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

(Ben Green) #1
172 THE

ARCHITECTURE OF HUMANISM

isnot
merelythat

theleastworthyfactsarestudied

most, and that the stress falls

rather on what
is

historiallyilluminating than on what is beautiful.

Theprejudiceis moreprofound. Forevolution

was

schooled in
the study of biology;

and
historical

criticism, when it deals in values at all, tends
un-

consciously toimposeonarchitecture thevalues
of

biology.
Renaissancearchitectureisblamed,inthe

general, because it is sdf-guided and

'

arbitrary

'

;

yetitiscondemned,in
the

particular,
bytheunjust

dooms
of

'

necessary

'

law. Let us take a typical

presentationofthestyle,andseehowthisoccurs.

Thearchitectureofthe Renaissance, we are

told,

and rightly, falls
into three fairly distinct periods.

There
is the period of the Florentine Renaissance


^the period of the

quattrocento—tentative, experi-


mental,hesitating,
withacertainnaivequalitythat

makes for
charm but hardly for accomplishment

:

theperiod ofwhich Brunelleschi
istheoutstanding

figure. Ofthismanner
ofbuildingthePazziChapel

isthe
earliestpureejcample,andthe

'

Carceri

'Church

of
GuilianodaSangallo,
atPrato, oneofthelatest.

Thisisthe
periodofimmaturity.

The second period

is that of Bramante and of

Raphael. It

is much more sure

of itself; its

aim

is clearly
defined and
supremely achieved. The

tentative Brunelleschian
charmhasvanished, anda


moreassuredand
authoritative
mannerhastakenits
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