82 THEARCHITECTURE
OF HUMANISM
as possessing a value
in the visual arts.
And one
cause ofoffence in Renaissance
architectureis pre-
ciselyitslackof
thispicturesquenessof
whichNature
issofull. Forthesakeofthis
merittotheeye,
how
much decay has been endured and
awkwardness
forgiven! In a theory of architecture,
what place
then,ifany,canbefound forthistrue
meritofthe
picturesque? What
was,
in fact, its place in the
architecture
oftheRenaissance?
j
To
thesequestions
an answer should be given before the romantic
criticism of architecture can be fairly and finally
dismissed,
i/If the wild and the accidental are absent
from
Renaissance
architecture,it iscertainlynotbecause
themenofthatperiod
were
blindtotheirattraction.\
Thetermpittorescowas,afterall,theirowninvention.
Itstood,onitsownshowing,for
the
qualitieswhich
suggesta
picture,andareofuseinthemaking
ofit.
Picturesque
elements—elements that are curious,
fantastic, accidental, had been sought after inthe
painting of Italian
backgrounds almost from
the
first. Their
presence gave a special popularity to
suchsubjectsastheAdorationoftheKings,depicted,
asbyconvention
theyhabituallywere,with
strange
exoticretinues
andeverycircumstanceofthefancied
East. Thus the word itself,
when, soon after
the
middleoftheseventeenth
century,itcameinto
use,
marked not so
muchanewvirtuein
painting
asa