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

(Ben Green) #1
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.
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