Dictionary Definition
picturesque adj
1 suggesting or suitable for a picture; pretty as
a picture; "a picturesque village"
2 strikingly expressive; "a picturesque
description of the rainforest"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Adjective
- Resembling or worthy of a picture or painting; having the qualities
of a picture or painting.
- We looked down onto a beautiful, picturesque sunset over the ocean.
Translations
resembling a picture or painting
- Chinese: adj. 绘画般的, 逼真的, 栩栩如生的, 生动的
- Finnish: pittoreski, maalauksellinen
- German: pittoresk
- Hebrew: ציורי
- Romanian: pitoresc
Extensive Definition
Picturesque is an aesthetic ideal first
introduced into English cultural debate in 1782 by William
Gilpin in Observations of the River Wye, and Several Parts of
South Wales, etc. Relative Chiefly to Picturesque Beauty; made in
the Summer of the Year 1770, a practical book which instructed
England's leisured travelers to examine "the face of a country by
the rules of picturesque beauty". Picturesque, along with the
aesthetic and cultural strands of Gothic and Celticism, was a part
of the emerging Romantic
sensibility of the 18th century.
As the title of Gilpin's work suggests,
picturesque needs to be explained in terms of its relationship to
two other aesthetic ideals: those of the beautiful and the sublime.
By the last third of the 18th century, Enlightenment rationalist
ideas about aestheticism were being challenged by looking at the
experiences of beauty and sublimity as being non-rational
(instinctual). Aesthetic experience was not just a rational
decision - one did not look at a pleasing curved form and decide it
was beautiful - rather it was a matter of basic human instinct and
came naturally. Edmund Burke in his 1757 Philosophical Enquiry into
the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and the Beautiful said the
soft gentle curves appealed, he thought, to the male sexual desire,
while the sublime horrors appealed to our desires for
self-preservation. Picturesque arose as a mediator between the
opposed ideals of beauty and the sublime, showing the possibilities
that existed in between these two rationally idealized states. As
Thomas
Gray wrote in 1765 of the Scottish Highlands "The mountains are
ecstatic.. None but.. God know how to join so much beauty with so
much horror." The irregular, anti-classical, ruins and even ruined
people - the ragged poor (viewed from a safe distance of course) -
became sought after themes. Can-tinted portable mirrors to frame
and darken the scenes they visited, it was named after 17th century
landscape painter Claude
Lorraine whose work Gilpin saw as synonymous with the
picturesque and who Gilpin encouraged emulation. As Malcolm
Andrews remarks, there is "something of the big-game hunter in
these tourists, boasting of their encounters with savage
landscapes, "capturing" wild scenes, and "fixing" them as pictorial
trophies in order to sell them or hang them up in frames on their
drawing room walls". Gilpin himself asked, "shall we suppose it a
greater pleasure to the sportsman to pursue a trivial animal, than
it is to the man of taste to pursue the beauties of nature?" After
1815 when Europe was available to travel again after the wars, new
fields for picturesque-hunters opened up in Italy. Anna James
wrote in 1820 "Had I never visited Italy, I think I should never
have understood the word picturesque". Henry James
exclaimed in Albano in the 1870s
"I have talked of the picturesque all my life; now at last.. I see
it"..
Picturesque tourists were also encouraged to
reshape the landscapes as settings for English
country houses, exemplified by Lancelot
'Capability' Brown. Following Gilpin's advice, many landowners
began designing gardens with irregular sight lines and
prefabricated ruins of 'classical' structures.
Picturesque meaning literally "in the manner of a
picture; fit to be made into a picture" was a word used as early as
1703 (Oxford English Dictionary), and derived from an Italian term
pittoresco, meaning, "in the manner of a painter," William Gilpin's
Essay on Prints (1768) defined picturesque as " ... a term
expressive of that peculiar kind of beauty, which is agreeable in a
picture" (xii).
Notable works
- Gilpin's Three Essays: On Picturesque Beauty; On Picturesque Travel; and on Sketching Landscape: to which is Added a Poem, On Landscape Painting was published in London, 1792.
- Richard Payne Knight, An Analytical Inquiry into the Principles of Taste, soon followed, and went into several editions that the author revised and expanded.
- A third great essay on the Picturesque was Uvedale Price, An Essay on the Picturesque, as Compared with the Sublime and the Beautiful; and on the Use of Studying Pictures, for the Purpose of Improving Real Landscape, revised. edition London, 1796.
- Dorothy Wordsworth wrote Recollections of a Tour Made in Scotland, A. D. 1803 (1874) considered a classic of picturesque travel writing.
- William Combe and Thomas Rowlandson published an 1809 poem with pictures called The Tour of Doctor Syntax in Search of the Picturesque which was a satire of the ideal and famously skewered Picturesque-hunters.
- Humphry Repton applied picturesque theory to the practice of landscape design. In conjunction with the work of Price and Knight, this led to the 'picturesque theory' that designed landscapes should be composed like landscape paintings with a foreground, a middle ground and a background. Repton believed that the foreground should be the realm of art (with formal geometry and ornamental planting), that the middleground should have a parkland character of the type created by Brown and that the background should have a wild and 'natural' character.
- John Ruskin identified the "picturesque" as a genuinely modern aesthetic category, in The Seven Lamps of Architecture.
- In modern times, the essay by the English architectural historian Christopher Hussey, The Picturesque: Studies in a Point of View, 1927 focused modern thinking on the development of this approach. The picturesque idea continues to have a profound influence on garden design and planting design.
References
External links
picturesque in German: Picturesque
picturesque in French: Pittoresque
picturesque in Italian: Pittoresco
picturesque in Japanese: ピクチュアレスク
picturesque in Russian: Живописный
стиль
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
arabesque, attractive, baroque, busy, charming, chichi, colorful, delightful, elaborate, elegant, fancy, fetching, fine, flamboyant, florid, flowery, freehand, frilly, fussy, graphic, high-wrought, idyllic, interesting, intriguing, labored, lovely, luxuriant, luxurious, monochrome, moresque, original, ornate, ostentatious, overelaborate, overelegant, overlabored, overworked, overwrought, painty, pastose, photographic, pictorial, picturable, pictural, pleasing, polychrome, pretty, pretty-pretty, quaint, realistic, rich, rococo, scenic, scenographic, scumbled, striking, unique, unusual, vivid