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

(Ben Green) #1
120 THE ARCHITECTURE

OF HUMANISM

donotexpress

themselvesinour terms,i They
arg^

notpowerfuloverusfor

delight.

^^.^u^S*iXid

In

proportion asthese differences became
'distin-

!

guished,theart

ofarchitecturewasbound
todetach/

itself from

mechanical science.

The

art
of archi-^

tecture

studies notstructureinitself, butthe
effect

of structure

on the human spirit. Empirically,

by

intuition and example, it learns where to discard,

wheretoconceal,

wheretoemphasise,and
whereto

imitate, the facts of construction. It creates, by

degrees, a

humanised dynamics. For
that task,

constructive science

is a usefulslave,
and perhaps

a natural ally, but certainly ablind master.
The

builders
of

theRenaissancegavearchitecture
forthe

first time a wholly

conscious
liberty of aim, and

releaseditfrommechanicalsubservience. To

recall

theartofarchitecturetothatobedienceistoreverse

a natural process, and cast away its opportunity.

The Mechanical Fallacy, in its zeal for structure,

refuses,inthearchitectureoftheRenaissance,an
art

where structure is raised
to the

ideal.
It looks in

rpoetryforthesyntaxofanakedprose.

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