<h3><SPAN name="chap_20"></SPAN>CHAPTER XX.</h3>
<h5>THE MATERIAL OF ORNAMENT.</h5>
<p><span class="scs">I</span>. <span class="sc">We</span> enter now on the second division of our subject.
We have no more to do with heavy stones and hard lines; we
are going to be happy: to look round in the world and discover
(in a serious manner always, however, and under a sense
of responsibility) what we like best in it, and to enjoy the same
at our leisure: to gather it, examine it, fasten all we can of it
into imperishable forms, and put it where we may see it for
ever.</p>
<p>This is to decorate architecture.</p>
<p><span class="scs">II</span>. There are, therefore, three steps in the process: first,
to find out in a grave manner what we like best; secondly,
to put as much of this as we can (which is little enough) into
form; thirdly, to put this formed abstraction into a proper
place.</p>
<p>And we have now, therefore, to make these three inquiries
in succession: first, what we like, or what is the right material
of ornament; then how we are to present it, or its right treatment;
then, where we are to put it, or its right place. I think
I can answer that first inquiry in this Chapter, the second inquiry
in the next Chapter, and the third I shall answer in a
more diffusive manner, by taking up in succession the several
parts of architecture above distinguished, and rapidly noting
the kind of ornament fittest for each.</p>
<p><span class="scs">III</span>. I said in chapter II. <span class="scs">XIV</span>., that all noble ornamentation
was the expression of man’s delight in God’s work. This
implied that there was an <i>ig</i>noble ornamentation, which was
the expression of man’s delight in his <i>own</i>. There is such a
school, chiefly degraded classic and Renaissance, in which the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page212"></SPAN>212</span>
ornament is composed of imitations of tilings made by man. I
think, before inquiring what we like best of God’s work, we
had better get rid of all this imitation of man’s, and be quite
sure we do not like <i>that</i>.</p>
<p><span class="scs">IV</span>. We shall rapidly glance, then, at the material of decoration
hence derived. And now I cannot, as I before have
done respecting construction, <i>convince</i> the reader of one thing
being wrong, and another right. I have confessed as much
again and again; I am now only to make appeal to him, and
cross-question him, whether he really does like things or not.
If he likes the ornament on the base of the column of the Place
Vend�me, composed of Wellington boots and laced frock coats,
I cannot help it; I can only say I differ from him, and don’t
like it. And if, therefore, I speak dictatorially, and say this
is base, or degraded, or ugly, I mean, only that I believe men
of the longest experience in the matter would either think it
so, or would be prevented from thinking it so only by some
morbid condition of their minds; and I believe that the reader,
if he examine himself candidly, will usually agree in my
statements.</p>
<p><span class="scs">V</span>. The subjects of ornament found in man’s work may
properly fall into four heads: 1. Instruments of art, agriculture,
and war; armor, and dress; 2. Drapery; 3. Shipping; 4.
Architecture itself.</p>
<p>1. Instruments, armor, and dress.</p>
<p>The custom of raising trophies on pillars, and of dedicating
arms in temples, appears to have first suggested the idea of
employing them as the subjects of sculptural ornament:
thenceforward, this abuse has been chiefly characteristic of
classical architecture, whether true or Renaissance. Armor is
a noble thing in its proper service and subordination to the
body; so is an animal’s hide on its back; but a heap of cast
skins, or of shed armor, is alike unworthy of all regard or imitation.
We owe much true sublimity, and more of delightful
picturesqueness, to the introduction of armor both in painting
and sculpture: in poetry it is better still,—Homer’s undressed
Achilles is less grand than his crested and shielded Achilles,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page213"></SPAN>213</span>
though Phidias would rather have had him naked; in all medi�val
painting, arms, like all other parts of costume, are treated
with exquisite care and delight; in the designs of Leonardo,
Raffaelle, and Perugino, the armor sometimes becomes almost
too conspicuous from the rich and endless invention bestowed
upon it; while Titian and Rubens seek in its flash what the
Milanese and Perugian sought in its form, sometimes subordinating
heroism to the light of the steel, while the great
designers wearied themselves in its elaborate fancy.</p>
<p>But all this labor was given to the living, not the dead
armor; to the shell with its animal in it, not the cast shell of
the beach; and even so, it was introduced more sparingly by
the good sculptors than the good painters; for the former felt,
and with justice, that the painter had the power of conquering
the over prominence of costume by the expression and color
of the countenance, and that by the darkness of the eye, and
glow of the cheek, he could always conquer the gloom and the
flash of the mail; but they could hardly, by any boldness or
energy of the marble features, conquer the forwardness and
conspicuousness of the sharp armorial forms. Their armed
figures were therefore almost always subordinate, their principal
figures draped or naked, and their choice of subject was much
influenced by this feeling of necessity. But the Renaissance
sculptors displayed the love of a Camilla for the mere crest and
plume. Paltry and false alike in every feeling of their narrowed
minds, they attached themselves, not only to costume
without the person, but to the pettiest details of the costume
itself. They could not describe Achilles, but they could describe
his shield; a shield like those of dedicated spoil, without
a handle, never to be waved in the face of war. And then we
have helmets and lances, banners and swords, sometimes with
men to hold them, sometimes without; but always chiselled
with a tailor-like love of the chasing or the embroidery,—show
helmets of the stage, no Vulcan work on them, no heavy hammer
strokes, no Etna fire in the metal of them, nothing but
pasteboard crests and high feathers. And these, cast together
in disorderly heaps, or grinning vacantly over keystones, form
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page214"></SPAN>214</span>
one of the leading decorations of Renaissance architecture, and
that one of the best; for helmets and lances, however loosely
laid, are better than violins, and pipes, and books of music,
which were another of the Palladian and Sansovinian sources
of ornament. Supported by ancient authority, the abuse soon
became a matter of pride, and since it was easy to copy a heap
of cast clothes, but difficult to manage an arranged design of
human figures, the indolence of architects came to the aid of
their affectation, until by the moderns we find the practice carried
out to its most interesting results, and, as above noted, a
large pair of boots occupying the principal place in the bas-reliefs
on the base of the Colonne Vend�me.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VI</span>. A less offensive, because singularly grotesque, example
of the abuse at its height, occurs in the H�tel des Invalides,
where the dormer windows are suits of armor down to the
bottom of the corselet, crowned by the helmet, and with the
window in the middle of the breast.</p>
<p>Instruments of agriculture and the arts are of less frequent
occurrence, except in hieroglyphics, and other work, where
they are not employed as ornaments, but represented for the
sake of accurate knowledge, or as symbols. Wherever they
have purpose of this kind, they are of course perfectly right;
but they are then part of the building’s conversation, not conducive
to its beauty. The French have managed, with great
dexterity, the representation of the machinery for the elevation
of their Luxor obelisk, now sculptured on its base.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VII</span>. 2. Drapery. I have already spoken of the error of
introducing drapery, as such, for ornament, in the “Seven
Lamps.” I may here note a curious instance of the abuse in
the church of the Jesuiti at Venice (Renaissance). On first
entering you suppose that the church, being in a poor quarter
of the city, has been somewhat meanly decorated by heavy
green and white curtains of an ordinary upholsterer’s pattern:
on looking closer, they are discovered to be of marble, with the
green pattern inlaid. Another remarkable instance is in a piece
of not altogether unworthy architecture at Paris (Rue Rivoli),
where the columns are supposed to be decorated with images
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page215"></SPAN>215</span>
of handkerchiefs tied in a stout knot round the middle of them.
This shrewd invention bids fair to become a new order. Multitudes
of massy curtains and various upholstery, more or less
in imitation of that of the drawing-room, are carved and gilt,
in wood or stone, about the altars and other theatrical portions
of Romanist churches; but from these coarse and senseless vulgarities
we may well turn, in all haste, to note, with respect as
well as regret, one of the errors of the great school of Niccolo
Pisano,—an error so full of feeling as to be sometimes all but
redeemed, and altogether forgiven,—the sculpture, namely, of
curtains around the recumbent statues upon tombs, curtains
which angels are represented as withdrawing, to gaze upon the
faces of those who are at rest. For some time the idea was
simply and slightly expressed, and though there was always a
painfulness in finding the shafts of stone, which were felt to be
the real supporters of the canopy, represented as of yielding
drapery, yet the beauty of the angelic figures, and the tenderness
of the thought, disarmed all animadversion. But the
scholars of the Pisani, as usual, caricatured when they were
unable to invent; and the quiet curtained canopy became a
huge marble tent, with a pole in the centre of it. Thus vulgarised,
the idea itself soon disappeared, to make room for urns,
torches, and weepers, and the other modern paraphernalia of
the churchyard.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VIII</span>. 3. Shipping. I have allowed this kind of subject to
form a separate head, owing to the importance of rostra in
Roman decoration, and to the continual occurrence of naval
subjects in modern monumental bas-relief. Mr. Fergusson
says, somewhat doubtfully, that he perceives a “<i>kind</i> of
beauty” in a ship: I say, without any manner of doubt, that
a ship is one of the loveliest things man ever made, and one of
the noblest; nor do I know any lines, out of divine work, so
lovely as those of the head of a ship, or even as the sweep of
the timbers of a small boat, not a race boat, a mere floating
chisel, but a broad, strong, sea boat, able to breast a wave and
break it: and yet, with all this beauty, ships cannot be made
subjects of sculpture. No one pauses in particular delight
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page216"></SPAN>216</span>
beneath the pediments of the Admiralty; nor does scenery of
shipping ever become prominent in bas-relief without destroying
it: witness the base of the Nelson pillar. It may be, and
must be sometimes, introduced in severe subordination to the
figure subject, but just enough to indicate the scene; sketched
in the lightest lines on the background; never with any
attempt at realisation, never with any equality to the force of
the figures, unless the whole purpose of the subject be picturesque.
I shall explain this exception presently, in speaking
of imitative architecture.</p>
<p><span class="scs">IX</span>. There is one piece of a ship’s fittings, however, which
may be thought to have obtained acceptance as a constant
element of architectural ornament,—the cable: it is not, however,
the cable itself, but its abstract form, a group of twisted
lines (which a cable only exhibits in common with many natural
objects), which is indeed beautiful as an ornament. Make
the resemblance complete, give to the stone the threads and
character of the cable, and you may, perhaps, regard the sculpture
with curiosity, but never more with admiration. Consider
the effect of the base of the statue of King William IV. at
the end of London Bridge.</p>
<p><span class="scs">X</span>. 4. Architecture itself. The erroneous use of armor, or
dress, or instruments, or shipping, as decorative subject, is
almost exclusively confined to bad architecture—Roman or
Renaissance. But the false use of architecture itself, as an
ornament of architecture, is conspicuous even in the medi�val
work of the best times, and is a grievous fault in some of its
noblest examples.</p>
<p>It is, therefore, of great importance to note exactly at what
point this abuse begins, and in what it consists.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XI</span>. In all bas-relief, architecture may be introduced as an
explanation of the scene in which the figures act; but with
more or less prominence in the <i>inverse ratio of the importance
of the figures</i>.</p>
<p>The metaphysical reason of this is, that where the figures
are of great value and beauty, the mind is supposed to be engaged
wholly with them; and it is an impertinence to disturb
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page217"></SPAN>217</span>
its contemplation of them by any minor features whatever.
As the figures become of less value, and are regarded with less
intensity, accessory subjects may be introduced, such as the
thoughts may have leisure for.</p>
<p>Thus, if the figures be as large as life, and complete statues,
it is gross vulgarity to carve a temple above them, or distribute
them over sculptured rocks, or lead them up steps into pyramids:
I need hardly instance Canova’s works,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_63" href="#Footnote_63"><span class="sp">63</span></SPAN> and the Dutch
pulpit groups, with fishermen, boats, and nets, in the midst of
church naves.</p>
<p>If the figures be in bas-relief, though as large as life, the
scene may be explained by lightly traced outlines: this is
admirably done in the Ninevite marbles.</p>
<p>If the figures be in bas-relief, or even alto-relievo, but less
than life, and if their purpose is rather to enrich a space and
produce picturesque shadows, than to draw the thoughts
entirely to themselves, the scenery in which they act may become
prominent. The most exquisite examples of this treatment
are the gates of Ghiberti. What would that Madonna
of the Annunciation be, without the little shrine into which
she shrinks back? But all medi�val work is full of delightful
examples of the same kind of treatment: the gates of
hell and of paradise are important pieces, both of explanation
and effect, in all early representations of the last judgment, or
of the descent into Hades. The keys of St. Peter, and the
crushing flat of the devil under his own door, when it is beaten
in, would hardly be understood without the respective gate-ways
above. The best of all the later capitals of the Ducal
Palace of Venice depends for great part of its value on the
richness of a small campanile, which is pointed to proudly by
a small emperor in a turned-up hat, who, the legend informs
us, is “Numa Pompilio, imperador, edifichador di tempi e
chiese.”</p>
<p><span class="scs">XII</span>. Shipping may be introduced, or rich fancy of vestments,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page218"></SPAN>218</span>
crowns, and ornaments, exactly on the same conditions
as architecture; and if the reader will look back to my definition
of the picturesque in the “Seven Lamps,” he will see
why I said, above, that they might only be prominent when
the purpose of the subject was partly picturesque; that is to
say, when the mind is intended to derive part of its enjoyment
from the parasitical qualities and accidents of the thing, not
from the heart of the thing itself.</p>
<p>And thus, while we must regret the flapping sails in the
death of Nelson in Trafalgar Square, we may yet most heartily
enjoy the sculpture of a storm in one of the bas-reliefs of the
tomb of St. Pietro Martire in the church of St. Eustorgio at
Milan, where the grouping of the figures is most fancifully
complicated by the undercut cordage of the vessel.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XIII</span>. In all these instances, however, observe that the permission
to represent the human work as an ornament, is conditional
on its being necessary to the representation of a scene,
or explanation of an action. On no terms whatever could any
such subject be independently admissible.</p>
<p class="mb">Observe, therefore, the use of manufacture as ornament is—</p>
<p class="nomarg">1. With heroic figure sculpture, not admissible at all.</p>
<p class="nomarg">2. With picturesque figure sculpture, admissible in the degree of its picturesqueness.</p>
<p class="nomarg">3. Without figure sculpture, not admissible at all.</p>
<p class="mt">So also in painting: Michael Angelo, in the Sistine Chapel,
would not have willingly painted a dress of figured damask
or of watered satin; his was heroic painting, not admitting
accessories.</p>
<p>Tintoret, Titian, Veronese, Rubens, and Vandyck, would
be very sorry to part with their figured stuffs and lustrous
silks; and sorry, observe, exactly in the degree of their picturesque
feeling. Should not <i>we</i> also be sorry to have Bishop
Ambrose without his vest, in that picture of the National
Gallery?</p>
<p>But I think Vandyck would not have liked, on the other
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page219"></SPAN>219</span>
hand, the vest without the bishop. I much doubt if Titian or
Veronese would have enjoyed going into Waterloo House,
and making studies of dresses upon the counter.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XIV</span>. So, therefore, finally, neither architecture nor any
other human work is admissible as an ornament, except in
subordination to figure subject. And this law is grossly and
painfully violated by those curious examples of Gothic, both
early and late, in the north, (but late, I think, exclusively, in
Italy,) in which the minor features of the architecture were
composed of <i>small models</i> of the larger: examples which led
the way to a series of abuses materially affecting the life,
strength, and nobleness of the Northern Gothic,—abuses
which no Ninevite, nor Egyptian, nor Greek, nor Byzantine,
nor Italian of the earlier ages would have endured for an
instant, and which strike me with renewed surprise whenever
I pass beneath a portal of thirteenth century Northern Gothic,
associated as they are with manifestations of exquisite feeling
and power in other directions. The porches of Bourges,
Amiens, Notre Dame of Paris, and Notre Dame of Dijon,
may be noted as conspicuous in error: small models of feudal
towers with diminutive windows and battlements, of cathedral
spires with scaly pinnacles, mixed with temple pediments
and nondescript edifices of every kind, are crowded together
over the recess of the niche into a confused fool’s cap for the
saint below. Italian Gothic is almost entirely free from the
taint of this barbarism until the Renaissance period, when it
becomes rampant in the cathedral of Como and Certosa of
Pavia; and at Venice we find the Renaissance churches decorated
with models of fortifications like those in the Repository
at Woolwich, or inlaid with mock arcades in pseudo-perspective,
copied from gardeners’ paintings at the ends of
conservatories.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XV</span>. I conclude, then, with the reader’s leave, that all
ornament is base which takes for its subject human work, that
it is utterly base,—painful to every rightly-toned mind, without
perhaps immediate sense of the reason, but for a reason palpable
enough when we <i>do</i> think of it. For to carve our own
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page220"></SPAN>220</span>
work, and set it up for admiration, is a miserable self-complacency,
a contentment in our own wretched doings, when we
might have been looking at God’s doings. And all noble
ornament is the exact reverse of this. It is the expression of
man’s delight in God’s work.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XVI</span>. For observe, the function of ornament is to make
you happy. Now in what are you rightly happy? Not in
thinking of what you have done yourself; not in your own
pride, not your own birth; not in your own being, or your
own will, but in looking at God; watching what He does,
what He is; and obeying His law, and yielding yourself to
His will.</p>
<p>You are to be made happy by ornaments; therefore they
must be the expression of all this. Not copies of your own
handiwork; not boastings of your own grandeur; not heraldries;
not king’s arms, nor any creature’s arms, but God’s arm,
seen in His work. Not manifestation of your delight in your
own laws, or your own liberties, or your own inventions; but
in divine laws, constant, daily, common laws;—not Composite
laws, nor Doric laws, nor laws of the five orders, but of the
Ten Commandments.</p>
<p class="mb"><span class="scs">XVII</span>. Then the proper material of ornament will be whatever
God has created; and its proper treatment, that which
seems in accordance with or symbolical of His laws. And,
for material, we shall therefore have, first, the abstract lines
which are most frequent in nature; and then, from lower to
higher, the whole range of systematised inorganic and organic
forms. We shall rapidly glance in order at their kinds; and,
however absurd the elemental division of inorganic matter by
the ancients may seem to the modern chemist, it is one so grand
and simple for arrangements of external appearances, that I
shall here follow it; noticing first, after abstract lines, the
imitable forms of the four elements, of Earth, Water, Fire,
and Air, and then those of animal organisms. It may be convenient
to the reader to have the order stated in a clear succession
at first, thus:—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page221"></SPAN>221</span></p>
<p class="nomarg"> 1. Abstract lines.</p>
<p class="nomarg"> 2. Forms of Earth (Crystals).</p>
<p class="nomarg"> 3. Forms of Water (Waves).</p>
<p class="nomarg"> 4. Forms of Fire (Flames and Rays).</p>
<p class="nomarg"> 5. Forms of Air (Clouds).</p>
<p class="nomarg"> 6. (Organic forms.) Shells.</p>
<p class="nomarg"> 7. Fish.</p>
<p class="nomarg"> 8. Reptiles and insects.</p>
<p class="nomarg"> 9. Vegetation (A.) Stems and Trunks.</p>
<p class="nomarg">10. Vegetation (B.) Foliage.</p>
<p class="nomarg">11. Birds.</p>
<p class="nomarg">12. Mammalian animals and Man.</p>
<p class="mt">It may be objected that clouds are a form of moisture, not
of air. They are, however, a perfect expression of a�rial states
and currents, and may sufficiently well stand for the element
they move in. And I have put vegetation apparently somewhat
out of its place, owing to its vast importance as a means
of decoration, and its constant association with birds and men.</p>
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