HUMANIST
VALUES
227
But though
we mayoverlook
it, space affectsus
andcancontrol
ourspirit; and
alarge partofthe
pleasureweobtainfromarchitecture
—
^pleasurewhich
seemsunaccountable,
orforwhichwe
donottrouble
to account—springs in reality from
space. Even
from autilitarian point
ofview, space is logically
ourend. Toencloseaspaceisthe
objectofbuilding
;
whenwebuildwedobutdetach
aconvenientquantity
ofspace,secludeitandprotectit,andallarchitecture
springsfrom thatnecessity. But
aestheticallyspace
isevenmoresupreme. The
architectmodelsinspace
asasculptorinclay. Hedesignshisspaceasawork
of
art;
that is, he attempts
through itsmeans to
exciteacertainmoodinthosewhoenterit.
Whatishismethod? Onceagainhisappealis
to
Movement./Space, infact, is libertyofmovement^
.
Thatis itsvalue tous, and_a
g
such it
e
nters our
physicalconsciousness. Weadapt
ourselvesinstinc-
tivelytothe spacesinwhichwestand,projectour-
selvesintothem,
fillthemideallywithourmovements^
Letustakethesimplestofinstances. Whenweenter
theendofa
naveandfindourselvesinalongvista
ofcolumns, webegin, almost under
compulsion,
to
walkforward: the
characterofthe spacedemands
it. Even if westand still,
the eye is drawndown
theperspective, and
we, in imagination, follow it.
The space has suggested a
movement. Once this
suggestionhasbeenset
up,everythingwhich
accords