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Art-Unions or volun

exhibitions (where they exist) are usually periodical. A fee is demanded for admission, and only modern works are exhibited. From such exhibitions the poor are necessarily excluded. Even those who can afford to pay seldom enjoy the advantage of contemplating perfect specimens of beauty or of imbibing the pure principles of Art.

"It appears, that among our workmen, a great desire exists for such public exhibitions. Wherever it be possible, they should be accessible after working-hours, and admission should be gratuitous and general. A small obstruction is frequently a virtual prohibition. The vexatious fees exacted at Westminster Abbey, St. Paul's, and other public buildings, are discreditable to the nation.

"Among exhibitions connected with the encouragetary Asso- ment of Art, the attention of your Committee has been the Encou- called to the institutions established in Germany, under ragement of the name of Kunstvereine, (Art-Unions,) and now be

ciations for

the Arts.

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3. Protection and

coming prevalent in this country. These associations for the purchase of pictures to be distributed by lot, form one of the many instances in the present age of the advantages of combination. The smallness of the contribution required brings together a large mass of subscribers, many of whom, without such a system of association, would never have become patrons of the Arts.

The last division in the arrangement we have adopted rewards of treats of the LEGAL PROTECTION of artistic property, and the rewards of successful labour.

Artists.

Fiscal

duties.

"The Arts," say the Committee, "both generally and in so far as they are connected with manufactures, have shared the common suffering under the baneful influence of fiscal duties. The Excise laws, in their restrictions on the manufacture and the form of bricks,

have obstructed the exercise of art in that material. The window duty acts injuriously on the proportion and beauty of our buildings. The paper duty has been extensively detrimental in its effects on periodical publications on the arts, on the use of drawing-paper, on the employment of cards in the Jacquard loom, and in its oppressive application to the whole trade of paper-staining. The glass duties have fettered the Arts in their endeavours to restore painting on glass, and have restricted the adoption of engrav

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ings as ornaments in dwelling-houses. The lower cost of glass in France has encouraged a much more extended use of engravings in private residences.

of Artists

"The difficult and delicate question of COPYRIGHT Copyright. has already engaged the attention of the House; and numerous complaints of want of protection for their designs have been laid before the Committee by artists Complaints and manufacturers. Mr. Smith, an eminent manu- and Manufacturer of Sheffield, states, that the piracy of his facturers. designs will compel him altogether to abandon designing as connected with his trade. A similar or corroborative statement is made by architectural sculptors, modellers, manufacturing artists, and artists generally. Martin has been seriously injured by the piracy of his works; and Mr. Papworth attributes to the want of protection for inventions, the absence of original matter in tablets, vases, and foliages; of which, in England, we possess few specimens, and perhaps none worthy of observation.

Mr.

character of present sta

tutable pro38 Geo.III.

"It is well known that a short period of copyright Insufficient is extended to printed cotton patterns. A doubtful protection has also been afforded to the Arts by the statutes 38 Geo. III., c. 71; and 54 Geo. III. c. 56. The copyright given by these statutes extends to metallic figures of men and animals, to figures combined 66.

tection.

71.

54 Geo. III.

Remedy under these Statutes

both uncer

tain and

expensive.

Necessity

and access

nal.

French

of the two, and to what is somewhat loosely styled, ' matter of invention in sculpture.' Metallic foliages, arabesques, vases, candelabra, and similar works, are unprotected by them. Whatever be the legal latitude of these Acts, the expensiveness of a remedy through the courts of law or equity is a virtual bar to invention, and almost affords impunity to piracy in art.

"The most obvious principle of any measure enacted of a cheap for the protection of invention, appears to be the ible tribu- constitution of a CHEAP AND ACCESSIBLE TRIBUNAL. The French have long possessed a prompt and econoConseil des mical Court of Judgment for cases of this kind; Prud'hom- composed of master-manufacturers and of workmen, constituted. empowered to decide on priority of invention or design, as well as on many other subjects connected with manufactures.

mes,

how

Registration.

Various du

ration of Copyright.

Academies.

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"In addition to cheapness, the greatest promptitude of decision is another obvious element in the constitution of such a tribunal. For this and for other reasons a REGISTRATION appears to be indispen

SYSTEM OF

sable.

"Another element in the consideration of this subject is the varying DURATION OF PROTECTION to different inventions in manufactures.

"The Committee consider the elaboration of any comprehensive measure for the protection of design in manufactures to be well worthy of the serious attention of the Government.

"The Committee have naturally been led to enquire into the constitution and management of those institutions, which have prevailed in Europe for the last two hundred years under the name of ACADEMIES. Academies appear to have been originally designed to prevent or to retard the supposed decline of elevated Art. Political economists have denied the advantages

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of such institutions, and artists themselves, of later
years, have more than doubted them.
Many concur in the opinion, that academies ought
properly to be schools only, wherein such instruction
may be given as is not attainable in the studio of a
private master. When academies go beyond this, their
proper province, they degenerate into mannerism and
fetter genius; and when they assume too exclusive and
oligarchial a character, they damp the moral inde-
pendence of the artist and narrow the proper basis of
all intellectual excellence-mental freedom.

"Our own ROYAL ACADEMY,

as it now stands, is not a public national institution, like the French academy, since it lives by exhibition, and takes money at the door. Yet it possesses many of the privileges of a public body, without bearing the direct burthen of public responsibility.

The Royal
Academy.

"The artists, examined by the Committee, frequently concur in admitting the eminence of the present and of former members of the Royal Academy; but they com- Charges plain of the exclusive nature of its rules, of the limitation against it. of its numbers, and of the principle of self-election

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which pervades it. Of the privileges Its defence. objected to, some have been denied to be exclusive; others have been claimed by the Academy as essential to the nature of such an institution.

"The exclusion of ENGRAVERS from the highest rank in the Academy, has often called forth the animadversions of foreign artists. In the French Academy, engravers are admitted into the highest class of members; so they are in Milan, Venice, Florence, and Rome. In England, their rise is limited to the class of associates. This mark of depreciation drove such eminent men as Woollett, Strange, and Sharpe, far from the Academy. Such a distinction seems the more extraordinary, because British engraving has attained a high degree of excel

State of Engraving, and claims

of Engrav

ers.

Occupation

tional Gal

lery.

lence: foreigners send pupils hither for education; and the works of British engravers are diffused and admired throughout the continent.

"The plan annexed to the evidence of Mr. Wilkins of the Na- will explain that fully one half of the new NATIONAL GALLERY has been given up to the Royal Academy. Against this apportionment of the national building, a large number of artists have remonstrated; and two bodies of painters have petitioned the House of Commons on the subject. They declare their inability to compete with an institution so favoured at the public expense. It is true that the Academy can be compelled to quit the National Gallery whenever the public convenience requires their removal; but the great body of nonacademic artists contend, that a society which possesses not only this but a great many other public advantages, ought to be responsible to those who contribute to their exhibitions, and whose interests they are supposed to represent. A strong feeling pervades the artists. generally on this subject. They are uneasy under the ambiguous, half-public-half-private character of the Academy; and they suggest that it should either stand in the simple position of a private institution, or, if it really represents the artists of Great Britain, that it should be responsible to, and eligible by them.

Public competitions in Art.

"The composition of our COMMISSIONS for deciding on plans for public works has also been, with great apparent justice, complained of. In France, the tribunal which decides between competing artists is less limited and more professional. The opinion of the public is also there called in aid of the tribunal."

Such is the substance of the Report on the more important of the topics treated of. It certainly does not present a picture at all gratifying to national

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