HUMANIST Values
21a
of thwarted effort
or incipient
collapse. We have
looked
atthe building
and identifiedourselves
with
itsapparentstate.
Wehavetranscribed
ourselvesinto
terms
ofarchitecture.
But the
*
states
'
in
architecture with which
we
thus identify
ourselves need not
be actual. The
actual pressures ofa spire
are downward
;
yet no
onespeaksof a
'
sinking
'spire. Aspire,
whenwell
designed,
appears—as common
language testifies
—
tosoar. We identify
ourselves,notwith its
actual
downwardpressure,butitsapparent
upwardimpulse.
So,too,bythesameexcellent
—
^becauseunconscious
—
testimonyof
speech,arches
'
spring,'vistas
'
stretch,'
domes
'
swell,'Greektemples
are
*
calm,'andbaroque
facades
'restless.'
/The wholeofarchitecture is, in
fact,
unconsciouslyinvestedbyuswithhumanmove-
mentandhuman mood^
Here, then,isaprinciple
complementarytotheonejuststated./Wetranscribe
architectureintoterms
of
ourselves.
JThisis the humanismof architecture. The ten-
dencytoprojecttheimageofourfunctionsintocon-
creteformsisthebasis, forarchitecture,
ofcreative
I
.
..
'
11.
'
—
~™~-™~
—
design.\Thetendencytorecognise,inconcreteforms,
theimageofthosefunctionsisthetruebasis,inits
turn,ofcriticalappreciation.^
^
Thetheoryofaesthetichereimplied,
is,
needlesstosay,notnew.
Itwasfirstdeveloped
by
Lippstwentyyearsago,andsincethenhas
beenconstantlydiscussedandfrequentlymisunderstood.
InwhatfollowsIoweadebttomanysuggestivepointsinMr.