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         Ruskin John:     more books (100)
  1. JOHN RUSKIN (1819-1900) A CENTENARY EXHIBITION by HOUGHTON LIBRARY, 1999
  2. John Ruskin 1819-1900
  3. The queen of the air: being a study of the Greek myths of cloud and storm by John 1819-1900 Ruskin, 1891-12-31
  4. VAL D'ARNO: Ten Lectures on the Tuscan Art. Directly Antecedent to the Florentine Year of Victories. Given Before the University of Oxford in Michaelmas Term, 1873. by John [1819 - 1900]. Ruskin, 1890-01-01
  5. The CROWN Of WILD OLIVE. Four Lectures on Industry and War. by John [1819 - 1900]. Ruskin, 1886-01-01
  6. The story of Ida: epitaph on an Etrurian tomb by Francesca Alexander 1837-1917 Ruskin John 1819-1900 ed, 1883-12-31
  7. SESAME And LILIES. Three Lectures. by John [1819 - 1900]. Ruskin, 1889
  8. The queen of the air: being a study of the Greek myths of cloud and storm by John 1819-1900 Ruskin, 2010-06-25
  9. Correspondence With Charles Boner & John Ruskin. Edited By Elizabeth Lee by Ruskin John 1819-1900, Boner Charles 1815-1870, 2010-09-30
  10. Beautiful thoughts from John Ruskin by John Ruskin 1819-1900, 1908-12-31
  11. Ruskin year-book; selections from the writings of John Ruskin for every day in the year by John Ruskin 1819-1900, 1901-12-31
  12. Modern Painters, Volume IV (of V) by John, 1819-1900 Ruskin,
  13. Frondes Agrestes. Readings In 'modern Painters.' by Ruskin John 1819-1900, 2010-09-27
  14. The Crown Of Wild Olive, And Lectures On Art by Ruskin John 1819-1900, 2010-09-28

21. Ruskin, John Quotes On Quotations Book
John Ruskin (February 8, 1819 January 20, 1900) was an English author, poet and artist, although more famous for his work as art critic and social critic.
http://quotationsbook.com/author/6325/

22. Ruskin, John - Definition From Longman English Dictionary Online
Definition of Ruskin, John from the Longman Online Dictionary of Contemporary English. The Longman English Dictionary provides support and resources for those who want to learn
http://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/Ruskin-John

23. Banish Colds & Sore Throats
Information about the activities of a group of people who have an interest in the Brantwood house, estate, and Ruskin himself. Newsletter, timetable of events, reports of recent events, and information about joining.
http://www.rusmus.f9.co.uk
Permanently !
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How much should one take?
One teaspoonful of CV in a glass of water, taken twice a day , is quite sufficient for most people. A larger dose to begin with will not do any harm. You will soon become accustomed to the taste and find that the drink is beneficial in other ways also.
It cleans the palate, especially after oily or fatty food, and helps prevent tooth decay.

24. 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Ruskin, John - Wikisource
RUSKIN, JOHN (18191900), English writer and critic, was born in London, at Hunter Street, Brunswick Square, on the 8th of February 1819, being the only child of John James Ruskin
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/1911_Encyclopædia_Britannica/Ruskin,_John

25. Ruskin, John
Ruskin, John. To the Editor of the Times. London Times 21,733 (5 May 1854), 9. full text. TO THE EDITOR OF THE TIMES. Sir, I trust that, with your usual kindnes and liberality
http://www.engl.duq.edu/servus/PR_Critic/LT5may54.html
[Ruskin, John]. "To the Editor of the Times." London Times 21,733 (5 May 1854), 9. full text TO THE EDITOR OF THE TIMES. The spurious imitations of Præ-Raphaelite work represent the most minute leaves and other objects with sharp outlines, but with no variety of colour, and with none of the concealment, none of the infinity of nature. With this spurious work the walls of the Academy are half covered; of the true school one very small example may be pointed out, being hung so low that it might otherwise escpae attention. It is not by any means perfect, but still very lovely, the study of a calm pool in a mountain brook, by Mr. J. Dearle, No. 191, "Evening, on the Marchno, North Wales." This document was scanned/transcribed from the original source. Return to the list of reviews

26. Lakestay - Ruskin Infatuation With Girls
An alternative Ruskin biography from Lakestay, with emphasis on his enthusiasm for young girls, in particular Effie Gray and Rose La Touche.
http://www.lakestay.co.uk/ruskin.htm

More about the English Lakes
Ruskin's Complex Character / Edward Lear's Lakeland journey
John Ruskin would have given today's tabloid press and paparazzi plenty of interest. After a sheltered and oppressive upbringing he married a younger cousin , Effie Gray and for six years they maintained a marriage that was in one vital sense a sham. For the marriage was never consummated. This sham remained the case until in 1854 they were joined in a Highland jaunt by the young, handsome and gifted painter Millais. Millais soon fell in love with Effie and she found escape from her marriage in a notorious court action in a suit for nullity. Subsequently biographers of Ruskin chronicle his repeated infatuation with very young girls, especially that of Rose La Touche. When they first met, Rose La Touche was a mere ten years old and Ruskin 40.
Rose La Touche
Biographer Quentin Bell has this to say: "He lived on terms of sentimental intimacy with an entire girls' school and the modern readers knows not whether to blush or snigger at the romps and oglings, toyings and teasings which were conducted with perfect candour under the benevolent eye of the headmistress at Winnington." Rose was his "Rosie, pet and Rosie puss'' and he was her "St Crumpet" The strange under-currents were visible in 1859 when in his criticism of Millais' painting of Spring, Ruskin says it gives him the impression of "a field of penance for young ladies, where girl blossoms, who had been vainly gay, or treacherously amiable, were condemned to recline in reprobation, under red hot apple blossom and sip scalding milk out of a poisoned porringer."

27. Ruskin, John, Finding Aid
Ruskin, John, Letter Mrs. John Simon, 18 Manuscript Collection MS 0006b 1
http://www.mtholyoke.edu/offices/library/arch/col/msrg/mancol/ms0006br.htm
Mount Holyoke College
Archives and Special Collections
Manuscript Register Ruskin, John,
Letter : Mrs. John Simon, [18]
Manuscript Collection: MS 0006b 1 item. Agency History/Biographical note:
Scope and Content:

A letter to Mrs. Simon, the wife of Ruskin's physician, Dr. John Simon, on the nature of the artistic standards of the English people. Includes transcription, as well as a check dated October 13, 1884, payable to Miss Gale. Cite as: John Ruskin Letter, Mount Holyoke College, Archives and Special Collections, South Hadley, Massachusetts Access Restrictions: Unrestricted Manuscript Collecti ons Library

28. Ruskin On Turner
A brief biography of the work of Ruskin, plus some extracts from The Works of Ruskin , ed. Cook/Wedderburn, of essays by Ruskin on JW Turner.
http://art-bin.com/art/oruskincontents.html
Please note:

John Ruskin (1819-1900)
Ruskin on Turner
Thirst for largeness - grasp of terror
WHAT WAS IT in William Turner's art that so immensely captured John Ruskin that he almost devoted his life to the advocacy of it? Maybe he saw some of his own transformed desires in the works of the great master of light, surf and rock. I deliberately avoid the modern term sublimation, since this mental state neither was modern nor sublime, but heavy as the stones of Venice he also chose to write about and life surely taught Ruskin lessons as harsh as those ethics of the dust he lectured the young girls at Winnington school about.
Turner on varnishing day,
by S. W. Parrott The result was "Modern Painters", published in five volumes 1843-60. During those years Turner himself had died, at the age of 76 in 1851. He left behind some 300 paintings and 19,000 drawings and watercolors, that Ruskin cataloged.
In 1848 Ruskin married Effie Gray, who later left him for one of the Pre-Raphaelites, John Everett Millais. Nevertheless, Ruskin wrote a book in defense of this artistic movement, "Pre-Raphaelitism" (1851). Apart from "Modern Painters", his most famous works are "The Seven Lamps of Architecture" (1849) and "The Stones of Venice" (three volumes 1851-53). Ruskin detested industrialism and also wrote several essays about social reform that were later collected in "Unto This Last" (1862).
Turner's "The Sun Setting among Dark Clouds", watercolor, appr. 1826.

29. John Ruskin - Artist Philosopher Writer - Arts & Crafts Leader
A brief biography of the life of John Ruskin, with particular emphasis on his relationship with, and inspiration to, the Pre-Raphaelite painters from the Arts and Crafts Society.
http://arts-crafts.com/archive/jruskin.shtml

30. Ruskin John On Netlog
Ruskin John news contact page on Netlog. Look at photos, videos, friends and much more of Ruskin.
http://en.netlog.com/ruskinjohn

31. Art/Museums - Ruskin, Turner And The Pre-Raphaelites
Illustrated essay on the major exhibition, held during 2000, at the Tate Gallery in London, on John Ruskin, JMW Turner and the Pre-Raphaelites.
http://www.thecityreview.com/ruskin.html
RUSKIN, TURNER AND THE PRE-RAPHAELITES Tate Britain March 9 to May 28, 2000 Portrait of the Critic as a Young Artist "John Ruskin" by Sir John Everett Millais, oil on canvas, 78.7 by 68 centimeters, private collection By Michele Leight Connoisseurs and artists are different, usually. The former take delight in the work of others and the latter take delight in their own work, generally. Most people would prefer to be known as an artist rather than merely as a connoisseur, but without connoisseurs most artists would be lost. John Ruskin, the world’s foremost art critic in the mid- and late-19th Century, was a connoisseur and an artist. Although best known for his controversial libel trial with Whistler and for his promotion of the work of Turner and the Pre-Raphaelites, Ruskin was a very influential writer on architecture whose advocacy of preservation and public exposure to the arts and "adult education" were highly important. In the current age of multi-culturalism and "political correctness," Ruskin’s "elitist" views might still seem controversial to some, but his fervor and oeuvre, both literary and artistic, is in no way diminished. While his contributions to English heritage are magnificent and very impressive, his life’s interests, goals, and achievements are of exceeding interest to everyone in love with art, architecture, and the notion of beauty. Moreover, his is a fascinating story of how even the most brilliant observers can have blind spots and how even powerful and influential men can have strange love lifes.

32. Ruskin, John
Ruskin, John Encyclopedia article; The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, 2004. Read Ruskin, John at Questia library.
http://www.questia.com/read/101268500
questia.Dictionary.domain = 'questia'; Letter A Letter B Letter C Letter D ... Letter Z addthis_url = 'http://www.questia.com/read/101268500'; addthis_title = 'Ruskin, John'; addthis_pub = 'ahanin'; This feature allows you to create and manage separate folders for your different research projects. To view markups for a different project, make that project your current project. This feature allows you to save a link to the publication you are reading or view all the publications you have put on your bookshelf. This feature allows you to save a link to the page you are reading, which you can later return to from Projects. This feature allows you to highlight words or phrases on the publication page you are reading. This feature allows you to save a note you write on the publication page you are reading. This feature allows you to create a citation to the page you are reading that you can paste into your paper. Highlight a passage to include that passage as a quotation. This feature allows you to save a reference to a publication you are reading for your bibliography or generate a bibliography you can paste into your paper.

33. Museums Sheffield | Ruskin Collection
Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust describes the gallery in the Millennium Galleries, Sheffield, which houses John Ruskin s collection of minerals, paintings, drawings, ornithological prints, medieval manuscripts, books and architectural plastercasts.
http://www.sheffieldgalleries.org.uk/coresite/html/ruskin.asp

34. Ruskin, John - Definition Of Ruskin, John By The Free Online Dictionary, Thesaur
Thesaurus Legend Synonyms Related Words Antonyms. Noun 1. John Ruskin British art critic (1819-1900) Ruskin
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Ruskin, John

35. Redirecting To New Page
The aim of the programme is to carry out research into the work of John Ruskin and his circle, to publish the results of that research, and to organize and support exhibitions, conferences and colloquia relating to Ruskin and his circle
http://www.lancs.ac.uk/users/ruskin/
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36. Ruskin, John From International Dictionary Of Adult And Continuing Education | B
Ruskin, John from International Dictionary of Adult and Continuing Education. Ruskin, John summary with 1 pages of research material.
http://www.bookrags.com/tandf/ruskin-john-1-tf/

37. John Ruskin (1819-1900)
Notes by Bob Speel on the life of the Victorian thinker John Ruskin, with particular emphasis on his influence on the Pre-Raphaelite painters.
http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/speel/otherart/ruskin.htm
John Ruskin (1819-1900)
John Ruskin John Ruskin, the greatest Victorian bar Victoria, was an artist, scientist, poet, environmentalist, philosopher, and, importantly here, the pre-eminent art critic of his time. He provided the impetus that gained respectability for the Pre-Raphaelites . Ruskin's letter to The Times in 1851, supporting the much-derided Pre-Raphaelites for their naturalism and truth to nature, marked a turning point in their perception by the public. In a second letter, he wrote that the Pre-Raphaelites might "lay the foundation of a school of art nobler than the world has seen for 300 years." When, after this, Ruskin met the Pre-Raphaelites, he encouraged them in their ideals, acting as tutor, mentor, and generous supporter to Rossetti Millais and Holman Hunt , as well as later artists in a similar spirit such as John Brett and John William Inchbold . He was a long-time friend of the children's illustrator Kate Greenaway , and also of the bird-painter H. S. Marks Ruskin taught Pre-Raphaelite style drawing at the Working Men's College in London for some years, enlisting Rossetti to teach figure and watercolour painting, and afterwards Ford Madox Brown to fill the same position. Afterwards, he left London, becoming Slade Professor of Art at Oxford (where there is an art college named after him) and then removing to the Lake District where he helped to start the Environmental Movement.

38. Ruskin, John Summary | BookRags.com
Ruskin, John. Ruskin, John summary with encyclopedia entries, research information, and more.
http://www.bookrags.com/eb/ruskin-john-eb/

39. RUSKIN, John
Biographie, Werke, Literatur im Biographisch-Bibliographischen Kirchenlexikon.
http://www.bautz.de/bbkl/r/ruskin_j.shtml
Verlag Traugott Bautz www.bautz.de/bbkl Zur Hauptseite Suche in den Texten des BBKL ...
Helfen Sie uns, das BBKL aktuell zu halten!

Band XV (1999) Spalten 1217-1248 Autor: Hugo Altmann Bibliographien: Werke: Gesamtausgg.: Lit.: Lit.: Nonfictional Prose), 207-220, 224 (Art of Lit.: Children's Lit.); XXVII, 365-375 (Social Sciences: Hist. of the Social Sciences); - BBKL I-II; V; VIII-IX; XII; XIV. Hugo Altmann Hilary Fraser, Beauty and belief. Aesthetics and religion in Victorian literature. Cambridge 1986, S. 107-182.

40. *Ruskin, John « United Architects – Essays
home table of content united architects – essays table of content all sites Ruskin, John. British, 1819–1900 John Ruskin was a prolific essayist who, like his intellectual and
http://danassays.wordpress.com/encyclopedia-of-the-essay/ruskin-john/
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*Ruskin, John
John Ruskin
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Ruskin, John
British, 1819–1900
John Ruskin was a prolific essayist who, like his intellectual and stylistic mentor Thomas Carlyle, railed against many of the advances of modern society. Many of his major works were epistolary or delivered as lectures, making generic classification problematic; nevertheless, the wide range of Ruskin’s interests may be viewed as a series of interrelated essays. As an art critic and social economist Ruskin defined the relationship between art and society and between the worker and society in novel ways, influencing figures as diverse as Proust and Gandhi. In a rapidly changing world, in which workers were becoming alienated from the works they produced and science was competing with art and literature as a source of knowledge and spiritual sustenance, Ruskin championed art as both ethical teacher and moral yardstick against which society could be measured.
The publication of volume one of Modern Painters in 1843 launched Ruskin’s career as “sage” and intellectual guide for his era. Expanding on ideas espoused in uninspired essays written while Ruskin was a student at Oxford, Modern Painters began as a defense of Turner’s landscape painting against the charge that it was untrue to nature. The five volumes of Modern Painters (1843–60) became an ambitious series of essays on the social context in which art is produced and which in turn mirrors the society that produces it. Art, therefore, appeals to the intellect as well as to the aesthetic sensibility. In accordance with his lofty aims, Ruskin employs a formal and literary prose in the first three volumes of Modern Painters. He is a master at exemplifying major points through succinct examples. In illustrating the connection between art’s power to evoke great thought, as well as its capacity to give aesthetic pleasure, Ruskin states in volume three:

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