88 THE
ARCHITECTURE
OF HUMANISM
savingqualities
whichcanreconcile
itwitha'domi-
nating and insistent
art': the qualities
of reserve,
finality,andrepose.
|
While the
Renaissance was in its
vigour,
the
romanticview of Nature was
no enemyof classic
architecture.
Ofthisthe painters
giveusevidence
enough. The
paintingof ClaudeLorrain
poeticised
Naturein a luminousVirgilian
mood, to whichhis
vision of classic architecture, so
far from being
foreign,wasthealmostnecessarycomplement. With-
out the austerequietofhis
temples, Nature,inits
tranquillity,mightseemlesshumanthanhe
dreamt
;
without their
Corinthian state, less sumptuous.
Poussin,moresylvaninhisinterpretation,
isnotless
classic in his forms. The more dramatic nature-
painters—Salvator and the rest—did not
press the
wildness of their inspiration beyond its natural
confines. It
is perhaps only with Piranesi that a
'^ew
spiritbeginstoshowitsforce. /InPiranesi,the
greatest
master of the picturesque in art. Nature
holdsarchitectureinitsclasp,and,likethe
'
marble-
rootedfigtree,'shattersandtorturesit
initsembrace.'^
Theconsequenceswhichwereinduecourseto
follow
from
the
unionareforeshadowedintheearliestphase
ofthismaster'sart. He conceivedavisionof
infer-
naldungeons,withoutmeaning,exitorhope;archi-
tecture,surrenderedtothepicturesque,wasdoomed
in
twogenerationstofalltothechaoswithoutachieving