The Elements of Drawing, John Ruskin’s teaching collection at Oxford

The Elements of Drawing, John Ruskin’s teaching collection at Oxford

Ruskin's revision to the Rudimentary series (1878)

Unpublished manuscript catalogue for proposed re-organisation of the Rudimentary series.

Rudimentary manu Cover

Catalogue / 10th Cabinet / 2nd Section

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    With Mr. Burgess’ exquisite execution in the preceding example of cross-hatched pen-work I place a perfect example of linear pen-work, the lower subject in this frame, copied by Mr. Allen from Albert Dürer while I was teaching him drawing with a view to his becoming an engraver. The subject above is a pencil-study from Nature of Rouen Cathedral by my pupil M.r. Butterworth. Both these men were originally carpenters and came to me to the Working Men’s College to learn drawing. Both of them had been first rate workmen; M.r. Butterworth, I think, in simple carpentry, Mr. Allen a joiner. By examining these two drawings together, the student will, I hope, learn to appreciate the delicacy of touch involved in fine carpentry; for it was simply the transference of the fine qualities of finger which had been acquired by handling the carpenter’s tools to the pen and pencil that I obtained results, almost at once, of this extreme precision; in each case, of course, innate disposition for art having existed. I do not think the best student in these schools will easily rival the execution of the iron-worked spire in the upper drawing, still less of the grass in the lower one. I had no doubt of Mr. Butterworth far surpassing me, R. eventually, in architectural drawing, but his career was briefly brought to a close by an illness caused by bathing in a Welsh lake when he was heated, from which he never recovered so as to be able to work with his full energy again. Mr. Allen advanced steadily in skill, engraved for me several wonderful plates in Modern Painters, and is now the exclusive engraver of my drawings in the Laws of Fiesole and Deucalion. His plate of my drawing No. cannot, I think be rivalled either in line or mezzotint, either for skill or fidelity to his original; and the only complaint I have now to make of him is that he sometimes makes me ashamed of my own work.

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