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

(Ben Green) #1
HUMANIST

VALUES

225

Bramahte



^aims at authority,
dignity, and

peaceJ

It


doesthisby conveying
atevery
pointa senseof

equipoise. The forms are so

adjusted amid
the

surrounding contours as
to cancel all
suggested


movement: tJieyare placed,as
itwere,each atthe


centreofgravitywithinthe
space,andour
conscious-


ness is thus sustained at apoint of
rest. Butthe


baroquearchitectsrejectedthis


arrangement. They

employedspaceadjustmentswhich,takeninisolation,


would be inharmonious. In their
church fagades,

as Wolfiflin has pointed out, theyquitedeliberately


congested their forms. The lower

windows are

jammedbetween the pilastersoneither side
;

they

areplacedabovethecentreofgravity
; theygivethe

sense of lateral pressure

and
upward movement.

This, taken alone, would leave us
perpetually in

suspense.
Butin theupperpart of the design our

expectancy is satisfied; the upward movement is

allowed
todisperse

itselfin greaterareas
of lateral

space, and makes its escape in a final flourish of

decorative sculpture; or

it is laid to rest
by

an

exaggeratedemphasisuponthedownwardmovement

ofthecrowningpedimentand

onthehorizontalsofthe

cornice. Here,therefore,amovement,which inthe

midstofaBramantesque

designwouldbedestructive

andrepugnant, is turned toaccountand madethe

basisofamore

dramatic,butnotlesssatisfyingtreat-

ment,
the

motiveofwhichisnotpeace,butenergy.

P
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