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

(Ben Green) #1
24

THE ARCHITECTURE

OF

HUMANISM

and which, but for that

expression,

would never,

perhaps,havebeensupposedtoexist.

Inthe

present

case, no

doubt,thispointcouldnot

bepressed very!

far. YetSt.

Peter'sandtheVatican,and

thegreat

monumentsof

restored Rome,arewitnesses

noless

tothepowerofarchitecture

tocreateanddefinethe

imaginative value of the Renaissance

papacy, than

to

the encouragement and inspiration which the

papacy

contributed to art. Moreover, the char-

acterofthepapacy

inthisperiodwasla,rgely
formed

by the character of its popes
;

and such men as

Pius
II.,

Leo X., and
Julius

ii., were fit patrons
of

Renaissance architecture,partlyforthe reason that
,

theywerecultivatedenthusiasts,a\yaketotheideals;

ofanart which, quite independentlyofthemselves,

had given evidence of its nature, and which was

already,intheeyesofallmen,an
energysovigorous

andsplendid,thatthepopescouldconceivenosecurer

meansofaddingtotheir fame than by inviting
its

support.

So, too, with the more particular
religious and

socialmovementsbywhichthephases
ofRenaissance

architecturehave

sometimesbeenexplained. When

the
Counter-Reformation

madeitsbidforpopularity,

it
erected on every hand
churches in the
baroque

manner frankly
calculated
todelightthesensesand!

kindle comnion
enthusiasms.
Never,
perhaps, has

architecturebeenmore
successfullyor
moredeliber-

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