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

(Ben Green) #1

34


THE

ARCHITECTUREOF

HUMANISM





to


disown its authority, and to

be guided, if it is

guidedatall, by


instinctsofwhich

theintellectcan

give no immediate account.

It is an unconscious

attempt


todrillart into the ready-made

categories

whichwehave

foundusefulinquiteotherfields,and

toexplain theunfamiliarby

the familiar. Itisthe

application toart ofthe methods ofscience, which

sometimesarelessconcernedwiththeultimatetruth

about

itsfactsthan with bringingthem within the

range of a given intellectual formula. But it is

unscientific to persist in the application when itis

clearthattheformula

doesnotfit.

f'Wehavedealtinthischapterwithapointofhis-

toricalfact. Itishistoricallytruethatthedistinctive

controlin

Renaissance architecture
lay notin con-

struction or materials or politics, but, chiefly and

typically,

inthetasteforform. 1 Itfollows
that

itis

reasonable to analyse the Italian styles primarily

intermsoftaste: toask,howfardotheyfulfilthat

third

*

condition of well-building
' which WottOH

names

'

delight.'

Butitisonethingtostatehow

Renaissancearchi-

tecturearose
;

itis
quiteanothertoestimateitsvalue,*

Foritmayberejoinedthatgoodtasteinarchitecture

consists in approving what is

truthfully built—ex-

pressive

alike of the
methods and materials ofits

construction

on
theonehand,and,
on the other,

of

the

ends
it

hastoserve
; andthatifthe
taste

ofthe
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