisms which dictate the overall experience and a simultaneous embracing of irregular qualities while manipulating the natural scenery to promote them The importance of this comparison lies in its location at the beginning of modernism and modernization marking a period in which Nature was allowed to become less mathematically ordered but where intervention was still paramount but could be masked compositionally and just shortly after technologically as in Adolphe Alphand s Parc des Buttes Chaumont and Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux s Central Park Picturesque architecture edit nbsp A drawing of Cullen s showing use of perspectiveIn the 1930s and 1940s the editor Hubert de Cronin Hastings used the Architectural Review in his attempt to popularize modern architecture in Britain Authors who published in the Architectural Review include Paul Nash John Piper James Maude Richards John Betjeman Nikolaus Pevsner and Gordon Cullen Cronin Hastings combined the different landscape philosophies of surrealism abstraction neo romanticism and rationalism under the heading picturesque Cronin Hastings advanced his urban planning philosophy as Townscape In 1944 he published Exterior Furnishing or Sharawaggi The Art of Making Urban Landscap 19 Notable works editWilliam Combe and Thomas Rowlandson published an 1809 poem with pictures called The Tour of Doctor Syntax in Search of the Picturesque which was a satire of the ideal and famously skewered Picturesque hunters William Gilpin Three Essays On Picturesque Beauty On Picturesque Travel and on Sketching Landscape to which is Added a Poem On Landscape Painting was published in London 1792 Christopher Hussey The Picturesque Studies in a Point of View 1927 focused modern thinking on the development of this approach The picturesque idea continues to have a profound influence on garden design and planting design Richard Payne Knight An Analytical Inquiry into the Principles of Taste soon followed and went into several editions that the author revised and expanded Uvedale Price An Essay on the Picturesque as Compared with the Sublime and the Beautiful and on the Use of Studying Pictures for the Purpose of Improving Real Landscape revised edition London 1796 Humphry Repton applied picturesque theory to the practice of landscape design In conjunction with the work of Price and Knight this led to the picturesque theory that designed landscapes should be composed like landscape paintings with a foreground a middle ground and a background Repton believed that the foreground should be the realm of art with formal geometry and ornamental planting that the middleground should have a parkland character of the type created by Lancelot Capability Brown and that the background should have a wild and natural character John Ruskin identified the picturesque as a genuinely modern aesthetic category in The Seven Lamps of Architecture Dorothy Wordsworth wrote Recollections of a Tour Made in Scotland A D 1803 1874 considered a classic of picturesque travel writing See also editLandscape painting Sharawadgi Planting design Borrowed scenery Context theory John Dixon Hunt Wye Valley Thomas Johnes John P MacarthurReferences edit James Buzard The Grand Tour and after 1660 1840 In The Cambridge Companion to Travel Writing 2001 p 45 Glenn Hooper The Isles Ireland the wilder shore In The Cambridge Companion to Travel Writing 2001 p 176 Sohm Philip 1991 Pittoresco Marco Boschini his critics and their critiques of painterly brush work in seventeenth and eighteenth century Italy Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press pp 88 196 Bakker Boudewijn 1995 Schilderachtig Discussions of a Seventeenth Century Term and Concept Simiolus Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art 23 2 3 147 162 doi 10 2307 3780826 ISSN 0037 5411 JSTOR 3780826 Wybe Kuitert November 2017 Spruces pines and the picturesque in seventeenth century Netherlands Studies in the History of Gardens amp Designed Landscapes 38 1 73 95 doi 10 1080 14601176 2017 1404223 S2CID 165427133 Richardson Tim 2011 The Arcadian Friends London Penguin Books pp 31 32 Hussey Christopher 1927 The picturesque studies in a point of view London and New York G P Putnam s Sons p 16 Taylor Nicholas 1973 The Victorian City Images and Realities London and Boston Routledge amp Kegan Paul pp 432 433 a b Glenn Hooper 2001 The Isles Ireland In The Cambridge Companion to Travel Writing Malcolm Andrews 1989 The Search for the Picturesque p 67 Danijela Bucher Miriam Volmert eds 2019 European Fans in the 17th and 18th Centuries Images Accessories and Instruments of Gesture De Gruyter p 154 ISBN 9783110661736 James Buzard The Grand Tour and after 1660 1840 In The Cambridge Companion to Travel Writing 2001 p 47 Chang Y Z A Note on Sharwadgi Modern Language Notes 45 4 1930 pp 221 224 Ch ien Chung shu China in the English Literature of the Seventeenth Century Quarterly Bulletin of Chinese Bibliography 1 1940 pp 351 384 Gatenby E V The Influence of Japanese on English Studies in English Literature 1 1931 pp 508 520 Lang S and Nikolaus Pevsner Sir William Temple and Sharawadgi The Architectural Review 106 1949 pp 391 392 Murray Ciaran 1999 Sharawadgi The Romantic Return to Nature Austin and Winfield Wybe Kuitert Japanese Art Aesthetics and a European discourse unraveling Sharawadgi Japan Review 2014 ISSN 0915 0986 Vol 27 Online as PDF Archived 2017 03 18 at the Wayback Machine Stephen Kite 2022 Shaping the Surface Materiality and the History of British Architecture 1840 2000 Bloomsbury Publishing p 128 ISBN 9781350320673 External links editJohn Macarthur The Picturesque architecture disgust and other irregularities George P Landow Ruskin on the Picturesque Turner s journeys of the imagination Landscape Style of Repton Price and Knight Pictures and Poetry Debunking the Bunk An Examination of Picturesque Influence by Keith Waddington A Masters Thesis at Concordia University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Picturesque amp oldid 1183843398, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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