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

(Ben Green) #1
202 THE ARCHITECTURE

OF

HUMANISM

niseditselfinthehopesand


habitsof

itsimmediate

past; itdidrecogniseitself,onthe


contrary,inthat

remoter


andmorecivilisedsocietyin

whichithadits

origin. The mediaeval styles had


run their course

andoutlivedtheirusefulness. Tohaveresisted

the

logic
of


events,
to

haveclungtothevestigesoflocal

Gothic—vital and


'

rational' as in their

timethey

had been, picturesque and romanticas theyarein


their survival



^this in

truth would have been an

artificial actofstyle. Itwouldhave led,


in a few

generations,toastateofarchitectureasunalive,as

falselyacademic, aswere the

shams ofarchaeology

threehundredyearslater.

ThatRenaissancearchitecturewasbuiltuparound

an academic tradition—that it was, in a measure,


imitative


^will not, if we understand aright the

historicalandaestheticconditionsofthecase,appear

tobea fault. Theacademic traditionwill, onthe

contrary, be realised as a positive force that was

natural, necessary, and

alive. The

Renaissance

architects
deviated from the canon whenever their

instinctive taste prompted them
to

do so
;

they

returnedtothecanon
whenevertheyfeltthat their

creative
experiment had overreached its profitable

bounds. Anditshouldberealisedthat

a

convention

of form in
architecture has a valueeven when itis

neglected. It
is present in the spectator's mind,

sharpening his perception

of what is new in the
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