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

(Ben Green) #1
154

THE

ARCHITECTUREOF

HUMANISM

stoodintheirway,


preferred atleast,

andforemost,

to


indicatedesign. And,since,

intherichmaterial,

part only


of the charm resides in the imaginative

valueofitspreciousness


—^itsrarity,the distanceit


hascome,thelaboursandsacrificesit


hascost—

^anda

far


greaterpartinthe materialbeauty, forthesake

of which


those sacrifices are made, those
labours

undertaken, the baroque architects, seeing this,


soughttosecurethelastbybrilliantimitation,even


when,of


necessity,theyforewentthefirst. Nor
was

theimitation,likemanythataremodern,sordidand

commercial



a. meticulousforgery. It wasa brave

impressionism,fitto


satisfythe

eye. The

mind
was

deluded,ifatall,thenmerrily,andforamoment.


An impartial spectator whofound so

much con-

trived



^and so ingenuously—for his delightwould,


on taking thought, no more complain
ofall these


substitutions—


these
false perspectives and painted

shadows



^thangrowindignantbecause,intheGreek

cornice,
he isshown false

eggs
anddarts. Forthis

is nomere flippancy. Imitation runsthroughart


;

andPlatowasmorelogical


whorejectedart,onthis

account,altogether,thanarethosecriticswhodraw

aline atthe baroque. Whenwe

haveimitated in

oneway longenough, ourconventionisacceptedas

such. The egganddart moulding

isaconvention.

The

baroquehabitis
aconventionalso. Itisobjected

thatitisaconventionwhichactually
deceivesand

dis-
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