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

(Ben Green) #1
22

THE

ARCHITECTUREOF

HUMANISM

that
oftheChurch,

andeventhiswas

notfeltassuch!

tillafterthearthadacquireditsown

naturalmomen-

tuminthefree,secularlifeof

Florence.

Itmustberecognised,however,that

theexistence,

in the sixteenth centurypapacy,of asoil perfectly^

suited
to receivetherootsofthe

restoredartwas
in

itself

a piece of rare good fortune. The

return
to

theantique,howevertentative and, sotosay, pro-

vincial,atthe first, wasin

essenceandbyimplica-

tion
a returntothe

'

grandstyle

'

—toanimperial,


and, in the literal sense, a
'catholic

'
architecture.

Forthe assertion and
developmentofsuch astyle

the papacy
was the ideal instrument: the papacy

with its imperial
court, its boast of ancient con-

tinuities, its
claim touniversaldominion,
itspagan

inheritance,and its pomp. All
sijich qualities were

favourable to the
vigour of a partly retrospective'

enthusiasm,
fascinatedbythebroken
ruinsinwhich

ancient Rome had embodied

splendours so similar

tothese.

And thiswasnot

all. For,inproportioi|

as the

classic movement

was noempty

revival,

in

proportion asit
representeda rising
tothe surface

ofthepreferences,
stillvital
andpotent,ofanancient;

and
indigenous culture,
which claimed
a future as


confidently as it
possessed the
past, just in that


measureitrequired
afieldin
whichtorealise
itsown

creative
resources, its


own untried

originality. It

could not
have found
itself in
any rigid discipline

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