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The Elements of Drawing by John RuskinOn First Practice Sketching from Nature On Color and Composition 1. THE LAW OF PRINCIPALITY. The great object of composition being always to secure unity; that is, to make out of many things one whole; the first mode in
which this can be effected is, by determining that one feature shall
be more important than all the rest, and that the others shall group
with it in subordinate positions.This is the simplest law of ordinary ornamentation. Thus the group of two leaves, a, Fig. 31, is unsatisfactory, because it has no leading leaf; but that at b is prettier, because it has a head or master leaf; and c more satisfactory still, because the subor- dination of the other members to this head leaf is made more manifest by their gradual loss of size as they fall back from it. Hence part of the pleasure we have in the Greek honeysuckle ornament, 2 and such others. Thus, also, good pictures have always one light larger and brighter than the other lights, or one figure more prominent than the other figures, or one mass of color dominant over all the other masses; and in general you will find it much benefit your sketch if you manage that there shall be one light on the cottage wall, or one blue cloud in the sky, which may attract the eye as leading light, or leading gloom, above all others. But the observance of the rule is often so cunningly concealed by the great composers, that its force is hardly at first traceable; and you will generally find they are vulgar pictures in which the law is strikingly manifest. This may be simply illustrated by musical melody: for instance, in such phrases as this ![]() one note (here the upper G) rules the whole passage, and has the full energy of it concentrated in itself. Such passages, corresponding to completely subordinated compositions in painting, are apt to be wearisome if often repeated. But, in such a phrase as this
it is very difficult to say which is the principal note. The A in the last bar is slightly dominant, but there is a very equal current of power running through the whole; and such passages rarely weary. And this principle holds through vast scales of arrangement; so that in the grandest compositions, such as Paul Veronese's Marriage in Cana, or Raphael's Disputa, it is not easy to fix at once on the principal figure; and
very commonly the figure which is really chief does not catch the eye
at first, but is gradually felt to be more and more conspicuous as we
gaze. Thus in Titian's grand composition of the Cornaro Family, the
figure meant to be principal is a youth of fifteen or sixteen, whose
portrait it was evidently the painter's object to make as interesting
as possible. But a grand Madonna, and a St. George with a drifting
banner, and many figures more, occupy the centre of the picture, and
first catch the eye; little by little we are led away from them to a
gleam of pearly light in the lower corner, and find that, from the
head which it shines upon, we can turn our eyes no more.
As, in every good picture, nearly all laws of design are more or less exemplified, it will, on the whole, be an easier way of explaining them to analyse one composition thoroughly, than to give instances from various works. I shall therefore take one of Turner's simplest; which will allow us, so to speak, easily to decompose it, and illustrate each law by it as we proceed.
Fig. 32 is a rude sketch of the arrangement of the whole subject;
the old bridge over the Moselle at Coblentz, the town of Coblentz on
the right, Ehrenbreitstein on the left. The leading or master feature
is, of course, the tower on the bridge. It is kept from being too
principal by an important group on each side of it; the boats, on the
right, and Ehrenbreitstein beyond. The boats are large in mass, and
more forcible in color, but they are broken into small divisions,
while the tower is simple, and therefore it still leads.
Ehrenbreitstein is noble in its mass, but so reduced by aerial
perspective of color that it cannot contend with the tower, which
therefore holds the eye, and becomes the key of the picture. We shall
see presently how the very objects which seem at first to contend with
it for the mastery are made, occultly, to increase its preeminence.
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