Art in Theory. Группа авторов

Art in Theory - Группа авторов


Скачать книгу
a nation so singular that virtue was taught among them in the same manner as the sciences are with us … Such were the Scythians, of whom such wonderful eulogies have come down to us. Such were the Germans, whose simplicity, innocence, and virtue afforded a most delightful contrast to the pen of an historian, weary of describing the baseness and villainies of an enlightened, opulent, and voluptuous nation. Such had been even Rome in the days of its poverty and ignorance. And such has shown itself to be, even in our own times, that rustic nation, whose justly renowned courage not even adversity could conquer, and whose fidelity no example could corrupt.2

      The origins of the Egyptians are lost in the era of fable. History tells us nothing about the beginnings of this People, which from the first appears with the traits of wisdom and grandeur that characterise all its ideas. We see it surrounded by the Arts, which it explored in depth, acquainted as it was with their vast extent and their every subtlety and, since Egypt is the source whence the Ancients derived the principles of taste, we cannot do better than begin here the examination of monuments that have escaped the ravages of time.

      The mysteries in which the Egyptians wrapped their religion, in order to induce a greater respect for it, have covered the history of their country in an impenetrable veil, while a people that worked, it would seem, for nothing other than posterity, did not foresee that, by employing the symbolic writing known by the name of hieroglyphs, it obstructed its own intention, so true is it that the purview of mankind is blinkered and profoundly imperfect.

      Architecture seems to me the art on which they concentrated their efforts. It is not of the kind that strikes us by its agreeable harmony or reveals at first glance the nature of the thing that it is decorating; but solid, majestic building, in which one sees the germ of everything that the Greeks were subsequently able to discover in it. The Egyptians were unacquainted with the Orders, meaning that they were not yoked to proportions. They were inventors and did what seemed best to them; they seem to have tolerated nothing that was not useful. They employed columns and pilasters and decorated them with capitals, string courses, bases and fluting; they shaped and decorated pediments; but there is some indication that all these ornaments were merely arbitrary, since they were never repeated.

      * * *

      I think they saw columns not only as a sturdy and reliable means to pierce and impart a lighter appearance to the immense spaces occupied by their buildings but also found them necessary to hold up their ceilings, since the art of vaulting was completely unknown to them. The descriptions of the two labyrinths and of the ruins of Thebes, found in Herodotus and in our travellers, elevate the mind. Yet we have only inferior engravings or inadequate drawings to represent them, which are better suited to destroying than embellishing an idea. The scale of the stones that the Egyptians employed would be enough in itself to excite our admiration. What patience it must have required to carve them! What forces to set them in their places! These objects, considerable as they are, vanish, so to speak, from the mind when one recalls the idea of the pyramids or of Lake Moeris.1 Those monuments, because of the grandeur of the enterprise – always, it seems, crowned with success – are an inexhaustible source of astonishment. Thus the art of constructing vaults was unknown to the Egyptians and if any are found in their country, they must be thought to derive from their contacts with the Greeks and Romans. […]


Скачать книгу