Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- PART I “LECTURES ON ARCHITECTURE AND PAINTING” (1854)
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE
- CONTENTS
- TEXT OF THE LECTURES AS PUBLISHED (WITH ADDITIONS FROM THE MS. OF THEM AS DELIVERED)
- PART II REVIEWS, LETTERS, AND PAMPHLETS ON ART (1844–1854)
- APPENDIX TO PART II
- PART III “NOTES ON THE CONSTRUCTION OF SHEEPFOLDS” (1851)
- APPENDIX TO PART III
- PART IV LETTERS ON POLITICS (1852)
- Plate section
AUTHOR'S PREFACE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- PART I “LECTURES ON ARCHITECTURE AND PAINTING” (1854)
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE
- CONTENTS
- TEXT OF THE LECTURES AS PUBLISHED (WITH ADDITIONS FROM THE MS. OF THEM AS DELIVERED)
- PART II REVIEWS, LETTERS, AND PAMPHLETS ON ART (1844–1854)
- APPENDIX TO PART II
- PART III “NOTES ON THE CONSTRUCTION OF SHEEPFOLDS” (1851)
- APPENDIX TO PART III
- PART IV LETTERS ON POLITICS (1852)
- Plate section
Summary
The following Lectures are printed, as far as possible, just as they were delivered. Here and there a sentence which seemed obscure has been mended, and the passages which had not been previously written, have been, of course imperfectly, supplied from memory. But I am well assured that nothing of any substantial importance which was said in the lecture-room, is either omitted, or altered in its signification; with the exception only of a few sentences struck out from the notice of the works of Turner, in consequence of the impossibility of engraving the drawings by which they were illustrated, except at a cost which would have too much raised the price of the volume. Some elucidatory remarks have, however, been added at the close of the second and fourth Lectures, which I hope may be of more use than the passages which I was obliged to omit.
The drawings by which the Lectures on Architecture were illustrated have been carefully reduced, and well transferred to wood by Mr. Thurston Thompson. Those which were given in the course of the notices of schools of painting could not be so transferred, having been drawn in colour; and I have therefore merely had a few lines, absolutely necessary to make the text intelligible, copied from engravings.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 7 - 10Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1903