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

(Ben Green) #1
THE ROMANTIC

FALLACY

67

itwhereveritmightbe
found. As in the
cult of

the past, so,
too, in this cult of
the 'natural,' it

was
literature,the trueinstrument
ofthe
Romantic

Movement,thatledthe
way.

|

"Itis
evidentthatarchitecture
andthecriticismof

architecturehave reflected
thispoeticchange.

The

formal
garden, necessarily, was the first
object of

attack. IntheRenaissancetaste
thegardenwasan

extensionofthemain
design. Itwasamiddleterm

between architecture and Nature.

The transition

from house to landscape
was logically effected by

combining
at this point formality of design
with

naturalness of material.

The garden was thus an

integral, anarchitectural, elementin the art.
But

whenNature, through poetry,acquired

itsprestige,

the formal

garden
stood condemned. Unpleasing

in itself, becaiise

'

unnatural,' it wasin addition
a

barbarousviolence,aruthlessvandalism
uponpools

and
trees^ Itwas

an
offence againstNatureallthe

morediscordantbecauseitwasexpressedinNature^'s

terms. Thus,beforetheimpactofNaturalism
shook

traditional designinactualarchitecture,
the formal

gardenwasalreadygone. Eighteenthcenturyphilo-

sophers, seated under porticoes still impeccably

Greek,
were


enabled comfortablyto
venerate Nature

—or, if not Nature, at least her symbol



^as they

watchedtheirancestralbutunromanticgardensgive


place to a


'

prospect'

oflittle holes and
hills. At
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