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

(Ben Green) #1
i6 THE

ARCHITECTURE OF

HUMANISM

though impassioned,


was too

reactionary,

his con-

clusionstooacademicand


tooset,for

an agewhen

creative


vigourwasstill,beyond

measure,

turbulent.

Withthat


turbulencenoartthat

wasnot rapidand

pictorialinitsappeal


couldnowkeeppace.

The

time

was past when an architecture


of such calculated

restraint as Sammichele had


foreshadowed
could

capture


longattention
;

andtheartofPeruzzi,rich

though it was


with never-exhausted possibilities,

seems to have perished unexplored, because, so to


say, its tempo was too slow, its interest
too


unob-

trusive.
Vignola, stronger perhaps than these, is


before long forgotten in Bernini.
Architecture


becomes a debatable ground between
the ideals of


structureand
decoration, andfromtheirfertilecon-


flict new inventions areever forthcoming

to please

a rapidly


  • tiring taste. Fashions
    die; but the


Renaissance
itself, more irresistible than any force

which it produced, begets its own

momentum, and

passes on, with almost the
negligent fecundity of

nature, self-destructive and self-renewing.

Weareconfrontedwith

aperiodofarchitectureat

oncedaringand
pedantic,andasuccessionofmasters

theorthodoxy
ofwhoseprofessions
isoftenequalled!

onlybythelicenceof
theirpractice. In
spite

ofits

libertyofthought,
inspiteofitskeen
individualism,

the Renaissance
is yet an
age of
authority;

and

Rome, butpagan Rome

thistime,is
oncemorethe
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