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

(Ben Green) #1
2o6 THE

ARCHITECTURE

OF

HUMANISM

parts. Ratio,


identity, and

correspondence form

partofthenecessary


webandfabric

ofourthought.

Reason

is compelled to

seekthem, WTien it

finds

themwefeel


consciousofunderstanding

andcontrol.

Orderis a desire of


the mind. Andit isfoundin

classic


architecture. What more

natural, then, than

to say that


architectural beauty


^the beauty of

classicarchitecture,atany


rate—consistsinOrder?


Whathigher

ormoreperfectbeauty,Plato

asked,can

exist,than


mathematicalbeauty? Andtheacademic

criticism, with its canon of


mathematical ratios,

enforcesthe


demand.

Theintellectual

biasofourcriticismmustbepro-

foundwhichallowsthistheory'tobeasserted. For

this agreeable


fancy—so flattering to the intellect,


andsoexalted—


dissolvesatthefirstbrushofexperi-

ence. It shouldatonce beapparentthatOrderin


design


istotally^stinctfromBeauty. Manyofthe

ugliest

patterns and most joyless buildings


^build-

ings from which no being can ever have derived

delight



possessOrderinahighdegree
;

they
exhibit

fixedandevidentratiosofdesign. Instancesofthis

amongthehideousfiats,warehousesandothercom-

mercialbuildingsofour streets
require nocitation.

Hereis Order,andnobeauty,but,onthe contrary,

ugliness.

Eighteenth-century critics,
perceiving this diffi-

culty, werefond ofsayingthat beauty
consistedin
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