THE OPENING OF THE CRYSTAL PALACE.
253. I read the account in the
Times newspaper of the opening of the Crystal
Palace at Sydenham as I ascended the hill between Vevay
and Chatel St. Denis, and the thoughts which it called
up haunted me all day long as my road wound among
the grassy slopes of the Simmenthal. There was
a strange contrast between the image of that mighty
palace, raised so high above the hills on which it
is built as to make them seem little else than a basement
for its glittering stateliness, and those lowland
huts, half hidden beneath their coverts of forest,
and scattered like gray stones along the masses of
far-away mountain. Here man contending with the
power of Nature for his existence; there commanding
them for his recreation; here a feeble folk nested
among the rocks with the wild goat and the coney,
and retaining the same quiet thoughts from generation
to generation; there a great multitude triumphing in
the splendor of immeasurable habitation, and haughty
with hope of endless progress and irresistible power.
254. It is indeed impossible
to limit, in imagination, the beneficent results which
may follow from the undertaking thus happily begun.
For the first time in the history of the world, a national
museum is formed in which a whole nation is interested;
formed on a scale which permits the exhibition of
monuments of art in unbroken symmetry, and of the
productions of nature in unthwarted growth, formed
under the auspices of science which can hardly err,
and of wealth which can hardly be exhausted; and placed
in the close neighborhood of a metropolis overflowing
with a population weary of labor, yet thirsting for
knowledge, where contemplation may be consistent with
rest, and instruction with enjoyment. It is impossible,
I repeat, to estimate the influence of such an institution
on the minds of the working-classes. How many
hours once wasted may now be profitably dedicated to
pursuits in which interest was first awakened by some
accidental display in the Norwood palace; how many
constitutions, almost broken, may be restored by the
healthy temptation into the country air; how many intellects,
once dormant, may be roused into activity within the
crystal walls, and how these noble results may go
on multiplying and increasing and bearing fruit seventy
times seven-fold, as the nation pursues its career, are
questions as full of hope as incapable of calculation.
But with all these grounds for hope there are others
for despondency, giving rise to a group of melancholy
thoughts, of which I can neither repress the importunity
nor forbear the expression.
255. For three hundred years,
the art of architecture has been the subject of the
most curious investigation; its principles have been
discussed with all earnestness and acuteness; its models
in all countries and of all ages have been examined
with scrupulous care, and imitated with unsparing
expenditure. And of all this refinement of inquiry, this
lofty search after the ideal, this subtlety
of investigation and sumptuousness of practice, the
great result, the admirable and long-expected conclusion
is, that in the center of the 19th century, we suppose
ourselves to have invented a new style of architecture,
when we have magnified a conservatory!
256. In Mr. Laing’s speech,
at the opening of the palace, he declares that “an
entirely novel order of architecture, producing,
by means of unrivaled mechanical ingenuity, the most
marvelous and beautiful effects, sprang into existence
to provide a building." In these words, the speaker
is not merely giving utterance to his own feelings.
He is expressing the popular view of the facts, nor
that a view merely popular, but one which has been
encouraged by nearly all the professors of art of
our time.
It is to this, then, that our Doric
and Palladian pride is at last reduced! We have
vaunted the divinity of the Greek ideal we
have plumed ourselves on the purity of our Italian
taste we have cast our whole souls into
the proportions of pillars and the relations of orders and
behold the end! Our taste, thus exalted and disciplined,
is dazzled by the luster of a few rows of panes of
glass; and the first principles of architectural sublimity,
so far sought, are found all the while to have consisted
merely in sparkling and in space.
Let it not be thought that I would
depreciate (were it possible to depreciate) the mechanical
ingenuity which has been displayed in the erection
of the Crystal Palace, or that I underrate the effect
which its vastness may continue to produce on the
popular imagination. But mechanical ingenuity
is not the essence either of painting or architecture,
and largeness of dimension does not necessarily involve
nobleness of design. There is assuredly as much
ingenuity required to build a screw frigate, or a
tubular bridge, as a hall of glass; all
these are works characteristic of the age; and all,
in their several ways, deserve our highest admiration,
but not admiration of the kind that is rendered to
poetry or to art. We may cover the German Ocean
with frigates, and bridge the Bristol Channel with
iron, and roof the county of Middlesex with crystal,
and yet not possess one Milton, or Michael Angelo.
257. Well, it may be replied,
we need our bridges, and have pleasure in our palaces;
but we do not want Miltons, nor Michael Angelos.
Truly, it seems so; for, in the year
in which the first Crystal Palace was built, there
died among us a man whose name, in after-ages, will
stand with those of the great of all time. Dying,
he bequeathed to the nation the whole mass of his
most cherished works; and for these three years, while
we have been building this colossal receptacle for
casts and copies of the art of other nations, these
works of our own greatest painter have been left to
decay in a dark room near Cavendish Square, under
the custody of an aged servant.
This is quite natural. But it is also memorable.
258. There is another interesting
fact connected with the history of the Crystal Palace
as it bears on that of the art of Europe, namely, that
in the year 1851, when all that glittering roof was
built, in order to exhibit the paltry arts of our
fashionable luxury the carved bedsteads
of Vienna, and glued toys of Switzerland, and gay jewelry
of France in that very year, I say, the
greatest pictures of the Venetian masters were rotting
at Venice in the rain, for want of roof to cover them,
with holes made by cannon shot through their canvas.
There is another fact, however, more
curious than either of these, which will hereafter
be connected with the history of the palace now in
building; namely, that at the very period when Europe
is congratulated on the invention of a new style of
architecture, because fourteen acres of ground have
been covered with glass, the greatest examples in
existence of true and noble Christian architecture
are being resolutely destroyed, and destroyed by the
effects of the very interest which was beginning to
be excited by them.
259. Under the firm and wise
government of the third Napoleon, France has entered
on a new epoch of prosperity, one of the signs of which
is a zealous care for the preservation of her noble
public buildings. Under the influence of this
healthy impulse, repairs of the most extensive kind
are at this moment proceeding, on the cathedrals of
Rheims, Amiens, Rouen, Chartres, and Paris; (probably
also in many other instances unknown to me).
These repairs were, in many cases, necessary up to
a certain point; and they have been executed by architects
as skillful and learned as at present exist, executed
with noble disregard of expense, and sincere desire
on the part of their superintendents that they should
be completed in a manner honorable to the country.
260. They are, nevertheless,
more fatal to the monuments they are intended to preserve,
than fire, war, or revolution. For they are undertaken,
in the plurality of instances, under an impression,
which the efforts of all true antiquaries have as
yet been unable to remove, that it is impossible to
reproduce the mutilated sculpture of past ages in
its original beauty.
“Reproduire avec une
exactitude mathematique,” are the words
used, by one of the most intelligent writers on this
subject, of the proposed regeneration of the statue
of Ste. Modeste, on the north porch of the
Cathedral of Chartres.
Now it is not the question at present
whether thirteenth century sculpture be of value,
or not. Its value is assumed by the authorities
who have devoted sums so large to its so-called restoration,
and may therefore be assumed in my argument.
The worst state of the sculptures whose restoration
is demanded may be fairly represented by that of the
celebrated group of the Fates, among the Elgin Marbles
in the British Museum. With what favor would
the guardians of those marbles, or any other persons
interested in Greek art, receive a proposal from a
living sculptor to “reproduce with mathematical
exactitude” the group of the Fates, in a perfect
form, and to destroy the original? For with exactly
such favor, those who are interested in Gothic art
should receive proposals to reproduce the sculpture
of Chartres or Rouen.
261. In like manner, the state
of the architecture which it is proposed to restore
may, at its worst, be fairly represented to the British
public by that of the best preserved portions of Melrose
Abbey. With what encouragement would those among
us who are sincerely interested in history, or in
art, receive a proposal to pull down Melrose Abbey,
and “reproduce it mathematically”?
There can be no doubt of the answer which, in the
instances supposed, it would be proper to return.
“By all means, if you can, reproduce mathematically,
elsewhere, the group of the Fates, and the Abbey of
Melrose. But leave unharmed the original fragment,
and the existing ruin." And an answer of the same
tenor ought to be given to every proposal to restore
a Gothic sculpture or building. Carve or raise
a model of it in some other part of the city; but
touch not the actual edifice, except only so far as
may be necessary to sustain, to protect it. I
said above that repairs were in many instances necessary.
These necessary operations consist in substituting
new stones for decayed ones, where they are absolutely
essential to the stability of the fabric; in propping,
with wood or metal, the portions likely to give way;
in binding or cementing into their places the sculptures
which are ready to detach themselves; and in general
care to remove luxuriant weeds and obstructions of
the channels for the discharge of the rain. But
no modern or imitative sculpture ought ever,
under any circumstances, to be mingled with the ancient
work.
262. Unfortunately, repairs thus
conscientiously executed are always unsightly, and
meet with little approbation from the general public;
so that a strong temptation is necessarily felt by
the superintendents of public works to execute the
required repairs in a manner which, though indeed
fatal to the monument, may be, in appearance, seemly.
But a far more cruel temptation is held out to the
architect. He who should propose to a municipal
body to build in the form of a new church, to be erected
in some other part of their city, models of such portions
of their cathedral as were falling into decay, would
be looked upon as merely asking for employment, and
his offer would be rejected with disdain. But
let an architect declare that the existing fabric stands
in need of repairs, and offer to restore it to its
original beauty, and he is instantly regarded as a
lover of his country, and has a chance of obtaining
a commission which will furnish him with a large and
ready income, and enormous patronage, for twenty or
thirty years to come.
263. I have great respect for
human nature. But I would rather leave it to
others than myself to pronounce how far such a temptation
is always likely to be resisted, and how far, when
repairs are once permitted to be undertaken, a fabric
is likely to be spared from mere interest in its beauty,
when its destruction, under the name of restoration,
has become permanently remunerative to a large body
of workmen.
Let us assume, however, that the architect
is always conscientious always willing,
the moment he has done what is strictly necessary
for the safety and decorous aspect of the building,
to abandon his income, and declare his farther services
unnecessary. Let us presume, also, that every
one of the two or three hundred workmen who must be
employed under him is equally conscientious, and, during
the course of years of labor, will never destroy in
carelessness what it may be inconvenient to save,
or in cunning what it is difficult to imitate.
Will all this probity of purpose preserve the hand
from error, and the heart from weariness? Will
it give dexterity to the awkward sagacity
to the dull and at once invest two or three
hundred imperfectly educated men with the feeling,
intention, and information of the freemasons of the
thirteenth century? Grant that it can do all this,
and that the new building is both equal to the old
in beauty, and precisely correspondent to it in detail.
Is it, therefore, altogether worth the old building?
Is the stone carved to-day in their masons’ yards
altogether the same in value to the hearts of the
French people as that which the eyes of St. Louis
saw lifted to its place? Would a loving daughter,
in mere desire for gaudy dress, ask a jeweler for
a bright fac-simile of the worn cross which her mother
bequeathed to her on her deathbed? would
a thoughtful nation, in mere fondness for splendor
of streets, ask its architects to provide for it fac-similes
of the temples which for centuries had given joy to
its saints, comfort to its mourners, and strength to
its chivalry?
264. But it may be replied, that
all this is already admitted by the antiquaries of
France and England; and that it is impossible that
works so important should now be undertaken with due
consideration and faithful superintendence.
I answer, that the men who justly
feel these truths are rarely those who have much influence
in public affairs. It is the poor abbe, whose
little garden is sheltered by the mighty buttresses
from the north wind, who knows the worth of the cathedral.
It is the bustling mayor and the prosperous architect
who determine its fate.
I answer farther, by the statement
of a simple fact. I have given many years, in
many cities, to the study of Gothic architecture; and
of all that I know, or knew, the entrance to the north
transept of Rouen Cathedral was, on the whole, the
most beautiful beautiful, not only as an
elaborate and faultless work of the finest time of
Gothic art, but yet more beautiful in the partial,
though not dangerous, decay which had touched its
pinnacles with pensive coloring, and softened its severer
lines with unexpected change and delicate fracture,
like sweet breaks in a distant music. The upper
part of it has been already restored to the white
accuracies of novelty; the lower pinnacles, which flanked
its approach, far more exquisite in their partial
ruin than the loveliest remains of our English abbeys,
have been entirely destroyed, and rebuilt in rough
blocks, now in process of sculpture. This restoration,
so far as it has gone, has been executed by peculiarly
skillful workmen; it is an unusually favorable example
of restoration, especially in the care which has been
taken to preserve intact the exquisite, and hitherto
almost uninjured sculptures which fill the quatrefoils
of the tracery above the arch. But I happened
myself to have made, five years ago, detailed drawings
of the buttress decorations on the right and left of
this tracery, which are part of the work that has been
completely restored. And I found the restorations
as inaccurate as they were unnecessary.
265. If this is the case in a
most favorable instance, in that of a well-known monument,
highly esteemed by every antiquary in France, what,
during the progress of the now almost universal repair,
is likely to become of architecture which is unwatched
and despised?
Despised! and more than despised even
hated! It is a sad truth, that there is something
in the solemn aspect of ancient architecture which,
in rebuking frivolity and chastening gayety, has become
at this time literally repulsive to a large
majority of the population of Europe. Examine
the direction which is taken by all the influences
of fortune and of fancy, wherever they concern themselves
with art, and it will be found that the real, earnest
effort of the upper classes of European society is
to make every place in the world as much like the Champs
Elysees of Paris as possible. Wherever the influence
of that educated society is felt, the old buildings
are relentlessly destroyed; vast hotels, like barracks,
and rows of high, square-windowed dwelling-houses,
thrust themselves forward to conceal the hated antiquities
of the great cities of France and Italy. Gay promenades,
with fountains and statues, prolong themselves along
the quays once dedicated to commerce; ball-rooms and
theaters rise upon the dust of desecrated chapels,
and thrust into darkness the humility of domestic
life. And when the formal street, in all its pride
of perfumery and confectionery, has successfully consumed
its way through wrecks of historical monuments, and
consummated its symmetry in the ruin of all that once
prompted a reflection, or pleaded for regard, the whitened
city is praised for its splendor, and the exulting
inhabitants for their patriotism patriotism
which consists in insulting their fathers with forgetfulness,
and surrounding their children with temptation.
266. I am far from intending
my words to involve any disrespectful allusion to
the very noble improvements in the city of Paris itself,
lately carried out under the encouragement of the Emperor.
Paris, in its own peculiar character of bright magnificence,
had nothing to fear, and everything to gain, from
the gorgeous prolongation of the Rue Rivoli.
But I speak of the general influence of the rich travelers
and proprietors of Europe on the cities which they
pretend to admire, or endeavor to improve. I
speak of the changes wrought during my own lifetime
on the cities of Venice, Florence, Geneva, Lucerne,
and chief of all on Rouen, a city altogether inestimable
for its retention of mediaeval character in the infinitely
varied streets in which one half of the existing and
inhabited houses date from the 15th or early 16th
century, and the only town left in France in which
the effect of old French domestic architecture can
yet be seen in its collective groups. But when
I was there, this last spring, I heard that these noble
old Norman houses are all, as speedily as may be,
to be stripped of the dark slates which protected
their timbers, and deliberately whitewashed over all
their sculptures and ornaments, in order to bring the
interior of the town into some conformity with the
“handsome fronts” of the hotels and offices
on the quay.
Hotels and offices, and “handsome
fronts” in general they can be built
in America or Australia built at any moment,
and in any height of splendor. But who shall
give us back, when once destroyed, the habitations
of the French chivalry and bourgeoisie in the days
of the Field of the Cloth of Gold?
267. It is strange that no one
seems to think of this! What do men travel for,
in this Europe of ours? Is it only to gamble with
French dies to drink coffee out of French
porcelain to dance to the beat of German
drums, and sleep in the soft air of Italy? Are
the ball-room, the billiard-room, and the Boulevard,
the only attractions that win us into wandering, or
tempt us to repose? And when the time is come,
as come it will, and that shortly, when the parsimony or
lassitude which, for the most part, are
the only protectors of the remnants of elder time,
shall be scattered by the advance of civilization when
all the monuments, preserved only because it was too
costly to destroy them, shall have been crushed by
the energies of the new world, will the proud nations
of the twentieth century, looking round on the plains
of Europe, disencumbered of their memorial marbles, will
those nations indeed stand up with no other feeling
than one of triumph, freed from the paralysis of precedent
and the entanglement of memory, to thank us, the fathers
of progress, that no saddening shadows can any more
trouble the enjoyments of the future, no
moments of reflection retard its activities; and that
the new-born population of a world without a record
and without a ruin may, in the fullness of ephemeral
felicity, dispose itself to eat, and to drink, and
to die?
268. Is this verily the end at
which we aim, and will the mission of the age have
been then only accomplished, when the last castle has
fallen from our rocks, the last cloisters faded from
our valleys, the last streets, in which the dead have
dwelt, been effaced from our cities, and regenerated
society is left in luxurious possession of towns composed
only of bright saloons, overlooking gay parterres?
If this indeed be our end, yet why must it be so laboriously
accomplished? Are there no new countries on the
earth, as yet uncrowned by thorns of cathedral spires,
untenanted by the consciousness of a past? Must
this little Europe this corner of our globe,
gilded with the blood of old battles, and gray with
the temples of old pieties this narrow piece
of the world’s pavement, worn down by so many
pilgrims’ feet, be utterly swept and garnished
for the masque of the Future? Is America not
wide enough for the elasticities of our humanity?
Asia not rich enough for its pride? or among the quiet
meadowlands and solitary hills of the old land, is
there not yet room enough for the spreadings of power,
or the indulgences of magnificence, without founding
all glory upon ruin, and prefacing all progress with
obliteration?
269. We must answer these questions
speedily, or we answer them in vain. The peculiar
character of the evil which is being wrought by this
age is its utter irreparableness. Its newly formed
schools of art, its extending galleries, and well-ordered
museums will assuredly bear some fruit in time, and
give once more to the popular mind the power to discern
what is great, and the disposition to protect what
is precious. But it will be too late. We
shall wander through our palaces of crystal, gazing
sadly on copies of pictures torn by cannon-shot, and
on casts of sculpture dashed to pieces long ago.
We shall gradually learn to distinguish originality
and sincerity from the decrepitudes of imitation
and palsies of repetition; but it will be only in hopelessness
to recognize the truth, that architecture and painting
can be “restored” when the dead can be
raised, and not till then.
270. Something might yet be done,
if it were but possible thoroughly to awaken and alarm
the men whose studies of archaeology have enabled them
to form an accurate judgment of the importance of the
crisis. But it is one of the strange characters
of the human mind, necessary indeed to its peace,
but infinitely destructive of its power, that we never
thoroughly feel the evils which are not actually set
before our eyes. If, suddenly, in the midst of
the enjoyments of the palate and lightnesses of heart
of a London dinner-party, the walls of the chamber
were parted, and through their gap, the nearest human
beings who were famishing, and in misery, were borne
into the midst of the company feasting and
fancy-free if, pale with sickness, horrible
in destitution, broken by despair, body by body, they
were laid upon the soft carpet, one beside the chair
of every guest, would only the crumbs of the dainties
be cast to them would only a passing glance,
a passing thought be vouchsafed to them? Yet the
actual facts, the real relations of each Dives and
Lazarus, are not altered by the intervention of the
house wall between the table and the sick-bed by
the few feet of ground (how few!) which are indeed
all that separate the merriment from the misery.
271. It is the same in the matters
of which I have hitherto been speaking. If every
one of us, who knows what food for the human heart
there is in the great works of elder time, could indeed
see with his own eyes their progressive ruin; if every
earnest antiquarian, happy in his well-ordered library,
and in the sense of having been useful in preserving
an old stone or two out of his parish church, and an
old coin or two out of a furrow in the next plowed
field, could indeed behold, each morning as he awaked,
the mightiest works of departed nations moldering
to the ground in disregarded heaps; if he could always
have in clear phantasm before his eyes the ignorant
monk trampling on the manuscript, the village mason
striking down the monument, the court painter daubing
the despised and priceless masterpiece into freshness
of fatuity, he would not always smile so complacently
in the thoughts of the little learnings and petty
preservations of his own immediate sphere. And
if every man, who has the interest of Art and of History
at heart, would at once devote himself earnestly not
to enrich his own collection not even to
enlighten his own neighbors or investigate his own
parish-territory but to far-sighted and
fore-sighted endeavor in the great field of
Europe, there is yet time to do much. An association
might be formed, thoroughly organized so as to maintain
active watchers and agents in every town of importance,
who, in the first place, should furnish the society
with a perfect account of every monument of
interest in its neighborhood, and then with a yearly
or half-yearly report of the state of such monuments,
and of the changes proposed to be made upon them;
the society then furnishing funds, either to buy,
freehold, such buildings or other works of untransferable
art as at any time might be offered for sale, or to
assist their proprietors, whether private individuals
or public bodies, in the maintenance of such guardianship
as was really necessary for their safety; and exerting
itself, with all the influence which such an association
would rapidly command, to prevent unwise restoration
and unnecessary destruction.
272. Such a society would of
course be rewarded only by the consciousness of its
usefulness. Its funds would have to be supplied,
in pure self-denial, by its members, who would be
required, so far as they assisted it, to give up the
pleasure of purchasing prints or pictures for their
own walls, that they might save pictures which in their
lifetime they might never behold; they would have to
forego the enlargement of their own estates, that
they might buy, for a European property, ground on
which their feet might never tread. But is it
absurd to believe that men are capable of doing this?
Is the love of art altogether a selfish principle
in the heart? and are its emotions altogether incompatible
with the exertions of self-denial or enjoyments of
generosity?
273. I make this appeal at the
risk of incurring only contempt for my Utopianism.
But I should forever reproach myself if I were prevented
from making it by such a risk; and I pray those who
may be disposed in any wise to favor it to remember
that it must be answered at once or never. The
next five years determine what is to be saved what
destroyed. The restorations have actually begun
like cancers on every important piece of Gothic architecture
in Christendom; the question is only how much can
yet be saved. All projects, all pursuits, having
reference to art, are at this moment of less importance
than those which are simply protective. There
is time enough for everything else. Time enough
for teaching time enough for criticising time
enough for inventing. But time little enough
for saving. Hereafter we can create, but it is
now only that we can preserve. By the exertion
of great national powers, and under the guidance of
enlightened monarchs, we may raise magnificent temples
and gorgeous cities; we may furnish labor for the
idle, and interest for the ignorant. But the power
neither of emperors, nor queens, nor kingdoms, can
ever print again upon the sands of time the effaced
footsteps of departed generations, or gather together
from the dust the stones which had been stamped with
the spirit of our ancestors.
THE STUDY OF ARCHITECTURE IN OUR SCHOOLS.
274. I suppose there is no man
who, permitted to address, for the first time, the
Institute of British Architects, would not feel himself
abashed and restrained, doubtful of his claim to be
heard by them, even if he attempted only to describe
what had come under his personal observation, much
more if on the occasion he thought it would be expected
of him to touch upon any of the general principles
of the art of architecture before its principal English
masters.
But if any more than another should
feel thus abashed, it is certainly one who has first
to ask their pardon for the petulance of boyish expressions
of partial thought; for ungraceful advocacy of principles
which needed no support from him, and discourteous
blame of work of which he had never felt the difficulty.
275. Yet, when I ask this pardon,
gentlemen and I do it sincerely and in
shame it is not as desiring to retract anything
in the general tenor and scope of what I have hitherto
tried to say. Permit me the pain, and the apparent
impertinence, of speaking for a moment of my own past
work; for it is necessary that what I am about to
submit to you to-night should be spoken in no disadvantageous
connection with that; and yet understood as spoken,
in no discordance of purpose with that. Indeed
there is much in old work of mine which I could wish
to put out of mind. Reasonings, perhaps not in
themselves false, but founded on insufficient data
and imperfect experience eager preferences,
and dislikes, dependent on chance circumstances of
association, and limitations of sphere of labor:
but, while I would fain now, if I could, modify the
applications, and chasten the extravagance of my writings,
let me also say of them that they were the expression
of a delight in the art of architecture which was
too intense to be vitally deceived, and of an inquiry
too honest and eager to be without some useful result;
and I only wish I had now time, and strength and power
of mind, to carry on, more worthily, the main endeavor
of my early work. That main endeavor has been
throughout to set forth the life of the individual
human spirit as modifying the application of the formal
laws of architecture, no less than of all other arts;
and to show that the power and advance of this art,
even in conditions of formal nobleness, were dependent
on its just association with sculpture as a means of
expressing the beauty of natural forms: and I
the more boldly ask your permission to insist somewhat
on this main meaning of my past work, because there
are many buildings now rising in the streets of London,
as in other cities of England, which appear to be
designed in accordance with this principle, and which
are, I believe, more offensive to all who thoughtfully
concur with me in accepting the principle of Naturalism
than they are to the classical architect to whose modes
of design they are visibly antagonistic. These
buildings, in which the mere cast of a flower, or
the realization of a vulgar face, carved without pleasure
by a workman who is only endeavoring to attract attention
by novelty, and then fastened on, or appearing to
be fastened, as chance may dictate, to an arch, or
a pillar, or a wall, hold such relation to nobly naturalistic
architecture as common sign-painter’s furniture
landscapes do to painting, or commonest wax-work to
Greek sculpture; and the feelings with which true
naturalists regard such buildings of this class are,
as nearly as might be, what a painter would experience,
if, having contended earnestly against conventional
schools, and having asserted that Greek vase-painting
and Egyptian wall-painting, and Mediaeval glass-painting,
though beautiful, all, in their place and way, were
yet subordinate arts, and culminated only in perfectly
naturalistic work such as Raphael’s in fresco,
and Titian’s on canvas; if, I say,
a painter, fixed in such faith in an entire, intellectual
and manly truth, and maintaining that an Egyptian
profile of a head, however decoratively applicable,
was only noble for such human truth as it contained,
and was imperfect and ignoble beside a work of Titian’s,
were shown, by his antagonist, the colored daguerreotype
of a human body in its nakedness, and told that it
was art such as that which he really advocated, and
to such art that his principles, if carried out, would
finally lead.
276. And because this question
lies at the very root of the organization of the system
of instruction for our youth, I venture boldly to express
the surprise and regret with which I see our schools
still agitated by assertions of the opposition of
Naturalism to Invention, and to the higher conditions
of art. Even in this very room I believe there
has lately been question whether a sculptor should
look at a real living creature of which he had to
carve the image. I would answer in one sense, no;
that is to say, he ought to carve no living creature
while he still needs to look at it. If we do
not know what a human body is like, we certainly had
better look, and look often, at it, before we carve
it; but if we already know the human likeness so well
that we can carve it by light of memory, we shall
not need to ask whether we ought now to look at it
or not; and what is true of man is true of all other
creatures and organisms of bird, and beast,
and leaf. No assertion is more at variance with
the laws of classical as well as of subsequent art
than the common one that species should not be distinguished
in great design. We might as well say that we
ought to carve a man so as not to know him from an
ape, as that we should carve a lily so as not to know
it from a thistle. It is difficult for me to conceive
how this can be asserted in the presence of any remains
either of great Greek or Italian art. A Greek
looked at a cockle-shell or a cuttlefish as carefully
as he looked at an Olympic conqueror. The eagle
of Elis, the lion of Velia, the horse of Syracuse,
the bull of Thurii, the dolphin of Tarentum, the crab
of Agrigentum, and the crawfish of Catana, are studied
as closely, every one of them, as the Juno of Argos,
or Apollo of Clazomenae. Idealism, so far from
being contrary to special truth, is the very abstraction
of speciality from everything else. It is the
earnest statement of the characters which make man
man, and cockle cockle, and flesh flesh, and fish
fish. Feeble thinkers, indeed, always suppose
that distinction of kind involves meanness of style;
but the meanness is in the treatment, not in the distinction.
There is a noble way of carving a man, and a mean
one; and there is a noble way of carving a beetle,
and a mean one; and a great sculptor carves his scarabaeus
grandly, as he carves his king, while a mean sculptor
makes vermin of both. And it is a sorrowful truth,
yet a sublime one, that this greatness of treatment
cannot be taught by talking about it. No, nor
even by enforced imitative practice of it. Men
treat their subjects nobly only when they themselves
become noble; not till then. And that elevation
of their own nature is assuredly not to be effected
by a course of drawing from models, however well chosen,
or of listening to lectures, however well intended.
Art, national or individual, is the
result of a long course of previous life and training;
a necessary result, if that life has been loyal, and
an impossible one, if it has been base. Let a
nation be healthful, happy, pure in its enjoyments,
brave in its acts, and broad in its affections, and
its art will spring round and within it as freely as
the foam from a fountain; but let the spring of its
life be impure, and its course polluted, and you will
not get the bright spray by treatises on the mathematical
structure of bubbles.
277. And I am to-night the more
restrained in addressing you, because, gentlemen I
tell you honestly I am weary of all writing
and speaking about art, and most of my own. No
good is to be reached that way. The last fifty
years have, in every civilized country of Europe, produced
more brilliant thought, and more subtle reasoning about
art than the five thousand before them, and what has
it all come to? Do not let it be thought that
I am insensible to the high merits of much of our modern
work. It cannot be for a moment supposed that
in speaking of the inefficient expression of the doctrines
which writers on art have tried to enforce, I was
thinking of such Gothic as has been designed and built
by Mr. Scott, Mr. Butterfield, Mr. Street, Mr. Waterhouse,
Mr. Godwin, or my dead friend, Mr. Woodward.
Their work has been original and independent.
So far as it is good, it has been founded on principles
learned not from books, but by study of the monuments
of the great schools, developed by national grandeur,
not by philosophical speculation. But I am entirely
assured that those who have done best among us are
the least satisfied with what they have done, and will
admit a sorrowful concurrence in my belief that the
spirit, or rather, I should say, the dispirit, of
the age, is heavily against them; that all the ingenious
writing or thinking which is so rife amongst us has
failed to educate a public capable of taking true
pleasure in any kind of art, and that the best designers
never satisfy their own requirements of themselves,
unless by vainly addressing another temper of mind,
and providing for another manner of life, than ours.
All lovely architecture was designed for cities in
cloudless air; for cities in which piazzas and gardens
opened in bright populousness and peace; cities built
that men might live happily in them, and take delight
daily in each other’s presence and powers.
But our cities, built in black air which, by its accumulated
foulness, first renders all ornament invisible in distance,
and then chokes its interstices with soot; cities which
are mere crowded masses of store, and warehouse, and
counter, and are therefore to the rest of the world
what the larder and cellar are to a private house;
cities in which the object of men is not life, but
labor; and in which all chief magnitude of edifice
is to inclose machinery; cities in which the streets
are not the avenues for the passing and procession
of a happy people, but the drains for the discharge
of a tormented mob, in which the only object in reaching
any spot is to be transferred to another; in which
existence becomes mere transition, and every creature
is only one atom in a drift of human dust, and current
of interchanging particles, circulating here by tunnels
underground, and there by tubes in the air; for a
city, or cities, such as this no architecture is possible nay,
no desire of it is possible to their inhabitants.
278. One of the most singular
proofs of the vanity of all hope that conditions of
art may be combined with the occupations of such a
city, has been given lately in the design of the new
iron bridge over the Thames at Blackfriars. Distinct
attempt has been there made to obtain architectural
effect on a grand scale. Nor was there anything
in the nature of the work to prevent such an effort
being successful. It is not edifices, being of
iron, or of glass, or thrown into new forms, demanded
by new purposes, which need hinder its being beautiful.
But it is the absence of all desire of beauty, of
all joy in fancy, and of all freedom in thought.
If a Greek, or Egyptian, or Gothic architect had been
required to design such a bridge, he would have looked
instantly at the main conditions of its structure,
and dwelt on them with the delight of imagination.
He would have seen that the main thing to be done was
to hold a horizontal group of iron rods steadily and
straight over stone piers. Then he would have
said to himself (or felt without saying), “It
is this holding, this grasp, this
securing tenor of a thing which might be shaken, so
that it cannot be shaken, on which I have to insist.”
And he would have put some life into those iron tenons.
As a Greek put human life into his pillars and produced
the caryatid; and an Egyptian lotus life into his
pillars and produced the lily capital: so here,
either of them would have put some gigantic or some
angelic life into those colossal sockets. He
would perhaps have put vast winged statues of bronze,
folding their wings, and grasping the iron rails with
their hands; or monstrous eagles, or serpents holding
with claw or coil, or strong four-footed animals couchant,
holding with the paw, or in fierce action, holding
with teeth. Thousands of grotesque or of lovely
thoughts would have risen before him, and the bronze
forms, animal or human, would have signified, either
in symbol or in legend, whatever might be gracefully
told respecting the purposes of the work and the districts
to which it conducted. Whereas, now, the entire
invention of the designer seems to have exhausted itself
in exaggerating to an enormous size a weak form of
iron nut, and in conveying the information upon it,
in large letters, that it belongs to the London, Chatham,
and Dover Railway Company. I believe then, gentlemen,
that if there were any life in the national mind in
such respects, it would be shown in these its most
energetic and costly works. But that there is
no such life, nothing but a galvanic restlessness
and covetousness, with which it is for the present
vain to strive; and in the midst of which, tormented
at once by its activities and its apathies, having
their work continually thrust aside and dishonored,
always seen to disadvantage, and overtopped by huge
masses, discordant and destructive, even the best
architects must be unable to do justice to their own
powers.
279. But, gentlemen, while thus
the mechanisms of the age prevent even the wisest
and best of its artists from producing entirely good
work, may we not reflect with consternation what a
marvelous ability the luxury of the age, and the very
advantages of education, confer on the unwise and
ignoble for the production of attractively and infectiously
bad work? I do not think that this adverse
influence, necessarily affecting all conditions of
so-called civilization, has been ever enough considered.
It is impossible to calculate the power of the false
workman in an advanced period of national life, nor
the temptation to all workmen, to become false.
280. First, there is the irresistible
appeal to vanity. There is hardly any temptation
of the kind (there cannot be) while the arts are in
progress. The best men must then always be ashamed
of themselves; they never can be satisfied with their
work absolutely, but only as it is progressive.
Take, for instance, any archaic head intended to be
beautiful; say, the Attic Athena, or the early Arethusa
of Syracuse. In that, and in all archaic work
of promise, there is much that is inefficient, much
that to us appears ridiculous but nothing
sensual, nothing vain, nothing spurious or imitative.
It is a child’s work, a childish nation’s
work, but not a fool’s work. You find in
children the same tolerance of ugliness, the same
eager and innocent delight in their own work for the
moment, however feeble; but next day it is thrown
aside, and something better is done. Now, in this
careless play, a child or a childish nation differs
inherently from a foolish educated person, or a nation
advanced in pseudo-civilization. The educated
person has seen all kinds of beautiful things, of
which he would fain do the like not to
add to their number but for his own vanity,
that he also may be called an artist. Here is
at once a singular and fatal difference. The
childish nation sees nothing in its own past work to
satisfy itself. It is pleased at having done this,
but wants something better; it is struggling forward
always to reach this better, this ideal conception.
It wants more beauty to look at, it wants more subject
to feel. It calls out to all its artists stretching
its hands to them as a little child does “Oh,
if you would but tell me another story,” “Oh,
if I might but have a doll with bluer eyes.”
That’s the right temper to work in, and to get
work done for you in. But the vain, aged, highly-educated
nation is satiated with beautiful things it
has myriads more than it can look at; it has fallen
into a habit of inattention; it passes weary and jaded
through galleries which contain the best fruit of
a thousand years of human travail; it gapes and shrugs
over them, and pushes its way past them to the door.
281. But there is one feeling
that is always distinct; however jaded and languid
we may be in all other pleasures, we are never languid
in vanity, and we would still paint and carve for
fame. What other motive have the nations of Europe
to-day? If they wanted art for art’s sake
they would take care of what they have already got.
But at this instant the two noblest pictures in Venice
are lying rolled up in outhouses, and the noblest
portrait of Titian in existence is hung forty feet
from the ground. We have absolutely no motive
but vanity and the love of money no others,
as nations, than these, whatever we may have as individuals.
And as the thirst of vanity thus increases, so the
temptation to it. There was no fame of artists
in these archaic days. Every year, every hour,
saw someone rise to surpass what had been done before.
And there was always better work to be done, but never
any credit to be got by it. The artist lived
in an atmosphere of perpetual, wholesome, inevitable
eclipse. Do as well as you choose to-day, make
the whole Borgo dance with delight, they would
dance to a better man’s pipe to-morrow. Credette
Cimabue nella pittura, tener lo campo, et ora ha Giotto
il grido. This was the fate, the necessary fate,
even of the strongest. They could only hope to
be remembered as links in an endless chain. For
the weaker men it was no use even to put their name
on their works. They did not. If they could
not work for joy and for love, and take their part
simply in the choir of human toil, they might throw
up their tools. But now it is far otherwise now,
the best having been done and for a couple
of hundred years, the best of us being confessed to
have come short of it, everybody thinks that he may
be the great man once again, and this is certain,
that whatever in art is done for display, is invariably
wrong.
282. But, secondly, consider
the attractive power of false art, completed, as compared
with imperfect art advancing to completion. Archaic
work, so far as faultful, is repulsive, but advanced
work is, in all its faults, attractive. The moment
that art has reached the point at which it becomes
sensitively and delicately imitative, it appeals to
a new audience. From that instant it addresses
the sensualist and the idler. Its deceptions,
its successes, its subtleties, become interesting
to every condition of folly, of frivolity, and of vice.
And this new audience brings to bear upon the art
in which its foolish and wicked interest has been
unhappily awakened, the full power of its riches:
the largest bribes of gold as well as of praise are
offered to the artist who will betray his art, until
at last, from the sculpture of Phidias and fresco
of Luini, it sinks into the cabinet ivory and the picture
kept under lock and key. Between these highest
and lowest types, there is a vast mass of merely imitative
and delicately sensual sculpture; veiled
nymphs chained slaves soft goddesses
seen by roselight through suspended curtains drawing
room portraits and domesticities, and such like, in
which the interest is either merely personal and selfish,
or dramatic and sensational; in either case, destructive
of the power of the public to sympathize with the aims
of great architects.
283. Gentlemen, I
am no Puritan, and have never praised or advocated
puritanical art. The two pictures which I would
last part with out of our National Gallery, if there
were question of parting with any, would be Titian’s
Bacchus and Correggio’s Venus. But the noble
naturalism of these was the fruit of ages of previous
courage, continence, and religion it was
the fullness of passion in the life of a Britomart.
But the mid-age and old age of nations is not like
the mid-age or old age of noble women. National
decrepitude must be criminal. National death can
only be by disease, and yet it is almost impossible,
out of the history of the art of nations, to elicit
the true conditions relating to its decline in any
demonstrable manner. The history of Italian art
is that of a struggle between superstition and naturalism
on one side, between continence and sensuality on
another. So far as naturalism prevailed over
superstition, there is always progress; so far as sensuality
over chastity, death. And the two contests are
simultaneous. It is impossible to distinguish
one victory from the other. Observe, however,
I say victory over superstition, not over religion.
Let me carefully define the difference. Superstition,
in all times and among all nations, is the fear of
a spirit whose passions are those of a man, whose acts
are the acts of a man; who is present in some places,
not in others; who makes some places holy and not
others; who is kind to one person, unkind to another;
who is pleased or angry according to the degree of
attention you pay to him, or praise you refuse to
him; who is hostile generally to human pleasure, but
may be bribed by sacrifice of a part of that pleasure
into permitting the rest. This, whatever form
of faith it colors, is the essence of superstition.
And religion is the belief in a Spirit whose mercies
are over all His works who is kind even
to the unthankful and the evil; who is everywhere
present, and therefore is in no place to be sought,
and in no place to be evaded; to whom all creatures,
times, and things are everlastingly holy, and who claims not
tithes of wealth, nor sevenths of days but
all the wealth that we have, and all the days that
we live, and all the beings that we are, but who claims
that totality because He delights only in the delight
of His creatures; and because, therefore, the one
duty that they owe to Him, and the only service they
can render Him, is to be happy. A Spirit, therefore,
whose eternal benevolence cannot be angered, cannot
be appeased; whose laws are everlasting and inexorable,
so that heaven and earth must indeed pass away if
one jot of them failed: laws which attach to
every wrong and error a measured, inevitable penalty;
to every rightness and prudence, an assured reward;
penalty, of which the remittance cannot be purchased;
and reward, of which the promise cannot be broken.
284. And thus, in the history
of art, we ought continually to endeavor to distinguish
(while, except in broadest lights, it is impossible
to distinguish) the work of religion from that of
superstition, and the work of reason from that of
infidelity. Religion devotes the artist, hand
and mind, to the service of the gods; superstition
makes him the slave of ecclesiastical pride, or forbids
his work altogether, in terror or disdain. Religion
perfects the form of the divine statue, superstition
distorts it into ghastly grotesque. Religion contemplates
the gods as the lords of healing and life, surrounds
them with glory of affectionate service, and festivity
of pure human beauty. Superstition contemplates
its idols as lords of death, appeases them with blood,
and vows itself to them in torture and solitude.
Religion proselytes by love, superstition
by war; religion teaches by example, superstition by
persecution. Religion gave granite shrine to the
Egyptian, golden temple to the Jew, sculptured corridor
to the Greek, pillared aisle and frescoed wall to
the Christian. Superstition made idols of the
splendors by which Religion had spoken: reverenced
pictures and stones, instead of truths; letters and
laws, instead of acts, and forever, in various madness
of fantastic desolation, kneels in the temple while
it crucifies the Christ.
285. On the other hand, to reason
resisting superstition, we owe the entire compass
of modern energies and sciences; the healthy laws of
life, and the possibilities of future progress.
But to infidelity resisting religion (or which is
often enough the case, taking the mask of it), we
owe sensuality, cruelty, and war, insolence and avarice,
modern political economy, life by conservation of forces,
and salvation by every man’s looking after his
own interest; and, generally, whatsoever of guilt,
and folly, and death, there is abroad among us.
And of the two, a thousand-fold rather let us retain
some color of superstition, so that we may keep also
some strength of religion, than comfort ourselves
with color of reason for the desolation of godlessness.
I would say to every youth who entered our schools Be
a Mahometan, a Diana-worshiper, a Fire-worshiper,
Root-worshiper, if you will; but at least be so much
a man as to know what worship means. I had rather,
a million-fold rather, see you one of those “quibus
haec nascuntur in hortis numina,” than
one of those “quibus haec non nascuntur
in cordibus lumina”; and who are, by everlasting
orphanage, divided from the Father of Spirits, who
is also the Father of lights, from whom cometh every
good and perfect gift.
286. “So much of man,”
I say, feeling profoundly that all right exercise
of any human gift, so descended from the Giver of good,
depends on the primary formation of the character
of true manliness in the youth that is
to say, of a majestic, grave, and deliberate strength.
How strange the words sound; how little does it seem
possible to conceive of majesty, and gravity, and
deliberation in the daily track of modern life.
Yet, gentlemen, we need not hope that our work will
be majestic if there is no majesty in ourselves.
The word “manly” has come to mean practically,
among us, a schoolboy’s character, not a man’s.
We are, at our best, thoughtlessly impetuous, fond
of adventure and excitement; curious in knowledge
for its novelty, not for its system and results; faithful
and affectionate to those among whom we are by chance
cast, but gently and calmly insolent to strangers:
we are stupidly conscientious, and instinctively brave,
and always ready to cast away the lives we take no
pains to make valuable, in causes of which we have
never ascertained the justice. This is our highest
type notable peculiarly among nations for
its gentleness, together with its courage; but in lower
conditions it is especially liable to degradation
by its love of jest and of vulgar sensation.
It is against this fatal tendency to vile play that
we have chiefly to contend. It is the spirit
of Milton’s Comus; bestial itself, but having
power to arrest and paralyze all who come within its
influence, even pure creatures sitting helpless, mocked
by it on their marble thrones. It is incompatible,
not only with all greatness of character, but with
all true gladness of heart, and it develops itself
in nations in proportion to their degradation, connected
with a peculiar gloom and a singular tendency to play
with death, which is a morbid reaction from the morbid
excess.
287. A book has lately been published
on the Mythology of the Rhine, with illustrations
by Gustave Dore. The Rhine god is represented
in the vignette title-page with a pipe in one hand
and a pot of beer in the other. You cannot have
a more complete type of the tendency which is chiefly
to be dreaded in this age than in this conception,
as opposed to any possibility of representation of
a river-god, however playful, in the mind of a Greek
painter. The example is the more notable because
Gustave Dore’s is not a common mind, and, if
born in any other epoch, he would probably have done
valuable (though never first rate) work; but by glancing
(it will be impossible for you to do more than glance)
at his illustrations of Balzac’s “Contes
Drolatiques,” you will see further how
this “drolatique,” or semi-comic mask
is, in the truth of it, the mask of a skull, and how
the tendency to burlesque jest is both in France and
England only an effervescence from the cloaca maxima
of the putrid instincts which fasten themselves on
national sin, and are in the midst of the luxury of
European capitals, what Dante meant when he wrote “quel
mi sveglio col puzzo,” of
the body of the Wealth-Siren; the mocking levity and
mocking gloom being equally signs of the death of the
soul; just as, contrariwise, a passionate seriousness
and passionate joyfulness are signs of its full life
in works such as those of Angelico, Luini, Ghiberti,
or La Robbia.
It is to recover this stern seriousness,
this pure and thrilling joy, together with perpetual
sense of spiritual presence, that all true education
of youth must now be directed. This seriousness,
this passion, this universal human religion, are the
first principles, the true roots of all art, as they
are of all doing, of all being. Get this vis
viva first and all great work will follow.
Lose it, and your schools of art will stand among
other living schools as the frozen corpses stand by
the winding stair of the St. Michael’s Convent
of Mont Cenis, holding their hands stretched out under
their shrouds, as if beseeching the passer by to look
upon the wasting of their death.
288. And all the higher branches
of technical teaching are vain without this; nay are
in some sort vain altogether, for they are superseded
by this. You may teach imitation, because the
meanest man can imitate; but you can neither teach
idealism nor composition, because only a great man
can choose, conceive, or compose; and he does all these
necessarily, and because of his nature. His greatness
is in his choice of things, in his analysis of them,
and his combining powers involve the totality of his
knowledge in life. His methods of observation
and abstraction are essential habits of his thought,
conditions of his being. If he looks at a human
form he recognizes the signs of nobility in it, and
loves them hates whatever is diseased,
frightful, sinful, or designant of decay.
All ugliness, and abortion, and fading away; all signs
of vice and foulness, he turns away from, as inherently
diabolic and horrible; all signs of unconquered emotion
he regrets, as weaknesses. He looks only for
the calm purity of the human creature, in living conquests
of its passions and of fate. That is idealism;
but you cannot teach anyone else that preference.
Take a man who likes to see and paint the gambler’s
rage; the hedge-ruffian’s enjoyment; the debauched
soldier’s strife; the vicious woman’s
degradation; take a man fed on the dusty
picturesque of rags and guilt; talk to him of principles
of beauty! make him draw what you will, how you will,
he will leave the stain of himself on whatever he
touches. You had better go lecture to a snail,
and tell it to leave no slime behind it. Try
to make a mean man compose; you will find nothing
in his thoughts consecutive or proportioned nothing
consistent in his sight nothing in his fancy.
He cannot comprehend two things in relation at once how
much less twenty! How much less all! Everything
is uppermost with him in its turn, and each as large
as the rest; but Titian or Veronese compose as tranquilly
as they would speak inevitably. The
thing comes to them so they see it so rightly,
and in harmony: they will not talk to you of composition,
hardly even understanding how lower people see things
otherwise, but knowing that if they do see
otherwise, there is for them the end there, talk as
you will.
289. I had intended, in conclusion,
gentlemen, to incur such blame of presumption as might
be involved in offering some hints for present practical
methods in architectural schools, but here again I
am checked, as I have been throughout, by a sense
of the uselessness of all minor means, and helps,
without the establishment of a true and broad educational
system. My wish would be to see the profession
of the architect united, not with that of the engineer,
but of the sculptor. I think there should be
a separate school and university course for engineers,
in which the principal branches of study connected
with that of practical building should be the physical
and exact sciences, and honors should be taken in
mathematics; but I think there should be another school
and university course for the sculptor and architect,
in which literature and philosophy should be the associated
branches of study, and honors should be taken in
literis humanioribus; and I think a young architect’s
examination for his degree (for mere pass), should
be much stricter than that of youths intending to enter
other professions. The quantity of scholarship
necessary for the efficiency of a country clergyman
is not great. So that he be modest and kindly,
the main truths he has to teach may be learned better
in his heart than in books, and taught in very simple
English. The best physicians I have known spent
very little time in their libraries; and though my
lawyer sometimes chats with me over a Greek coin,
I think he regards the time so spent in the light
rather of concession to my idleness than as helpful
to his professional labors.
But there is no task undertaken by
a true architect of which the honorable fulfillment
will not require a range of knowledge and habitual
feeling only attainable by advanced scholarship.
290. Since, however, such expansion
of system is, at present, beyond hope, the best we
can do is to render the studies undertaken in our
schools thoughtful, reverent, and refined, according
to our power. Especially, it should be our aim
to prevent the minds of the students from being distracted
by models of an unworthy or mixed character. A
museum is one thing a school another; and
I am persuaded that as the efficiency of a school
of literature depends on the mastering a few good
books, so the efficiency of a school of art will depend
on the understanding a few good models. And so
strongly do I feel this that I would, for my own part,
at once consent to sacrifice my personal predilections
in art, and to vote for the exclusion of all Gothic
or Mediaeval models whatsoever, if by this sacrifice
I could obtain also the exclusion of Byzantine, Indian,
Renaissance-French, and other more or less attractive
but barbarous work; and thus concentrate the mind of
the student wholly upon the study of natural form,
and upon its treatment by the sculptors and metal
workers of Greece, Ionia, Sicily, and Magna Graecia,
between 500 and 350 B.C. But I should hope that
exclusiveness need not be carried quite so far.
I think Donatello, Mino of Fiesole, the Robbias, Ghiberti,
Verrocchio, and Michael Angelo, should be adequately
represented in our schools together with
the Greeks and that a few carefully chosen
examples of the floral sculpture of the North in the
thirteenth century should be added, with especial view
to display the treatment of naturalistic ornament
in subtle connection with constructive requirements;
and in the course of study pursued with reference
to these models, as of admitted perfection, I should
endeavor first to make the student thoroughly acquainted
with the natural forms and characters of the objects
he had to treat, and then to exercise him in the abstraction
of these forms, and the suggestion of these characters,
under due sculptural limitation. He should first
be taught to draw largely and simply; then he should
make quick and firm sketches of flowers, animals,
drapery, and figures, from nature, in the simplest
terms of line, and light and shade; always being taught
to look at the organic, actions and masses, not at
the textures or accidental effects of shade; meantime
his sentiment respecting all these things should be
cultivated by close and constant inquiry into their
mythological significance and associated traditions;
then, knowing the things and creatures thoroughly,
and regarding them through an atmosphere of enchanted
memory, he should be shown how the facts he has taken
so long to learn are summed by a great sculptor in
a few touches; how those touches are invariably arranged
in musical and decorative relations; how every detail
unnecessary for his purpose is refused; how those
necessary for his purpose are insisted upon, or even
exaggerated, or represented by singular artifice,
when literal representation is impossible; and how
all this is done under the instinct and passion of
an inner commanding spirit which it is indeed impossible
to imitate, but possible, perhaps, to share.
291. Perhaps! Pardon me
that I speak despondingly. For my own part, I
feel the force of mechanism and the fury of avaricious
commerce to be at present so irresistible, that I
have seceded from the study not only of architecture,
but nearly of all art; and have given myself, as I
would in a besieged city, to seek the best modes of
getting bread and water for its multitudes, there
remaining no question, it seems, to me, of other than
such grave business for the time. But there is,
at least, this ground for courage, if not for hope:
As the evil spirits of avarice and luxury are directly
contrary to art, so, also, art is directly contrary
to them; and according to its force, expulsive of them
and medicinal against them; so that the establishment
of such schools as I have ventured to describe whatever
their immediate success or ill success in the teaching
of art would yet be the directest method
of resistance to those conditions of evil among which
our youth are cast at the most critical period of
their lives. We may not be able to produce architecture,
but, at the least, we shall resist vice. I do
not know if it has been observed that while Dante
rightly connects architecture, as the most permanent
expression of the pride of humanity, whether just or
unjust, with the first cornice of Purgatory, he indicates
its noble function by engraving upon it, in perfect
sculpture, the stories which rebuke the errors and
purify the purposes of noblest souls. In the
fulfillment of such function, literally and practically,
here among men, is the only real use of pride of noble
architecture, and on its acceptance or surrender of
that function it depends whether, in future, the cities
of England melt into a ruin more confused and ghastly
than ever storm wasted or wolf inhabited, or purge
and exalt themselves into true habitations of men,
whose walls shall be Safety, and whose gates shall
be Praise.
NOTE. In the course of
the discussion which followed this paper the meeting
was addressed by Prof. Donaldson, who alluded
to the architectural improvements in France under
the Third Napoleon, by Mr. George Edmund Street, by
Prof. Kerr, Mr. Digby Wyatt, and others.
The President then proposed a vote of thanks to Mr.
Ruskin, who, in acknowledging the high compliment
paid him, said he would detain the meeting but a few
minutes, but he felt he ought to make some attempt
to explain what he had inefficiently stated in his
paper; and there was hardly anything said in the discussion
in which he did not concur: the supposed differences
of opinion were either because he had ill-expressed
himself, or because of things left unsaid. In
the first place he was surprised to hear dissent from
Professor Donaldson while he expressed his admiration
of some of the changes which had been developed in
modern architecture. There were two conditions
of architecture adapted for different climates; one
with narrow streets, calculated for shade; another
for broad avenues beneath bright skies; but both conditions
had their beautiful effects. He sympathized with
the admirers of Italy, and he was delighted with Genoa.
He had been delighted also by the view of the long
vistas from the Tuileries. Mr. Street had showed
that he had not sufficiently dwelt on the distinction
between near and distant carving between
carving and sculpture. He (Mr. Ruskin) could allow
of no distinction. Sculpture which was to be
viewed at a height of 500 feet above the eye might
be executed with a few touches of the chisel; opposed
to that there was the exquisite finish which was the
perfection of sculpture as displayed in the Greek
statues, after a full knowledge of the whole nature
of the object portrayed; both styles were admirable
in their true application both were “sculpture” perfect
according to their places and requirements. The
attack of Professor Kerr he regarded as in play, and
in that spirit he would reply to him that he was afraid
a practical association with bricks and mortar would
hardly produce the effects upon him which had been
suggested, for having of late in his residence experienced
the transition of large extents of ground into bricks
and mortar, it had had no effect in changing his views;
and when he said he was tired of writing upon art,
it was not that he was ashamed of what he had written,
but that he was tired of writing in vain, and of knocking
his head, thick as it might be, against a wall.
There was another point which he would answer very
gravely. It was referred to by Mr. Digby Wyatt,
and was the one point he had mainly at heart all through viz.,
that religion and high morality were at the root of
all great art in all great times. The instances
referred to by Mr. Digby Wyatt did not counteract
that proposition. Modern and ancient forms of
life might be different, nor could all men be judged
by formal canons, but a true human heart was in the
breast of every really great artist. He had the
greatest detestation of anything approaching to cant
in respect of art; but, after long investigation of
the historical evidence, as well as of the metaphysical
laws bearing on this question, he was absolutely certain
that a high moral and religious training was the only
way to get good fruits from our youth; make them good
men first, and only so, if at all, they would become
good artists. With regard to the points mooted
respecting the practical and poetical uses of architecture,
he thought they did not sufficiently define their
terms; they spoke of poetry as rhyme. He thanked
the President for his definition to-night, and he
was sure he would concur with him that poetry meant
as its derivation implied “the doing.”
What was rightly done was done forever, and that which
was only a crude work for the time was not poetry;
poetry was only that which would recreate or remake
the human soul. In that sense poetical architecture
was separated from all utilitarian work. He had
said long ago men could not decorate their shops and
counters; they could decorate only where they lived
in peace and rest where they existed to
be happy. There ornament would find use, and
there their “doing” would be permanent.
In other cases they wasted their money if they attempted
to make utilitarian work ornamental. He might
be wrong in that principle, but he had always asserted
it, and had seen no reason in recent works for any
modification of it. He thanked the meeting sincerely
for the honor they had conferred upon him by their
invitation to address them that evening, and for the
indulgence with which they had heard him. ED.