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  • May 11, 1861
  • Page 5
  • ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 11, 1861: Page 5

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Architecture And Archæology.

which , however , may be divided into two general styles of execution . One was the painting or staining them more or less to imitate reality , for the higher classes of which work it was , I conceive , that ivory was used , as in the great gods of the temples . The second was the obtaining of variety of colour by difference of material . The former of these treatments can onlI conceivefind its excuseif excuse it may

y , , , be called , in the idolatry of the time . The second partakes of the character of mosaic work , and is perhaps less objectionable in principle , but as au art it is assuredly more curious than beautiful , as may be remarked of several late experiments in this direction by our neighbours the French . While , however , it may be readily acknowledged that Greek artistscoerced bpolytheism and superstitiondid

occasio-, y , nally colour some of their most prized works , yet on the other hand , with respect to the highest class of their independent marble statues , it is equally evident that they were left untouched in this respect , as we have seen was the case with that most cherished work of them all , " The Venus of Onidus . " I would thus submit that Greek art-craft made beautiful

statues—uncoloured— -as works of art and left them so—and that it was Greek priestcraft that made them coloured—as idols—ancl as engines of state religion . This is a broad distinction ; as such , I venture to submit it to you as a clue to what I readily acknowledge to have been the varied character of old Greek practice in this respect . We will not proceed to later times . Here the reflection

obtrudes itself on us that even now we meet occasionally with coloured statues which savour of superstition , and I would avoid this phase of the subject , and as regards modern times , restrict myself solely to the art-craft of the question . In the Renaissance , or revival of the arts in Europe , we hear nothing of colouring marble statues . In the time of

the learned Leonardo da Vinci , Michel Angelo , Eaffaclle , John of Bologna , and others great in art , ive find no instance of marble statues having been coloured . Michel Angelo , who was so remarkable for the union in his one person of ail the arts , being at the same time an admirable architect , painter , sculptor , and decorator , never attempted to colour his marble statues . It is true that colouring was afterwards

applied to the statues and relievi , even of considerable size , by Luca clella JRobbia ancl others ; but these works were not in marble , but in porcelain , and more subordinate than any fine work of sculpture can ever be , however harmonious with the situation in which it is placed . The marble Moses , for the tomb of Julius , and the wonderful groups of the Medici monuments , have come down to us in their native

monochrome , untouched by change of tint , except such as time has supplied . Michel Angelo , that representative in one of all the arts of his time , did not mingle in one obj eet the two arts , nor does it appear that iu the more important works of the Cinque Cento that marble statues were ever coloured ; nor , great as was the attention given to the works of ancient sculpture that at this period were , from time to time , discovered among the ruins of Italian towns , especially iu that of ancient Borne , does it appear that these great

masters ever contemplated thc idea that such works were ever coloured . It appears , therefore , improbable that any remains of colour were found in the Apollo , the Venus , tho Laocoon , or other celebrated works when first exhumed , nor does any colour seem to have been found on the statues in Herculaneum and Pompeii , although the colours on the walls of the apartments in which they were discovered were

still fresh and vivid . Thus , neither in Ancient nor Modern Italy does there appear any proof of the prevalence at anytime of tho colouring of independent marble statues , any more than in Greece . Having thus set forth my view as to the practice of the ancient Greeks in this respect , namely , that they did not colour their statues except for purposes of idolatry , for

which reason ive find this treatment only connected with their templo architecture , and that not always , we naturally come to the consideration as to whether we should now colour our statues . At any rate , in these isles we aro not idolaters . Our church is not one of idolatry , and therefore we have not , as I have said before , that excuse , such as it is , for colouring statues that the pagans had . Quitting , however , for a moment this vantage ground , let us consider the matter merely as an art question .

Architecture And Archæology.

Let us first consider , is the addition of colouring to statues to be looked upon as an advance in art , or a retrogression ? The polychromist will hold it to be the former , while the monochromist in sculpture will represent that it is rather a confusion of those arts which good taste has gradually separated , in the progress of civilization , into distinct languages of human expressionThe polychromist

. will claim honour for uniting the charms of colour ivith those of form , as the evidence of advance aud improvement , while the monochromist will point with a significant finger to the earliest efforts of art ivhen the arts of form ttnd colour , each barely sufficient in itself to even suggest an animal , a man , or a god , wore obliged to club their means to produce anything like a clear result .

We are not ivithout illustrations of this even now , in outmost inferior speciments of pottery sold about the country to cottagers by the " Cheap Johns , " in crude little images of children , dogs , and parrots , & c , of which the form is so incomplete that the intention could hardly be recognised but for tho aid of colour .

In prnnaBval times , the first thing that men attempted in artivas probably in the way of hero worship , in . the making of images of their ancestors , or of great tyrants , as a sorb of guardian to their houses , and to be prayed to and propitiated in the chace or war . The more living these could be made to look by the artist ' s baud , ancl the more ferocious the more effective , no doubt , was deemed their mystic power , and heuce from thoso beginnings arose that evil feature that has played so large and lamentable a part in the history of man—the idol .

This form of superstition we have , I trust , thrown off for ever except in a region in which I have no doubt we shall all allow there is no objection to it—in the nursery—where it appears with but little change of name , that of the doll . Doll is only an abbreviation of idol . It is an infantine abbreviation . It is tho way a little child ivould strive to say idol . In the original Greek the work is EiSaXov ,- in the

Latin Idolum ; in the English , idol ; and in the nursery , doll . You may recognise readily that these little images are to all effects and purposes , coloured statues . Also , we may say that in tho nursery they aro to a great degree worshipped , especially when they are new . A new doll is to a certain degree a divinity for tho time being . However , these kinds of idols are no longer "ferocious . " On the contrary ,. they

are produced as pretty as wax and carmine and silken tresses can make them . Thoy even open and shut then- eyes , which is an advance even beyond thc crnseo-elephantine statues of the ancients . At least , I have no recollection of any record of winking divinities in those days , We can have no objection to tho harmless and interesting idolatry of the nursery towards these little images . There is nothing that breaks

any commandment in that . I would here remark that these little figures possess one great advantage over any coloured marble statues that I have seen , viz ., in having eyelashes . The want of these natural and beautiful fringes to the eye

in such coloured marble statues as I have seen is very unpleasing . Of course , in a pure marble statue you do not feel this , but when coloured the want is sadly apparent , and I do not see how it can be got over . There are some evidences of bronze eyelashes having been added in some of the ancient works , but the effect of these could not be very happy , one would think . The children ' s fayourites are more

fortunate in this respect . Pray do not conceive that I introduce the nursery statuettes in any way for the purpose of throwing ridicule upon the subject of coloured statues , but only as an illustration of the sole phase of the " coloured statue " which I conceive to be at the present time legitimate as a matter of art or regard . However , I must not let this happier phase of the idol

draw me away from our view of tho original type , or from the broad consideration I desire to illustrate , namely , that barbarians and idolaters have been and are more or less polychromists as regards the art of sculpture . They have all coloured , and while they remain barbarians and idolaters will continue to colour their statues . I conceive , therefore , that in these civilised days , the

colouring of statues is not an advance , but a palpable retrogression towards earlier times or less intelligence , ancl of a lower dispensation , aud , moreover , as far as art is concerned , that a decadence ivould at once ensue on a general adoption

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-05-11, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_11051861/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
OUR CHARITIES. Article 1
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 1
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 3
THE REMAINS OF ANCIENT ROMAN BATHS IN ENGLAND. Article 6
GENERAL ARCHITECTURAL INTELLIGENCE. Article 7
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 8
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 11
THE ASYLUM FOR AGED MASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 12
A CASE OF DISTRESS. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
ROYAL BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED MASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
COLONIAL. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 15
SCOTLAND. Article 16
INDIA. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Architecture And Archæology.

which , however , may be divided into two general styles of execution . One was the painting or staining them more or less to imitate reality , for the higher classes of which work it was , I conceive , that ivory was used , as in the great gods of the temples . The second was the obtaining of variety of colour by difference of material . The former of these treatments can onlI conceivefind its excuseif excuse it may

y , , , be called , in the idolatry of the time . The second partakes of the character of mosaic work , and is perhaps less objectionable in principle , but as au art it is assuredly more curious than beautiful , as may be remarked of several late experiments in this direction by our neighbours the French . While , however , it may be readily acknowledged that Greek artistscoerced bpolytheism and superstitiondid

occasio-, y , nally colour some of their most prized works , yet on the other hand , with respect to the highest class of their independent marble statues , it is equally evident that they were left untouched in this respect , as we have seen was the case with that most cherished work of them all , " The Venus of Onidus . " I would thus submit that Greek art-craft made beautiful

statues—uncoloured— -as works of art and left them so—and that it was Greek priestcraft that made them coloured—as idols—ancl as engines of state religion . This is a broad distinction ; as such , I venture to submit it to you as a clue to what I readily acknowledge to have been the varied character of old Greek practice in this respect . We will not proceed to later times . Here the reflection

obtrudes itself on us that even now we meet occasionally with coloured statues which savour of superstition , and I would avoid this phase of the subject , and as regards modern times , restrict myself solely to the art-craft of the question . In the Renaissance , or revival of the arts in Europe , we hear nothing of colouring marble statues . In the time of

the learned Leonardo da Vinci , Michel Angelo , Eaffaclle , John of Bologna , and others great in art , ive find no instance of marble statues having been coloured . Michel Angelo , who was so remarkable for the union in his one person of ail the arts , being at the same time an admirable architect , painter , sculptor , and decorator , never attempted to colour his marble statues . It is true that colouring was afterwards

applied to the statues and relievi , even of considerable size , by Luca clella JRobbia ancl others ; but these works were not in marble , but in porcelain , and more subordinate than any fine work of sculpture can ever be , however harmonious with the situation in which it is placed . The marble Moses , for the tomb of Julius , and the wonderful groups of the Medici monuments , have come down to us in their native

monochrome , untouched by change of tint , except such as time has supplied . Michel Angelo , that representative in one of all the arts of his time , did not mingle in one obj eet the two arts , nor does it appear that iu the more important works of the Cinque Cento that marble statues were ever coloured ; nor , great as was the attention given to the works of ancient sculpture that at this period were , from time to time , discovered among the ruins of Italian towns , especially iu that of ancient Borne , does it appear that these great

masters ever contemplated thc idea that such works were ever coloured . It appears , therefore , improbable that any remains of colour were found in the Apollo , the Venus , tho Laocoon , or other celebrated works when first exhumed , nor does any colour seem to have been found on the statues in Herculaneum and Pompeii , although the colours on the walls of the apartments in which they were discovered were

still fresh and vivid . Thus , neither in Ancient nor Modern Italy does there appear any proof of the prevalence at anytime of tho colouring of independent marble statues , any more than in Greece . Having thus set forth my view as to the practice of the ancient Greeks in this respect , namely , that they did not colour their statues except for purposes of idolatry , for

which reason ive find this treatment only connected with their templo architecture , and that not always , we naturally come to the consideration as to whether we should now colour our statues . At any rate , in these isles we aro not idolaters . Our church is not one of idolatry , and therefore we have not , as I have said before , that excuse , such as it is , for colouring statues that the pagans had . Quitting , however , for a moment this vantage ground , let us consider the matter merely as an art question .

Architecture And Archæology.

Let us first consider , is the addition of colouring to statues to be looked upon as an advance in art , or a retrogression ? The polychromist will hold it to be the former , while the monochromist in sculpture will represent that it is rather a confusion of those arts which good taste has gradually separated , in the progress of civilization , into distinct languages of human expressionThe polychromist

. will claim honour for uniting the charms of colour ivith those of form , as the evidence of advance aud improvement , while the monochromist will point with a significant finger to the earliest efforts of art ivhen the arts of form ttnd colour , each barely sufficient in itself to even suggest an animal , a man , or a god , wore obliged to club their means to produce anything like a clear result .

We are not ivithout illustrations of this even now , in outmost inferior speciments of pottery sold about the country to cottagers by the " Cheap Johns , " in crude little images of children , dogs , and parrots , & c , of which the form is so incomplete that the intention could hardly be recognised but for tho aid of colour .

In prnnaBval times , the first thing that men attempted in artivas probably in the way of hero worship , in . the making of images of their ancestors , or of great tyrants , as a sorb of guardian to their houses , and to be prayed to and propitiated in the chace or war . The more living these could be made to look by the artist ' s baud , ancl the more ferocious the more effective , no doubt , was deemed their mystic power , and heuce from thoso beginnings arose that evil feature that has played so large and lamentable a part in the history of man—the idol .

This form of superstition we have , I trust , thrown off for ever except in a region in which I have no doubt we shall all allow there is no objection to it—in the nursery—where it appears with but little change of name , that of the doll . Doll is only an abbreviation of idol . It is an infantine abbreviation . It is tho way a little child ivould strive to say idol . In the original Greek the work is EiSaXov ,- in the

Latin Idolum ; in the English , idol ; and in the nursery , doll . You may recognise readily that these little images are to all effects and purposes , coloured statues . Also , we may say that in tho nursery they aro to a great degree worshipped , especially when they are new . A new doll is to a certain degree a divinity for tho time being . However , these kinds of idols are no longer "ferocious . " On the contrary ,. they

are produced as pretty as wax and carmine and silken tresses can make them . Thoy even open and shut then- eyes , which is an advance even beyond thc crnseo-elephantine statues of the ancients . At least , I have no recollection of any record of winking divinities in those days , We can have no objection to tho harmless and interesting idolatry of the nursery towards these little images . There is nothing that breaks

any commandment in that . I would here remark that these little figures possess one great advantage over any coloured marble statues that I have seen , viz ., in having eyelashes . The want of these natural and beautiful fringes to the eye

in such coloured marble statues as I have seen is very unpleasing . Of course , in a pure marble statue you do not feel this , but when coloured the want is sadly apparent , and I do not see how it can be got over . There are some evidences of bronze eyelashes having been added in some of the ancient works , but the effect of these could not be very happy , one would think . The children ' s fayourites are more

fortunate in this respect . Pray do not conceive that I introduce the nursery statuettes in any way for the purpose of throwing ridicule upon the subject of coloured statues , but only as an illustration of the sole phase of the " coloured statue " which I conceive to be at the present time legitimate as a matter of art or regard . However , I must not let this happier phase of the idol

draw me away from our view of tho original type , or from the broad consideration I desire to illustrate , namely , that barbarians and idolaters have been and are more or less polychromists as regards the art of sculpture . They have all coloured , and while they remain barbarians and idolaters will continue to colour their statues . I conceive , therefore , that in these civilised days , the

colouring of statues is not an advance , but a palpable retrogression towards earlier times or less intelligence , ancl of a lower dispensation , aud , moreover , as far as art is concerned , that a decadence ivould at once ensue on a general adoption

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