
Ruskin, detail of an oil painting by Sir John Everett Millais, 1853–54; in a private elipsis
(born Feb. 8, 1819, London, Eng.—died Jan. 20, 1900, Coniston, Lancashire) English art critic. Born into a wealthy family, Ruskin was largely educated at home. He was a gifted painter, but the best of his talent went into his writing. His multivolume
Modern Painters (1843–60), planned as a defense of painter
J.M.W. Turner, expanded to become a general survey of art. In Turner he saw “truth to nature” in landscape painting, and he went on to find the same truthfulness in
Gothic architecture. His other writings include
The Seven Lamps of Architecture (1849) and
The Stones of Venice (1851–53). He was also a defender of the
Pre-Raphaelites. In 1869 he was elected Oxford's first Slade professor of fine art; he resigned in 1879 after
James McNeill Whistler won a libel suit against him. In later years he used his inherited wealth to promote idealistic social causes, but his powerful rhetoric, which still contained striking insights, became marred by bigotry and occasional incoherence. Ruskin remains the preeminent art critic of 19th-century Britain.
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Encyclopedia Britannica, 2008. Encyclopedia Britannica Online.