Treatise On Fresco
Treatise On Fresco
Treatise On Fresco
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PAINTING , 510
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BEI THE (1/4
SUBSTANCE OF LECTURES
DELIVERgh AT
AND AT THE
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SCHOOL OF DESIGN, LEICESTER SQUARE,
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BY EUGENIO LATILLA,
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MEM. 80C. BRIT. ART. , he •
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TREATISE
ON
1:111ESCO, ENCAUSTIC,
AND TEMPERA
PAINTING.
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ed by another ai'ti
al powers of a paint
ng to the common
t would be difficult
'th those painted i
olio Romano, in wl
e exercised. Cart
pictures, would aloe
xii
Commission to judge of the abilities of the artists;
and he who shewed himself incapable of makin
large cartoons, would be found still more incapabl
of painting large frescoes. Many can design subject
admirably•in small, who would-4 utterly at a los
in works of magnitude ; for ihich reason. small de
signs should he disregarded. Large cartoons, b
various artists, could be exhibited at once in th
situations they were intended to occupy, when th
fitness and harmony of the whole would be seen
besides which, cartoon painting is the best possibl
preparatory study for fresco.
Respecting the subject of competition, there ap-
peared much difference of opinion in the evidence,
yet it is no doubt the most just, as well as the most
certain course to bring to light the real talent of
the country.* It is true that some of those .
.
enjoy the sway in art,- though following perl
some minor branch of it, will not be dispose
compete in a work of a high class, where prob
the zeal and ambition of younger aspirants m
eclipse their efforts ; for many, condemned at
* The first cupola of modetn times, at Florence, by B
leschi, and the splendid bronze doors of the Baptistry, by Lo
Ghiberti, when he was only twenty years of age, were the
results of competition, not, as is too often the case with
cheapness, but excellence.
xiii
i
sent to unc nial employment, thirst for the
bighor ,(,,,i),, a national work can alone afford
Ilion,. , ,
For earn nto effect the establishment of a
British Sell Fresco, opportunities for the exer-
eta) and trill artis.)p should be giVen in some
public building, as Westminster Hall, according to
1\11.. Barry's hu estion, for which, cartoons in tern-
la of the , er size should be required. The
fight then be executed. in fresco,
premiums adjudged ; first, for the
, and secondly, for the frescoes
from them. Thus, an interest-
f the first essay of British skill
be obtained and preserved, at a
xis
foundation, a certain concomitant of encaustic.*
The Greeks, on the contrary, looked upon it as the
most enduring, and the specimens extant prove the
justness of their opinion.t w, : .
The only recent attempt at encaustic of which I • •
11
Ir
FRESCO PAINTING.
* CHAPTER I.
ON THE RISE AND PROGRESS OF ART AMONG THE
1 GREEKS, AND THE INTRODUCTION OF FRESCO
I
AND ENCAUSTIC PAINTING.
2
•
phatically the brilliant eras of Pericles, Augustus,
and Leo X., while ignominious silence, like nig,
shades many an_ intervening period.
High art has by all great ' nations, ancient and'
modern, been esteemed a basis and medium
" • promoting 'civilization and refinement. Where I
zealously cultivated, an empire assumes in its cha-
•
• ratter the distinctive marks of intellectual supe-
riority and power ; while the ebullitions of genius
in depictive poesy, which disseminate taste and-
!: knowledge, upon high principles, thragh the va-
rious ramifications of society, cannot 'fail giving
to commerce value, to industry an impetus, and to
human nature added dignity.
It is not to the honour of a people to continue
,.•
in a state of partial civilization ; neither can the
excursive mind of man rest satisfied in seeking
merely the necessaries for subsistence, or even
the enjoyment . and gratification of sense. Such a
But the primer and the child's book are far from
being the only ones aided by design ; our history
and our poetry are adorned and elucidated with
scenes from nature and imagination, which exhibit
the fact, or assist the illusion.
Our scientific works, also, are rendered lucid
and perspicuous by graphic delineation ; and intri-
cacies and phenomena are by this means explained,
that would otherwise, in the absence of the reality,
be ambiguous or unintelligible.
The reader of Homer will best understand . the
author by reference to Flaxman's outlines, unless
he is versed in Greek antiquities and customs.
The beautiful facts of Holy Writ will be the
better conceived by an acquaintance with the Car-
toons of Raffaelle ; instance that of " The Sacri-
fice at Lystra," where the priest of Jupiter is about
to offer the victim to Paul and Barnabas. This
scene, with very slight alterations, was taken from a
creek bas-relief (now at .Florence), and therefore
enables us to form a correct notion of the occurrence.
What should we have known of the Egyptians,
their temples, their customs ? Of Thebes, with its
hundred gates ? or the magnificence of Carnac,
• without the remains of art handed down to us ?
e should he as ignorant of these as we are res-
' ' petting Jerusalon, of which, though so much has
5
•
been written, we possess but very indefinite ideas,
since scarcely a monument of its. former greatness
is preserved, and not even one stone remains upon -
another. . i •
Of Babylon, again, notwithstanding the record .
of Herodotus, St. rabo, Xenophon, Diodorus, and
Josephus, how little do we know ! Who can deter- •
mine or portray with authority (seeing that not a
vestige of art remains) its mighty walls, its hanging
gardens, or its palaces of unequalled dimensions,
which have passed like a tale that is told?
How different to this is our cognizance of Greec
from whence streams of intelligence and informatio
have flowed down to us through her treasures of a1111
•'•
With these impressed on our minds, we familiarl -
enter into the spirit of the ancient writers ; their
kings, warriors, statesmen, philosophers, and poets,
are all known to us ; we are as well acquainted with
Pericles and the Cwsars, as with Henry VIII. or
Charles I. -
Where art is not found conjointly with history
and poetry, we are at a loss, after a lapse of years,
to comprehend the descriptions, and our conjectures
are often as vague as they are vain.
Our ideas of the Olympic games are formed upon
the splendid examples of Grecian sculpture ; and of
the gladiators we have the most accurate represen-
6
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milimpir, .
13
CHAPTER IL ,
) .
28
, -
CHAPTER III.
alAPTER IV.
1 •
'OFT iit: '.
BOM2AN *:
PA ANC II .',; 38
... -/ ..
ft EsTilIT .0
• 47ATIC'
-.. CHAPTER V.
ON TEMPERA.
..
TEMPERA is the most ancient of all the modes of
painting, and was common among the Egyptians, as
may- be seen in their antiquities preserved at thy
British Museiim. From them, it was doubtless
brought into use among the Greeks, to whom the.
tempera paintings at Pompeii are imputed. t
The scenery for the Greek drama may have 'been
painted in the aquazzo, or common size, which
Vitruvius mentions as 'in ordinary use for dry
stuccoes.
From occasional remarks by the ancient writers,
I am led to think that pictures were sometimes
painted in a description of tempera, and varnished.
The story of the sponge thrown against a picture
by Protogenes, and producing the effect of foam on
the horse's mouth, appears to favour the supposition ;
and the brown harmonizing varnish of Apelles
may have been the encaustic varnish used over an
r 39
•
ON PAINTING CARTOONS.
ii
The most important part of the preparation for
fresco with which the artist has to do is the car-
toon. On this raueli labour and study must be
bestowed ; the composition, the drawing, the chiaro-
scuro, and colour, should all be perfectly considered
and well defined before the wet stucto is ventured
upon.
For a cartoon, paper is strained or pasted on a
frame, covered with lining canvass ; if required to be
very strong, two layers of paper are necessary, each
pasted firmly on. This done, the design is sketched
in from a small previous study, with charcoal in a
large port crayon, attached to a stick of tolerable
•• length, so as to enable the painter to see the effect
. of his lines.
The invention designed, and the composition
arranged, the drawing must be carefully wrought
from models, draperies, &c. It was the custom
(and a most valuable one) of the old masters to
model their figures in wax, or clay, and to arrange
draperies on them composed of linen, or muslin,
saturated in clay water. Such figures being dis-
posed in groups on a plane, all the incidental effects
of light and shade are perceived and studied, and
G
a
42
IL
44
4
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
81051
52
. •
• •
53
CHAPTER VIII.
•
54
and preserve the unity, though all might execute
their own designs, as in the Farnese decorations,
where Annibal Caracc4 assisted by Agostino and
Ludovico, as well as Guido and Domehichino, has
nevertheless succeeded in obtaining great harmony
with variety.
When the plan is fully arranged, and the panels
prepared to all but the last layer of stucco by the
plasterer, the painter may commence thus : a por-
., tion of -the cartoon, suppose it to be a head, must
be cut out, and the back of the outline, blackened
with charcoal, laid upon the piece of fresh plaster ;
a point having been passed over the outline, an im-
pression will remain on the stucco.* It is neces-
sary to go speedily over the work with the colour,
letting the brush feel the lime, while the pigments
incorporate themselves with the ground. PaiNting
for some time on one place, and leaving the stucco
untouched in another, is apt to cause inequalities ;
besides which, in a short space of time it becomes
too dry to take the colour well. This being attended
to, the paint (worked in an impasto) proceeds de-
lightfully.
Semi-opaque tints, stumbled over solid colour,
become very brilliant ; the high lights should then
* This is the usual method, but having practised both, I very
much prefer the pounce, as described in the chapter on Tempera.
11161.11" 55
CHAPTER IX.
. .
CHAPTER X.
- ,
I SHALL now proceed: to mention the materials of
the stuccoes for fresco, beginning with' the Greek
method according to Vitruvius, and _nearly in his
words.
LIME.
Lime for the plastering is made ' of stone or
marble (as the Trevertino). It should be slaked
long before being used, so that parts not sufficiently
calcined may have time to dissolve and be reduced
to a proper consistency; for shduld the lime be fresh
or not thoroughly slaked, it will emit pustules, and
destroy the surface of the stucco.* To ascertain
when it is fit for use, cut it with an axe ; if it comes
in contact with lumps, the lime is not well tempered
—if the iron comes'out dry and clean, it is perishing
SAND.
River-sand only must be ' used for fre:(.0 on
account of its meagreness and not cawing t.riin.ii-
tation, like pit-sand when in conjunction ‘vith limo
Sea-sand is also to be avoided, as tlw salt en.lin .
from it dissolves the plastering.
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