Grand Manner Painting. Grand Manner refers to an idealized aesthetic style derived from classicism and the art of the High Renaissance.
   In the eighteenth century, British artists and connoisseurs used the term to describe paintings that incorporated visual metaphors in order to suggest noble qualities. It was Sir Joshua Reynolds who gave currency to the term through his Discourses on Art, a series of lectures presented at the Royal Academy from 1769 to 1790, in which he contended that painters should perceive their subjects through generalization and idealization, rather than by the careful copy of nature.
   Reynolds never actually uses the phrase, referring instead to the great style or grand style, in reference to history painting: How much the great style exacts from its professors to conceive and represent their subjects in a poetical manner, not confined to mere matter of fact, may be seen in the cartoons of Raffaelle. In all the pictures in which the painter has represented the apostles, he has drawn them with great nobleness; he has given them as much dignity as the human figure is capable of receiving yet we are expressly told in Scripture they had no such respectable appearance; and of St. Paul in particular, we are told by himself, that his bodily presence was mean.
   Alexander is said to have been of a low stature: a painter ought not so to represent him. Agesilaus was low, lame, and of a mean
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