The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery

Par un écrivain mystérieux
Last updated 10 juillet 2024
The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery
‘A facility of drawing, like that of playing upon a musical instrument, cannot be acquired but by an infinite number of acts. I need not, therefore, enforce by many words the necessity of continual application; nor tell you that the porte-crayon ought to be for ever in your hands.’ So proclaimed Sir Joshua Reynolds in 1769 in his second discourse to students of the newly founded Royal Academy. What Reynolds proclaimed was not new for there had long been an emphasis on drawing in an artist’s training and practice. To take the case of William Hogarth, he always carried a porte-crayon in his pocket, according to his early biographer, John Ireland
The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery
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The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery
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The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery
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The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery
The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery
The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery
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The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery
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The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery
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The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery
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The artist's porte-crayon - National Portrait Gallery
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