You might be able to overrule slick.js by defining the values for 'img' in CSS in either head of the page or maybe in an external stylesheet - you may have to consider which rule (slick.js or CSS) is the last to be rendered.
Specifying dimensions directly on the img-element is not bad practice and will validate - however you will only able to specify the proportions using 'unitless values' fx 'width:600' - proportions for 'img' in HTML with values like percentage, pixel or any other value wont work. However the 'unitless value' still refers to image-proportions measured in pixels.
This is because the element 'img' belongs to the group of elements called 'replaced elements', which comes with a pre-defined styling - in the case of 'img' the proportions of the original image will be preserved until something else is defined in CSS with "real" values:
Using CSS2 you can make your images scale quite easily by adding a class to the element:
.img_width {
width: 100%;
height: auto;
}
With CSS3 - which lacks support from IE8 and prior - you have 2 opportunities which you can apply directly on the element:
Using background-size 'cover':
img {
background: url(image.jpg);
background-repeat: no-repeat;
background-position: center;
background-size: cover;
]
Using background-size 'contain':
img {
background: url(image.jpg);
background-repeat: no-repeat;
background-position: center;
background-size: contain;
}
I initially just didn't bother specifying the dimensions in HTML, but obviously it doesn't validate and I know it's bad practice anyway.
I always use css to specify my width and height rather than attributes on the img tag. Especially with html5 as using percentages in the attributes is invalid: w3.org/TR/html-markup/img.html (expecting width or height in css pixels). What does your code look like when it doesn't validate?