The architecture of humanism; a study in the history of taste

(Ben Green) #1
86 THE

ARCHITECTURE OF

HUMANISM

itself. Thetwo

wereblendedinthe

Baroque. Itis

nottheleastamong

theparadoxesofthat

profoundly

greatstylethatitpossesses,in

completeaccord,these

contrary elements. To give the

picturesque
its

grandestscope,

andyettosubdueittoarchitectural

law—this was the baroque


experiment and it
is

achieved.'The baroqueisnot

afraid tostartle
and

arrest. Like Nature, it is fantastic, unexpected,

varied and grotesque. It is allthis in the highest

degree. But, unlike Nature,

it remains subject

rigidly to the laws of scale and composition
.|

It

enlarged their scope, but would not modify their

stringency. It is not, therefore, in any true sense

accidental, irregular, or wild. It makes—^for the


parallelisexact


a.morevarioususeofdiscordsand

suspensions,anditstandsin
a

closelysimilarrelation

tothesimplerandmorestaticstylewhichpreceded

'^it,asthelatermusictotheearlier.
vA.t


enlargedthe

classicformulabydevelopingwithinittheprinciple

of movement. But the movement is logical. For

baroquearchitectureis
always^logical: itis

logical

as an aesthetic construction, even where it most

neglects the
logic of material construction. It

in-

sistedoncoherent
purpose,anditsgreatestextrava-

'
Iamspeakingthroughoutofbaroquearchitectureatitsbest.

Naturally,in
somecasesthereischarlatanism,oranignorantattempt,

to

imitate
theformswithoutperceivingthetheoryoftheart. But

theessenceofthe
modern

'

picturesque'tasteinarchitectureisits

absenceoftheory,
itsinsistenceonthecasual.
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