Morality and Architecture Revisited: David Watkin NA 'f5.s'
Morality and Architecture Revisited: David Watkin NA 'f5.s'
Morality and Architecture Revisited: David Watkin NA 'f5.s'
Architecture
Revisited
DAVID WATKIN
NA
io 'f5.s'
.05
vJn
:,lbo1b
A<r
JOHN MURRAY
Albemarle Street, Landon
-
Contents
Typeset in Hill Monotype Bembo by Servis Filmsetting Ltd Epilogue: The Critical Reaction 139
Printed and bound in Great Britain by Butler & Tanner Ltd, The Position Today 143
London and Frome Index 154
VIOLLET-LE-Duc
than 'a striking proof of the utter disregard paid by architects to the
purposes of the building they are called upon to design'."
, We have argued that Pugin's writings lent support to those who
believed in 'a way of building that was not artificial, not marked by
"I" human imperfections and that represented some inescapable
reality'. Pugin hints at such an architecture when he states that 'a
pointed building is a natural building', and that 'I trust, before long,
to produce a treatise on Natural Architecture' .16 In such a treatise we
would doubtless have been told frequently that 'every building that
is treated naturally without disguise or concealment cannot fail to
look well';'? though we could be equally certain that we would
never be allowed to stray far from Pugin's belief 'that the beauty of
architectural design depended on its being the expression of what
the building required, and that for Christians that expression could
only be correctly given by the medium of pointed architecture'.
This notion of a natural architecture, so inevitable that its forms
should not be open to question, has long outlasted the belief that it
had already been achieved in Gothic. Pugins mode of argument
adumbrated the tendency which has been Widespread since his time
to deny or falsify the role of aesthetic motivation and to claim
instead guidance from considerations of 'naturalness', utility, func-
tional advantage, and social, moral, and political necessity, or simply
from correspondence with the 'spirit of the age'.
2. Viallet-le-Due
27
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VIOlLET-LE-Duc
t For a discussion of this point see E_H. Gombrich's excellent booklet Arr His/MY
alld tile S('dal &ie'la'S, Oxford, 1975, P. -<4-. '
30
VIOLLET-LE-Duc
skirrs would be in (the style of the period), but would not possess
style.'26 Similarly, modern Classical architecture is 'a sin against taste,
for taste consists essentially in making the appearance accord with
the reality'.27 Compared with modern Classical architecture even
ancient Roman begins to look truthful:
]1
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VlOLLET-Lf-Duc
JJ
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VIOLLET-lE-Duc
Elsewhere we are told that 'in the thirteenth century the art
invented by the secular school was essentially democratic' ;,5 and
that today we can recapture that spirit 'in spite of three centuries of
oppression'; thus 'in our own times, as in all fanner periods, it is
from below that the movement proceeds. . the old spirit of the
lay craftsmen of the twelfth century is being gradually awakened,
for in France the humblest workman reasons and desires to under-
stand what he is doing; and he conceives a passion for works in
whose general plan as well as in the details he can detect a logical
sequence. Our workmen are, in fact, of the same stuff as our
soldiers ... '36
It need hardly be pointed out that it is all a fantasy world of
Viollet-Ie-Duc's own creation, and that a different and more realis-
tic picture of the Gothic world has emerged from the patient
researches of scholars ranging from Emile Male in 1910 to John
Harvey in the present day.
Finally, we may observe in Viollet's writings how his belief in
democracy and in the Zeitgeist led him to atgue that phases in archi-
tectural development are produced collectively and from the
bottom upwards. The unlikely thesis that 'it is from below that the
movement proceeds' was developed in a book published near the
end of his life, L'Art tusse, SI!S origines, ses eJbnents collstittJifsJ son
apogee, son avenir (t877), where he wrote:
35
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