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

(Ben Green) #1
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
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