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

(Ben Green) #1
28 THEARCHITECTURE

OF

HUMANISM

'

theSpiritof the

time

'

wehavein

thiscasedemon-

stratedameretautology.

^

Norshallwe fare much

betterinthe attemptto

find the key to Renaissance architecture

in
con-

structive science. There havebeen occasions when

thediscoveryof
a

newstructuralprinciple,ortheuse

of a new material, hasstarted

architectural
design;

uponapathwhichithasfollowed,asitwereofneces-

sity, unable to desist fromitscourse until the
full

possibilities of the innovation
had been explored.

Each step
is determined by a scientific logic
; and

beauty lingers in the art by a fortunate
habit, or

comes,insome

newform,byaccidenttolight. Such,

insomesense,
wasthecasewiththemediaeval
Gothic

;

andsoitmight bewithsome
future architectureof

steel. But
suchwasnotthecasewiththe
architec-

ture of the Italian Renaissance.

No constructive

innovation
explains the course which
iF~pursued.

The dome of Brunelleschi,

unquestionably, by its

audacity and grandeur,
the effective starting-point

of the
Renaissance, wasindeed
agreat triumphof

engineering
skill
;

but it
involved no fundamental

principlewhich
wasnotalreadydisplayedin
the

dome

ofPisaor
theBaptisteryof

Florence. On the con-

trary, although
the
constructionofthe Renaissance

wasoftenvastin
extentandcourageous
inconception,

it wasat the same
time simpler
andless scientific;


than that of
the centuries
immediately
preceding,

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