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

(Ben Green) #1
THE ROMANTIC

FALLACY

55

itsprecisecharacterbecomes
farlessimportantthan


itsgeneralso-called


'

style

'

;

justasin
ahandwriting

thepreciseformsareless
importantthanthemean-

ingstowhichtheyrefer,andexistonly
tocallup

the

latter. Romanticism conceives styles
as a

stereo-,

typed

language.
Nineteenthcenturycriticismisfull

of this prepossession: its concern is
with

styles





Christian

'

and

'
un-Christian

'

;

one

'
style

'

is

suitable to museums and banks and cemeteries

;

anothertocollegesandchurches
; andthisnotfrom

anyarchitecturalrequirementsofthecase,butfrom

a notionoftheideasupposed
tobe

suggested
by a

squarebattlement,aDoricpillar,
ora

pointedarch.'-

And such criticism is far more occupied with the

importance ofhaving,ornothaving, these features

in

general,than
withtheimportanceofhavingthem

individually beautiful, or beautifullycombined. It

sets upa

falseconception
of

styleandattachesex-

aggeratedvaluetoit. Forit looksto theconven-

tional marks ofhistoricalstylesforthesakeof their

symbolic

value,insteadofrecognisingstyleingeneral

foritsownvalue.!

Andthereensuesafurthererror. Everyperiod

of

*

Noris

thisprepossession extinct. When, recently,

themost

eminentof

Englisharchitectsprojectedabasilicafor

theHampstead

GardenSuburb,

theBishopofLondonsweptthe

admirablescheme

aside,declaring

he

'
musthaveaspirepointtoGod.'

Wetrusthis

lordship

isfindingsomesolaceatGolder'sGreen

forthesignalinjury

done

him
by

SirChristopherWren.
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