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

(Ben Green) #1
RENAISSANCE

ARCHITECTURE

17

arbiter. Every
architect confesses
allegiance tothe

antique

;

none would
dispute the inspiration of

Vitruvius. Formany

the dictatesofthe
Augustan

critic
havethevalidityof
apapaldeliveranceupona

point offaith. Yet
theirefforts to giveexpression

to this
seemingly identical enthusiasm
are

contra-

dictoryintheextreme.
Neverwerethephasesofa

single art more
diverse. For to consistency the

Renaissance,withallitstheories,was
vitallyindiffer-

ent. Itsenergyis

ateverymomentsointensethat

the
forms, not of architecture alone, but ofevery

material object of

common use, are pressed into

simultaneous
andsympatheticexpression

;

yet itis

guided on no sure or general course. Its greater

schemes
too

often
bearevidencetothislackofcon-

tinuity,
thiswantofsubordinationtoinheritedprin-

ciple. UpontheproblemofSt.Peter'swereengaged

the minds of Bramante,
Michael

Angelo, Raphael,

Peruzzi,
Sangallo, Fontana, Maderna and

Bernini.

So much originality could not, without peril, be

focussed atasinglepoint
;

andthoseofBramante's

successorswho

werefortunate

enough
to

carrytheir

schemes into execution, obscured, if they did not

ignore,
the


large
idea which

he had bequeathed to

them. The history ofSt. Peter's is typical of

the

period. Shaped
by


a desire as powerful as it is

undefined,itsinventiveimpulse


remainsunexhausted,

andstylesucceeds
to


styleintheefforttosatisfy

the

B
Free download pdf