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

(Ben Green) #1
THE

ROMANTIC

FALLACY

89

the
grandeur of
Piranesi's

'

Carceri.' Piranesi's

etchingswere
multipliedrapidly
andwidelycirculated;

and the
effect of their
picturesque
power on the

imagination ofthe
eighteenth
centurywasdecisive.

Thusthe

waywasmadeready

fortheworkoflitera-

ture, and the new

poetryofNaturewhen
it came

was
reinforcedbyanexisting
fashion. Paintingand

literature were

now as one. The taste

for the

picturesque, defensible enough in those
two arts,

could not be long constrained
within their limits.

A picturesque

architecturewas required


^anarchi-

tectureuntrammelledbythose

restraintswhicheven

the baroque

style had hitherto observed. The

philosophyofthe Revolution favouredthis
impulse

ofthearts.
True,itwrappeditselfatfirstinaGreek

mantleandDavid contrivedaDoric
backgroundfor

its sages and tyrannicides.
But

'

natural' rights

and
acreedofanarchycouldnotforeverallythem-

selveswith themostaustere,themost
conventional

ofstyles. The philosophy

of freedom invoked for

architecture,asforlife,themagiccharmof
Nature.

Butthematerial
ofarchitecture,nolessthanthatof

politics, was unfitted to receive its impress. For,

intheseobdurateforms,varietymustprovetedious

andlicenceloseitsfascination.

Butsuchanargumentisincomplete. Picturesque

building,


itmaybereplied,in

so
far

as
it

isinsistent,
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