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

(Ben Green) #1
174

THE

ARCHITECTURE OF

HUMANISM

tecturalforms

givesplacetorestlessness: dignityis

puffed intodisplay.

Thesenseofgrandeurbecomes

thegreedforsize. ItistheperiodoftheBaroque:

the

periodofdecadence. Theproblemofstyleonce

solved

—Bramante's


school had solved it—^nothing

canremainbutanabuse

ofpower, andarchitecture

feelsthe strainof toomuch

liberty.
Asthearchi-

tectureof Bramantestoodlinked totheartofLeon-

ardo, so thisof the baroque shares in the
general

corruptionofthetime : a

time
when

*

godswithout

honour, men without humanity, nymphs without

innocence, satyrs without rusticity
gathered into

idiot groups on the polluted canvas and scenic

affectations encumbered the streets.' Scenic affec-

tations, broken cornices,
tripleand

quadruple
pedi-

ments, curved fagades, theatrical plans, gesticulat-

ingsculpture: everything isirrational, exaggerated,

abused. Thesearethedreamsof
a

collapsingmind

;

thisisthe violenceofasenile art: a sortofarchi-

tectural deUrium foretelling the approach of
death.

Butsenility, if
sometimes it is violent, is at other

momentsapathetic
;

andtheapproachofdissolution,

ifitisheraldedbydelirium,is
foreshadowedalsoin

coma.
Thusthe third periodofthe Renaissanceis

marked sometimes by an opposite mood

toits

ex-

travagance. The exquisite
proportions of Raphael


arehardened,
inthisdecline,intoacademicformulas

;

architecture,whenitisnot
ostentatious,becomesstiff.
Free download pdf