| Richard Cecil, Josiah Pratt - Theology - 1816 - 602 pages
...often agitated. Painting has the greatest number of requisites; but, at the same time, her expedients are the most numerous: and, therefore, we may venture...equally with a painting, the sculptor is certainly the greatest artist. Sculpture has, indeed, had the honour of giving law to all the schools of design,... | |
| Richard Cecil - Theology - 1825 - 476 pages
...and on which his Majesty complimented him — and of a poetical tract, calculatime, her expedients are the most numerous : and, therefore, we may venture...equally with a painting, the sculptor is certainly the greatest artist. Sculpture has, indeed, had the honour of giving law to all the schools of design,... | |
| Allan Cunningham - Architects - 1832 - 332 pages
...often agitated. Painting has the greatest number of requisites, but, at the same time, her expedients are the most numerous ; and therefore we may venture...equally with a painting, the sculptor is certainly the greatest artist. .Sculpture has indeed had the honour of giving law to all the schools of design, both... | |
| Allan Cunningham - Architects - 1830 - 466 pages
...often agitated. Painting has the greatest number of requisites, but at the same time her expedients are the most numerous ; and therefore we may venture...equally with a painting, the sculptor is certainly the greatest artist. Sculpture has indeed had the honour of giving law to all the schools of design, both... | |
| Englishmen - 1836 - 260 pages
...often agitated. Painting has the greatest number of requisites, but at the same time her expedients are the most numerous ; and therefore we may venture...equally with a painting, the sculptor is certainly the greatest artist. Sculpture has indeed had the honour of giving law to all the schools of design, both... | |
| Child rearing - 1846 - 340 pages
...often agitated. Painting has the greatest number of requisites, but, at the same time, her expedients are the most numerous ; and therefore we may venture...equally with a painting, the sculptor is certainly the greatest artist. Sculpture has indeed had the honour of giving law to all the schools of design, both... | |
| George Godfrey Cunningham - Great Britain - 1863 - 826 pages
...often agitated. Painting has the greatest number of requisites, but at the same time her expedients are the most numerous ; and therefore we may venture...equally with a painting, the sculptor is certainly the greatest artist. Sculpture has indeed had the honour of giving law to all the schools of design, both... | |
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