HUMANIST
VALUES 231
ence, and our unconscious mimetic
instinct impels
usto
identifyourselves
with apparentweight,pres-
sure, and resistance exhibited in the forms
we see\
Every
object,
bythe dispositionof thebulkwithin
its contours, carries with it suggestions of weight
easily
orawkwardly
distributed, ofpressures within
itselfand upon the ground, which havefound—or
failed to find
—
secure and
powerful adjustment.
Thisis trueofany blockofmatter, andtheartof
sculpture is built upon this fact.
But when such
blocksarestructurallycombined,complexsuggestions
of
physicalfunctionareinvolved
—
greaterinnumber,
larger and more
obvious
in scale. Architecture
1
selects
foremphasisthosesuggestionsofpressureand
|
resistancewhichmostclearly
answer
to,andcan
most
vividly awaken, our own remembrance ofphysicalI
security and strength.
In
the
unhumanised world
ofnaturalforms,thisstandardofourbodyisonall
hands contradicted. Not only are we surrounded
byobjectsoftenweakanduncompacted,but
alsoby
objectswhich,beingstrong,
areyetnotstronginour
ownway,andthusincapableofraising
inourselves
anechooftheirstrength.
Nature,likethescience
of
theengineer,requires fromobjectssuch
securityand
powerasshallinfactbe
necessarytoeach
;
butart
requiresfromthemasecurityandpower
whichshall
resemble and confirm
our own. Architecture,
by
thevalue of mass,gives tosolid forms