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

(Ben Green) #1
RENAISSANCE

ARCHITECTURE 21

Alphonso in
the South, in the North the Sforzas


these,andotherslikethem,
werecertainlyinfluential

patrons.
Butitwouldbedifficultto
maintainthat

they left a deep imprint
of themselves, or their

government, upon
the character of the art. Gis-

mondo

MalatestajtyrantofRimini,
theroughsoldier

whocausedaGothicchurch

tobeconvertedintothe

equivalentofapagantemplededicatedtohismistress,

and flanked it with the
entombed bones of Greek

philosophers

andgrammarians, maywellimpressus

with his individuality
;

but, as
between him

and

Alberti,hisarchitect,himself
ofnoblefamilyandone

ofthe
greatesthumanistsofhistime, therecan be

little doubt where the paramount imagination
lay.

yheinfluence
ofpatronagepnartiseasilymis-stated.

Artmaybebroughttotheserviceofthestateandits

rulers
;

but the most
that rulers can do

towards

determining
theessenceofanartistoimposeuponit

adistinctively courtlycharacter, andthecoherency

which comes ofastrongly centralised

organisation.

We should, for instance, misconstrue the

inmost

natureofAugustanart,oroftheartofLouisxiv.,if

we were
toignore thisfactor.

Butnothingsimilar

is true of the Renaissance city-state.

Here the

conditions
were

merelysuch astogivefreeplay

to

an
architecture


which, intrinsically,in its

character

asanart, remainedindependentof


them. Thesole

centralisinginfluence, inanyimaginative


sense,was
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