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