Description | Large volume containing notes on sculpture and art and some pencil and ink sketches by the artist John Flaxman. Description of contents on each page, as follows 1. Title "A commonplace book containing .. a lecture on science employed in sculpture, bound in parchment." - George Wallis 2- Sketch of a lecture, "on the use and connection of the Arts of Design in the circle of Human Knowledge" 3- Introduction continues 4- Connection to Geometry 5- Connections to Astronomy and Mechanics 6- Connections to Geography & History, Natural History, and Anatomy 7- Connection to Philosophy and Religion 8-10- Connection to religion continues 11- List of classical "noble monuments of sculpture" 12- "The universal connexion with all other branches of knowledge & their indispensible importance in cultivating the nobbler faculties of the mind" 13-15- Blank 16- Sketch of a lecture on Composition 17- Introduction continues 18-20- Lists key classical Greek and Roman sculptures up to 5th/6th century AD 21- Dark ages, "Arts of design and poetry revived in Religious subjects" 22- Begins subsection on Principles (scribbled out) 23- Discusions on Principles, Lines, and Light & Shadow 24- Examples of Sublime, Tender, Graceful, and Tragic categories of sculpture. Explores the powers of sculpture (more limited than poetical arts or painting) 25-26- Blank 27- Lecture on the Science of Sculpture: Anatomy, proportions, motion & mechanical powers 28- Blank 29- Lecture on Saxon Architecture, "barbarous & ignorant deviations from the greek orders" 30- Leads on to Norman architecture, lists key examples 31-32- Blank 33- Lecture on the principles of Drapery 34- Details the effects of body shape and wind on sculpting drapery 35- Drapery in Repose and Motion 36- Motion continued, History of Drapery 37- Blank 38-39- Lecture on Public Monuments, list key classical examples 40-41- Blank 42-43- Lecture on Style, its definition and intentions and signs of progressive improvement over time 44-46- Blank 47- Pen sketches of male body from front, side, and only torso 48- Pencil sketches of male figures from Temple of Theseus and Altemps Palace in Rome 49- Pencil sketches of sculptures of Hercules and Venus 50- Pencil sketch of two men wrestling 51-52- Introductory lecture on Ancient Art 53- Stages of advancement in ancient art over time 54-55- Lecture on Ancient Sculpture, from essential developments to key examples 56-57- Lecture on Modern Sculpture, essential developments starting from the establishment of Christianity 58- Blank (end of notebook) 59- statement "Presented to UCL by Sir Alexander Gibb" 1921 |
CustodialHistory | Presented to UCL by Sir Alexander Gibb, 1921 |