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

(Ben Green) #1
HUMANIST

VALUES 217

seated


and
universaland
continuous,as,forexample,

the


processofbreathing.
And/thishabitofprojecting

theimageofourownfunctions

upontheoutsideworld*^

of reading the outside


world in our own terms, is

certainly ancient,common,and profound.
It/is, in


fa:ct,the natural

wayof perceivingand interpreting

what wesee\ Itis the wayof thechild in whom

perpetual pretence and

'

endless
imitation

'

are a

spontaneousmethod
ofenvisagingtheworld. It is

thewayof the savage, whobelieves in 'animism,'

andconceiveseveryobjecttobeinvestedwithpowers

likehisown.^ Itisthewayoftheprimitivepeoples,

who inthe elaborate business
ofthe dance give a

bodilyrenderingtotheirbeliefsanddesireslongbefore

thought has accurately expressed them. It is the

wayofa,superblygiftedraceliketheGreeks,whose

mythologyisonevastmonumenttojustthisinstinct.

It

is the wayof the poetic

mind
at

all times and

places,whichhumanisestheexternalworld,not

in
a

'
Thusithasoflatebeen

morefullyrealisedthatchildrenand

primitiveracesare often

capable ofveryremarkable achievement

in
expressiveart,whilethe

scientificperceptionofthe

world
for

the

most
partunderminesthe

gift. Ifthechildorthesavage

isincapable

ofappreciatinggreat

architecture,itis notbecausethey

lackthe

sesthetic
sense(fora

childthegeneralforms,for

instance,ofapiece

offurnitureareoftenchargedwithsignificance


andimpressiveness),

butbecausethescopeandcontinuityoftheir


attentionistoolimited

toorganisetheseperceptionsintoany


aestheticwhole,stillmoreto

givethem concreterealisation. None


theless, itisonthis

half-

consciousorsubconscious,yetnotquite


undiscoverableworldinwhich,

morethanourselves,theylive, that


architecture,likeallthearts,

dependsforitseffect.

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