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

(Ben Green) #1
THE

ROMANTIC

FALLACY

41

A.

have said
thatonly upon
fixed conditionscan

romanticism
expressitself
throughthemoreconcrete

arts. In
architecturethese
conditionsarethreefold.

First,
there should be
no fundamentalincongruity

betweentheforms
suggestedbytheromanticimpulse

and
thosecustomary
toarchitectureatthetimeof

their introduction.
For, since the architect can

never
whollyoverridecustomnor
contradicttradition,

andsincethe
transformationofstyleisconsequently

slow,it
followsthat the oldelements and
the

new

will have to exist, in
somesense, sidebyside.
/

So

long,
therefore,asthese remain incongruous,theex-

perimentwillbeendangered.
Secondly,itisessential

thattheromanticimpulseshouldcomeatamoment

whentheartofformisvigorous
enoughforthework

ofassimilation,
andcapableoftranslatingthepoetic

materialintoplasticshape. Finally,as
a

thirdcon-

dition,itisessential
thatthetechniqueandorganisa-

tion

required bythe newidealshould be, asfaras>

possible, identical with those of the existent art.

Forneithertechniquenororganisationcan
be

called

intobeingsuddenlyandatwill: yetontheseboth

the existence and the character of architectural

style

depend. The instruments, therefore, which

theromanticimpulsefindstoitshandmustbesuited

to
theformswhichit

seekstoimpose.

|

4,


."

Now

theidealof

architecturewhichthe Romantic

Movement in the nineteenth century attempted to
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