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

(Ben Green) #1
i84 THE ARCHITECTUREOF HUMANISM

between the conceptionandthe


technique.
In the

archaicstage, techniqueisasaruleadequateto
the


conception, andno


more: ithasnolifeofits
own

;

it is noend in itself. And the period of so-called

decadence,sofarfromshowingadeclineoftechnique


—as the organism shows a decline ofcapacity—is


often marked by a superabundance of technical


resources, whichstifletheconception. The

atrophy

is one of ideas. Our judgment, then, will have


shifteditsground: itwillhaveestimatedoneperiod


by


itstechnique,andanother

byitsconception. And,

,

beyond
this, it


often
falsifies bothby relating eadi

ofthemtotheaestheticpurposesofthe


'

climax'that

came between. In recent yearsit is
truetheinde-


pendentvalue ofarchaicarthas receivedasudden


recognition. To that extent the biological

fallacy


^at

any
rate

in painting
and sculpture-^has been

checked. But then a corresponding injustice is


usually done to the later phases. For the
critic's


determinationtotake
a


comprehensive
view,tousie

inclusive formulas, and to trace an evolutionary


sequencebeyonditsproperlimits,stillcauses
himtp

readthewholeseriesofhisfacts
asrelatedtoasingle

ideal. Such an attitude had compensation when


thetraditionofarchitecturewasalive,and
tastewas


limitedtoadueappreciation
ofcontemporarythings.;;


forthenappreciationwasso
far


perfect,andthepast

wasmerelyignored. Tastewas
specialisedatevery

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