In "The Landscape" (1794), a poem dedicated to Price, and later in his substantial Analytical Inquiry into the Principles of Taste (1805), Knight differed from Gilpin and Price by suggesting that the picturesque was defined not by objective properties but by a mode of perception. In his Essay on the Picturesque (1794), Price described the picturesque as an aesthetic category in which perceptions of roughness, irregularity, and unexpected variety could produce sensations of curiosity and pleasure. Influenced by Edmund Burke's treatise, A Philosophical Inquiry into the Origins of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1757 revised 1759), however, Price also believed that perception of specific forms and textures could elicit specific thoughts and feelings within the mind of an observer. Like Gilpin, Price believed that aesthetic qualities were objective properties. Price and Knight looked not to rustic scenery but to estate landscapes in their appraisals of the picturesque. Gilpin popularized his theory through a series of travel guides, published beginning in 1782, in which he pinpointed places from which to view "picturesque" scenes within rural landscape. He argued that the "picturesque" -defined in his Essay on Prints (1768) as "expressive of that peculiar kind of beauty which is agreeable in a picture" -referred to compositional formulas and textures such as those found in the landscape paintings of Claude Lorrain (1600 –1682), Gaspard Dughet (called Poussin 1615 –1675), and Salvator Rosa (1615 –1673), in which an open area seen from a low viewpoint was backed by a screening device and framed on both sides by wings, all painted in rough brushstrokes. Gilpin was a rural schoolmaster and clergyman who believed that aesthetic qualities were based on objective properties. Central to the debate were questions about how and where aesthetic properties were constituted. However, that conformity might be deliberate or by chance and, consequently, the expression was equally applicable to designed and natural subjects: gardens and remote wilderness, artful compositions and haphazard arrangements, brushstrokes within a painting, and even paintings themselves.ĭuring the last third of the eighteenth century, the meaning of "picturesque" became a major subject of debate among three theorists particularly interested in landscape: William Gilpin (1724 –1804), Uvedale Price (1747 –1829), and Richard Payne Knight (1750 –1824). Until the last quarter of the eighteenth century, the term generally implied that the subject in question was to some degree in keeping with conventions of painting. For example, in notes to his translation of Homer's Iliad (1715 –1720), the poet Alexander Pope (1688 –1744) used the word "picturesque" to signal descriptive passages that, when visualized, were particularly compelling. Ostensibly derived from the Italian pittoresco or the French pittoresque, meaning "like a picture" or "as if by a painter," the English version exceeded those meanings even in its earliest usage. Use of the term "picturesque" has varied greatly since its emergence in the late seventeenth century, and its meaning has been frequently disputed.
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