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

(Ben Green) #1
74

THE ARCHITECTUREOF

HUMANISM

support.. They were inconvenient

rather
than

magical, and they opened, not on the

'

foam of

perilous
seas,'but, most often,

upon a landscape-

gardenlessfaerythanforlorn.


Certain images
of

architecture in their proper

context,
formal andpoetic, are


romantic.

Remove

themfrom
thatcontext,andrenderthemactual,and


itbecomesevident
that


thereis nothinginherentin

thearchitecture
itselfthatcanevokeanimaginative


response.
Again, there are actual works of archi-


tecture thatbythe lapseof time are almostfused


with Nature, and
by


the course of
history almost

humanisedwithlife.
These,too,areromantic. But


if they
arerepeated anew,it becomesevident that


the
romanticelementwasadventitious
to


thearchi-

tecturalvalue. The

formitself, whichmustinevit-

ably
be the object both of architectural art and


criticism,isfoundtobevalueless
altogether,or


valued

only


byavague analogyofthought. And this,in

effect,
isthe case withtheconsciousarchitectureof


romance. Sharplyconcrete,
divested ofthe charm


of age, it
lacksalike the material beauty and the


imaginativespell. Theformal
basisislackingwhich


alonecangiveit
power.


II

But the prejudice
against the

'

unnatural' style

of the
Renaissance was
something more than an

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