RUSKIN, JOHN

1819–1900, English critic and social theorist. During the mid-19th cent. Ruskin was the virtual dictator of artistic opinion in England, but Ruskin's reputation declined after his death, and he has been treated harshly by 20th-century critics. Although it is undeniable that he was an extravagant and inconsistent thinker (a reflection of his lifelong mental and emotional instability), it is equally true that he revolutionized art criticism and wrote some of the most superb prose in the English language.

Early Life

Educated by his wealthy, evangelical parents, Ruskin was prepared for the ministry, and until 1836 he spent his mornings with his domineering mother, reading and memorizing the Bible. In 1833 the family went on the first of its many tours of Europe, and the boy ardently studied nature and painting. His stay (1836–40) at Oxford resulted in his winning the Newdigate Prize for poetry and in his determining not to enter the ministry. A breakdown of health in 1840 forced him to travel.

Critic and Reformer

The first volume of Ruskin's Modern Painters appeared in 1843. This work started as a defense of the painter J. M. W. Turner and developed into a treatise elaborating the principles that art is based on national and individual integrity and morality and also that art is a "universal language." He finished the five volumes in 1860. The Seven Lamps of Architecture (1849) applied these same theories to architecture. In 1848, Ruskin married Euphemia Gray, a beautiful young woman with social ambitions; the union, which apparently was never consummated, was annulled in 1854, and Mrs. Ruskin subsequently married the painter John Everett Millais.

From his position as the foremost English art critic, Ruskin in 1851 defended the work of the Pre-Raphaelite group. His third great volume of criticism, The Stones of Venice (1851–53), maintained that the Gothic architecture of Venice reflected national and domestic virtue, while Venetian Renaissance architecture mirrored corruption. About 1857, Ruskin's art criticism became more broadly social and political. He wrote Unto This Last (in Cornhill Magazine, 1860) and Munera Pulveris (in Fraser's Magazine, 1862–63). These works attacked bourgeois England and charged that modern art reflected the ugliness and waste of modern industry.

Ruskin's positive program for social reform appeared in Sesame and Lilies (1865), The Crown of Wild Olive (1866), Time and Tide (1867), and Fors Clavigera (8 vol., 1871–84). Many of his suggested programs—old age pensions, nationalization of education, organization of labor—have become accepted doctrine. He was made the first professor of art in England (Slade professor, Oxford, 1870) and his lectures were well attended. His multifarious activities broke down his health, however, and in 1878 he suffered his first period of insanity. Recurrences of unbalance became more frequent, though some of his greatest prose, the autobiography Praeterita (1885–89), was written in the lucid intervals.

Bibliography

See his works (39 vol., 1903–12); M. Lutyens, The Ruskins and the Grays (1972); biographies by P. Quennell (1949), E. T. Cook (2 vol., 1911; repr. 1969); T. Hilton (2 vol., 1985–2000); studies by J. Evans (1952, repr. 1970), J. C. Sherburne (1973), J. L. Bradley (1984), and J. L. Spear (1984).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Ruskin John  - 5225 results

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LETTERS OF JOHN RUSKIN TO CHARLES ELIOT NORTON IN TWO VOLUMES VOLUME I LETTERS OF JOHN RUSKIN TO CHARLES ELIOT NORTON IN...JOHN RUSKIN Frontispiece...
...OF LETTERS EDITED BY JOHN MORLEY JOHN RUSKIN ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS JOHN RUSKIN BY FREDERIC HARRISON New York THE...INDEX 211 JOHN RUSKIN JOHN RUSKIN 1819-1900 CHAPTER I...
JOHN RUSKIN: THE CRITICAL HERITAGE THE CRITICAL HERITAGE...reputation following the writers death. JOHN RUSKIN THE CRITICAL HERITAGE Edited by...40 J. J. JARVES, signed article, John Ruskin, the Art-Seer, Art-Journal, January 1874...
THE LIFE OF JOHN RUSKIN G. Richmond The Author of "Modern Painters" 1843 THE LIFE OF JOHN RUSKIN BY E. T. COOK IN TWO VOLUMES...chapter. I The ancestry of John Ruskin, and the origin of his name, have been...
...ludicrous commercial way . . ." JOHN RUSKIN THE EXQUISITE TRAGEDY AN INTIMITE LIFE OF JOHN RUSKIN BY AMABEL WILLIAMS-ELLIS...experience and build with it. 2 John Ruskin was an exceedingly brilliant child...
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journal articles on: Ruskin John  - 445 results

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...with Comfort: Christina Rossetti, John Ruskin, and Leafy Emotion. by Emma...image in Christina Rossetti and John Ruskin is expressive of their different...Christina Rossetti, the second by John Ruskin. In her Christian poem A Better...
John Ruskin and the Victorian eye. by Anne...museum will present The Art of Seeing: John Ruskin and the Victorian Eye from 6 March through...P. Gordon and Anthony Lacy Gully, eds., John Ruskin and the Victorian Eye (New York, 1993...
...influence. The association of John Ruskins work on Gothic architecture in...Bataille. London: Routledge, 1994. Ruskin, John. The Bible of Amiens. 1880-85. The Works of John Ruskin. Eds. E.T. Cook and Alexander Wedderburn...
...Birch This article explores John Ruskins relations with cultural authority...social reform. (1) The Works of John Ruskin, ed. by E. T. Cook and Alexander...sufficient quantity of poetry (John Ruskin, Iteriad; or, Three Weeks among...
...The Artistic Relationship Between John Ruskin and Dante Gabriel Rossetti," unpublished...Wedderburn, eds., The Works of John Ruskin, 39 vols (London: Allen, 1903-12...Polygon: Essays on the Imagination of John Ruskin (Manchester U. Press, 1982), 137-58...
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magazine articles on: Ruskin John  - 278 results

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...and the ethics of construction: John Ruskin and the humanity of the builder...help us answer these questions is John Ruskin, an art critic of the Victorian...Architecture and The Stones of Venice, John Ruskin was not an architect, nor, as he...
...CELEBRATES THE LIFE AND VISION OF JOHN RUSKIN, THE NATIONS GREATEST CRITIC. THE...DAVEY On New Years Day 1844, John Ruskins present from his father was Turners...sense, the picture is an emblem of Ruskins life and character: in the swirling...
...Ruskin by Ann Hills * John Ruskin (1819-1900), Victorian critic, artist...gathered there by the schools founder, John Howard Whitehouse. Thousands of books...cared for during thirty-six years by Ruskin specialist James Dearden, who has...
...its artistic imperatives from the thought of John Ruskin. As the Brooklyn Museum has mounted an exceedingly...drawings at the entrance of the Brooklyn show by John Ruskin--one of them of a piece of rock Ruskin observed in the Alps, another of a twig of...
...on the Beano! How Can You Make John Ruskins Radical Socialism Approachable...often mentioned--17 times--was John Ruskin. Marx was named only twice. It...critic--all the more so because the Ruskin text they mentioned most often...
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newspaper articles on: Ruskin John  - 366 results

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...and Pottery Works, the factory later took the name Ruskin, apparently after the great Victorian writer and art critic, John Ruskin, who championed the Arts and Crafts Movement which was active around the turn of the 20th Century. It was here that...
...whose husband was the art critic John Ruskin - ironically the painters greatest...started in 1849 when 19-year- old John Everett Millais, precocious son...had been caught by the charms of John Ruskins wife, who, five years after their...
...art critic and social prophet John Ruskin (1819-1900), whose impassioned...with the Pre-Raphaelite painter John Millais. Subsequently, Ruskin, at this point 39, fell in love...PRAETERITA AND DILECTA By John Ruskin with an introduction by Tim...
...by Margaret Tarrant and Marion St John Webb. The second book is called...original sleeve. Mrs J Edwards, L1A. Ruskin pottery was established in 1898 by...Pottery was named after the artist John Ruskin. The company experimented with glazes...
...utterly miscast as the art critic John Ruskin in this risible mock-Victorian melodrama...to the Scottish Highlands, Morans Ruskin repeatedly tries to engineer compromising...between his pre-Raphaelite protege John Everett Millais (Damian OHare) and...
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encyclopedia articles on: Ruskin John  - 16 results

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RUSKIN, JOHN 1819 1900, English critic and social theorist. During the...apparently was never consummated, was annulled in 1854, and Mrs. Ruskin subsequently married the painter John Everett Millais. From his position as the foremost English...
...and in 1896 he became president of the Royal Academy. John Ruskin was a close friend and champion of his work until 1855 when Millais married Mrs. Ruskin, after the nullification of her marriage. His work is...
...forestalled by a committee of admirers, which included John Ruskin, Alfred Tennyson, Thomas Carlyle, and Charles Kingsley...episode contributed to the fall of the government of Lord John Russell in 1866. See W. L. Mathieson, Sugar Colonies...
...endowed with human qualities, e.g., allegorical morality plays where characters include Good Deeds, Beauty, and Death. John Ruskin termed sentimentalized, exaggerated personification the "pathetic fallacy." See also allegory ; apostrophe ; metonymy...
...cooperation. The idea was developed in mid-19th-century England when such social thinkers as Thomas Hill Green , John Ruskin , and Arnold Toynbee (1852 83) urged university students to settle in poor neighborhoods, where they could study...
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