Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Feb 8, 2019 · If we think of John Ruskin at all today it tends to be as the buttoned-up Victorian who was so repulsed by his wife Effie Gray’s pubic hair that he could not consummate their marriage. The ...

  2. Art, architecture, and society. After the publication of the first volume of Modern Painters in 1843, Ruskin became aware of another avant-garde artistic movement: the critical rediscovery of the painting of the Gothic Middle Ages. He wrote about these Idealist painters (especially Giotto, Fra Angelico, and Benozzo Gozzoli) at the end of the ...

  3. Biography. John Ruskin (8 February 1819 – 20 January 1900) was an English writer, philosopher, art historian, art critic and polymath of the Victorian era. He wrote on subjects as varied as geology, architecture, myth, ornithology, literature, education, botany and political economy.

  4. John Ruskin (February 8, 1819 – January 20, 1900) is best known for his work as an art critic and social critic, but is remembered as an author, poet, and artist as well. Ruskin's essays on art and architecture were extremely influential in the Victorian and Edwardian eras.

  5. Jan 25, 2019 · Ruskin gave voice to the most radical responses to industrialism and inequality, and anticipated questions about labor, the environment, and the arts that resonate today. But it is difficult to square some of the facts of his biography: his vision of liberating the underclass of England, to a modern viewer, seems to clash with his apparent ...

  6. Feb 8, 2019 · John Ruskin (1819–1900) was one of Britain’s most prolific art critics, who championed the careers of J. M. W. Turner and the Pre-Raphaelites, alongside many others.

  7. Ruskin suffered no financial ill effects, but his reputation as an art critic was seriously harmed. After this date there was a growing tendency to see him as an enemy of modern art: blinkered, eccentric, and out-of-date. Modernist artists and critics rejected Ruskin.

  1. People also search for