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  • July 1, 1878
  • Page 21
  • ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS.
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1878: Page 21

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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Art-Jottings In Art-Studios.

ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS .

. BY BRO . REV . W . TI 3 BBS . INTRODUCTORY . " When old age shall this generation waste , Thou shalt remain , in midst of other woe Than ours , a friend to man , to whom thou sayest , ' Beauty is truth , truth beauty' ¦ "

T \ EEP in the buried past , but clear as deep , written in imperishable characters , - * - ' stand revealed the souls of men , ancl it is in the . storehouse of antiquarian research that we can read the characters of nations , for no truer test of a people ' s advance in civilization is there to be found than is made manifest in the treasures of the archteologist . In the page' of history , where even it exists , interpolations may have crept in ; the very truth of history itself may have been so overlaid with mis-representation or corrupt

tradition that its story may be nothing worth ; but in the remnants of a nation ' s Art , be they never so few , never so mutilated , there stands recorded , in letters that can be neither doubted nor denied , its perception of the beautiful ancl therefore of the true . For what is Art ?—It is not our purpose here to-write a treatise upon the nature or characteristics of this divine gift to man , but rather to describe in a brief and popular manner some few of tbe processes by which it is brought home to tbe homes of the many , and therefore , a simple definition will suffice . —

Art is the silent language of truth , its embodied reality presented in visible form to the inner eye of man ; in other words , the presentment of true beauty enforcing upon the human mind the precepts of divine perfection . There are those who would tell us that Art is the creation of civilization ; we hold the very reverse , that civilization is the creature of Art . We do not for a moment pretend to deny that in the gradual dawn of culture ancl refinement the work of men's hands will ' grow more true to that of

which it is the presentment , and that thus it will step-by-step grow more ancl more beautiful ; but what we'affirm is this , that Art-work is ever striving to recall an idea once possessed , now lost , but gradually being and to be regained . Peoples , as individuals , are but re-acquiring a long-lost status ; and the gradual growth of civilization is but the nearer-and-nearer approach to a standard of perfection , once existingonce lostbut evermore being strained after and more or less nearl

, , y attained to again . Who , with our record before him , can doubt that man , in his original state , had a knowledge as perfect as humanity could possess it ? who deny that this perfection was lost in man ' s fall ? who doubt , but that in his renewal " and restitution , man shall arrive at it once more ?

As , then , man sank from this former standard of God-given knowledge , he became correspondingly degraded ancl corrupt ; when man gradually comes back to the perception of the truth of beauty and the beauty of truth , so does he gradually draw near to that estate from which he has so long been severed and estranged . We know that there are those who tell us ' that man's religious practice , not his religious instinct , has cultivated in him the pursuit of Art , —that religious teaching has awakened fervour in his soul that has

a forced him to clothe bis ideal in material form ; but if we look at the Art-productions of a savage race in . the way of religious embodiment we shall form but a poor estimate of the spirit that leads hint to represent the good and the beautiful in such barbarous guise ; rather as it seems to us , does something within him , the spirit of Art let us call it , bid him materialise the truth , and then his pursuit of his object softens and moulds him , so ' that at last the beautiful is attained and there stands revealed the true . 2

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-07-01, Page 21” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071878/page/21/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
PREFACE. Article 2
CONTENTS. Article 3
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 5
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 6
RECORDS OF OLD LODGES. Article 8
Untitled Article 12
PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID. Article 13
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 18
SONNET. Article 20
ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS. Article 21
AN ANCIENT CHAEGE.* Article 23
Untitled Article 25
"HAIL AND FAEEWELL." Article 26
FREEMASONRY IN KELSO. Article 27
AMABEL VAUGHAN.* Article 30
MODERN AND ANCIENT LODGES IN AMERICA, ON THE ROLL OF THE ENGLISH GRAND LODGE, A.D. 1813. Article 32
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 35
REVIEWS. Article 38
BE NOT UNKIND. Article 40
ALONE: A MOTHER'S SONG. Article 41
NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 42
LOST AND SAVED; OR, NELLIE POWERS, THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 45
THE MASON'S TRUST. Article 49
THE NAME OF GOD. Article 50
MASONIC THINKERS. Article 51
FORWARD. Article 52
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Art-Jottings In Art-Studios.

ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS .

. BY BRO . REV . W . TI 3 BBS . INTRODUCTORY . " When old age shall this generation waste , Thou shalt remain , in midst of other woe Than ours , a friend to man , to whom thou sayest , ' Beauty is truth , truth beauty' ¦ "

T \ EEP in the buried past , but clear as deep , written in imperishable characters , - * - ' stand revealed the souls of men , ancl it is in the . storehouse of antiquarian research that we can read the characters of nations , for no truer test of a people ' s advance in civilization is there to be found than is made manifest in the treasures of the archteologist . In the page' of history , where even it exists , interpolations may have crept in ; the very truth of history itself may have been so overlaid with mis-representation or corrupt

tradition that its story may be nothing worth ; but in the remnants of a nation ' s Art , be they never so few , never so mutilated , there stands recorded , in letters that can be neither doubted nor denied , its perception of the beautiful ancl therefore of the true . For what is Art ?—It is not our purpose here to-write a treatise upon the nature or characteristics of this divine gift to man , but rather to describe in a brief and popular manner some few of tbe processes by which it is brought home to tbe homes of the many , and therefore , a simple definition will suffice . —

Art is the silent language of truth , its embodied reality presented in visible form to the inner eye of man ; in other words , the presentment of true beauty enforcing upon the human mind the precepts of divine perfection . There are those who would tell us that Art is the creation of civilization ; we hold the very reverse , that civilization is the creature of Art . We do not for a moment pretend to deny that in the gradual dawn of culture ancl refinement the work of men's hands will ' grow more true to that of

which it is the presentment , and that thus it will step-by-step grow more ancl more beautiful ; but what we'affirm is this , that Art-work is ever striving to recall an idea once possessed , now lost , but gradually being and to be regained . Peoples , as individuals , are but re-acquiring a long-lost status ; and the gradual growth of civilization is but the nearer-and-nearer approach to a standard of perfection , once existingonce lostbut evermore being strained after and more or less nearl

, , y attained to again . Who , with our record before him , can doubt that man , in his original state , had a knowledge as perfect as humanity could possess it ? who deny that this perfection was lost in man ' s fall ? who doubt , but that in his renewal " and restitution , man shall arrive at it once more ?

As , then , man sank from this former standard of God-given knowledge , he became correspondingly degraded ancl corrupt ; when man gradually comes back to the perception of the truth of beauty and the beauty of truth , so does he gradually draw near to that estate from which he has so long been severed and estranged . We know that there are those who tell us ' that man's religious practice , not his religious instinct , has cultivated in him the pursuit of Art , —that religious teaching has awakened fervour in his soul that has

a forced him to clothe bis ideal in material form ; but if we look at the Art-productions of a savage race in . the way of religious embodiment we shall form but a poor estimate of the spirit that leads hint to represent the good and the beautiful in such barbarous guise ; rather as it seems to us , does something within him , the spirit of Art let us call it , bid him materialise the truth , and then his pursuit of his object softens and moulds him , so ' that at last the beautiful is attained and there stands revealed the true . 2

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