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  • Dec. 20, 1862
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  • OUR PUBLIC STATUES AND MEMORIALS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 20, 1862: Page 6

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    Article ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENT ABSTRACTEDLY CONSIDERED. ← Page 3 of 3
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Page 6

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Architectural Development Abstractedly Considered.

The conquest of Constantinople by the Turks , in the middle of the 15 th century , induced them to model their architecture from the church of Sta . Sophia , as the mosques of Solyman and Achmet prove , although the style began to be individualised . Thus we see the style originated by the Mahometan conquests of the Arabs , by degrees receive form and local impress—this latter

character , generally predominating in those countries ^ where the victorious Arabs left the subjected people their own forms of architecture , merely influencing them with the peculiarities of the Mahometan faith ; and we see it was not till these were combined that a tolerably homogenous character which resulted in the imaginary and poetic fancy which such a sparkling brilliance to some

gave varieties . Natural imitation , especially human representation , prohibited by the Koran , was replaced by that conventionalism of ornament , combined with those flights of Eastern fancy glowing with colour and gold , which so profusely enrich the mosque of Cordova , and blaze still more in the palace of the Alhambra Moors of Granada . It has been reasonablsuggested by some that the

y stalactite arches , the diapering , and other features which are so remarkable in the Arabian and Moorish buildings , tell of their tent-archetype ; and we may also note the semblance of the interlacing character of their ornament generally , with the like character so significant of Byzantine ornamentation .

Thus the Saracenic styles , exhibiting as they do such fertility of form , still retain analogies to antecedent types —many early varieties , as we have seen , being hardly distinguishable from Byzantine . We might multiply examples to show how sparingly other styles of architecture have introduced radical changes ; and , when they have , how slowly they have supplanted preceding types .

Plan , no less than architectural detail , has evidenced the same gradual development which we have been considering . The change from square parallelogramatic forms , to circular and complex , seems to have been slow . The varied requirements of luxurious nations chiefly effected this change . The monumental character of Egyptian , Assyrian , and other architecture ; the templar

character of Grecian and Gothic ; and the palatial character of Persian , Eoman , and other architecture , may have influenced , more or less , the forms of arrangement common in these different nations .

It is interesting to see how the Eoman basilica , for instance , grew into the medi _ eval cathedral ; how the forum , or atrium , became the Early Christian , narthex , or porch ; how the circular baptistery was supplied by the font ; how the Pagan apse developed into the Christian chancel ; till the perfected cruciform cathedral was producedThe by which the early timber

. processes roofs of the basilican churches were gradually supplanted by cylindrical and groined vaults , as well as the stages of spire and dome growth , were naturally conducive to complex ichnography ; and show , moreover , that love for elaborating existing forms which we have before noticed .

Were it necessary , we might go on enumerating examples to substantiate those principles and views of Architectural development we have advanced ; though many will readily suggest themselves to our readers in proof of what ive have said . Exceptions there are to every rule , and eases might be instanced as exceptional , at first thought , to some of our conclusions , though , on

closer investigation , they will be found to confirm them . Whether we take Assyrian , Grecian , Eoman , Byzantine , Saracenic , Eomanesque , or the Gothic developments , the principles of selection or discriminate imitation of features , is , more or less , found in all ; the principle of adaptation or an indigenousness of character , is also clear in the most distinctive styles ; while the process of elaboration has shown itself in all those varieties whose prolific and fertile elements were susceptible of growth or capable of refinement . —Budding News . '

Our Public Statues And Memorials.

OUR PUBLIC STATUES AND MEMORIALS .

The great decennial Exhibition which we have just closed , comprised , nothwithstanding all its mismanagement and shortcomings , such an aggregation of the arts and industries of the whole civilised world , as they existed in the year 1862 , as did not fail attract vast numbers of foreign visitors of all countries to our metropolis . Men of science , literature , and art naturally formed an

unusually large proportions of the vast multitude of strangers drawn together on such an exceptional occassion ; and we have consequently had to undergo a course of criticisms which , thong occasionally severe and often unjust , was yet , iu the main , truthful ; often exposing shortcomings of various kinds to which our national self-sufficiency induced us to close our eyes . If . is well

to be occasionally reminded , of our national defects , especially through the medium of foreign visitors ; who , viewing us from their own stand , which is very different from ours , naturally perceive blemishes ( occasionally rather remarkable ones ) which we had never looked for , and of which , in our insular self-sufficiency , we had not indeed believed the existence possible .

Nothing so much , struck the artistic section of our crowds of foreign visitors during the present season as the extreme poverty of our public memorials and honorary statutes . They appeared to our continental critics utterly unworthy ofthe intellectual and artistic eminence of our nation ; and so , in fact , they are ; and the foreign critics , however sarcastically unpleasant they may haye correct in

been in their mode of stating it , were perfectly their general verdict . Let us ourselves examine a few of our public statues and memorials , from the dingy kings in the dingy outof-the-way squares , to the caricature of the Great Duke at Hyde-park-corner , the monstrosities of Trafalgarsquare , and the clumsy masonry of the monument of Waterloo-place . We have , as a rule , adopted bronze statuary instead of

marble , on account of our variable climate , which proves speedily fatal to the beauty of the fair Carrara product . This necessity ought to have led to a more careful study of statuesque out line ; for is is the character and general perfection of the main external lines of a group or figure that can alono impart attractive effect to bronze statuary , which soon changes its naturally deep hue to one of

positive black . Characteristic outline is as necessary to a bronze statue , unless gilt , as to a shadow on the wall , as no details within the external line can be made expressively visible , when blackened by a London atmosphere , except in a very favourable light . Tet this necessary feature in bronze statuary has not been successfully studied in any of our principal public statues . Like

Take , for instance , that of Pitt , in Hanover-square . _ many others , its general outline is entirely without meaning ; the figure being , after a kind of artistic superstitution which prevails amongst ns , muffled up in a kind of cloak or toga . It is true that this statue of Pitt , by Sir Erancis Chantrey , on of the artist ' s best works , has dash of characteristic life about itinthe

outa , _ stretched arm , and in the fine head , which is thrown back with that defiant air which the orator often assumed in rebutting the attacks of a talented and powerful opposition . But here all effective outline ceases ; the rest of the figure bundled up in a mass of unmeaning cloak , such as assuredly Pitt never wore while addressing the House , nor we should think under any other

circumstances . There is , moreover , a little lump of this wrappering gathered together just above the left arm which , at a little distance , is altogether unintelligle . Only the other morning , while taking a round among our public monuments , guided by the official list recently called for in Parliament , we stood beforo this work , at about the proper focal distance , pondering upon what could be the meaning of the lump of something over the left arm ; and it was not till after a much closer aud very careful examination of the nature of the excrescence , that its

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-12-20, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_20121862/page/6/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 1
FROM WEST TO EAST—FROM EAST TO WEST.* Article 2
ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENT ABSTRACTEDLY CONSIDERED. Article 4
OUR PUBLIC STATUES AND MEMORIALS. Article 6
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 15
Poetry. Article 16
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Architectural Development Abstractedly Considered.

The conquest of Constantinople by the Turks , in the middle of the 15 th century , induced them to model their architecture from the church of Sta . Sophia , as the mosques of Solyman and Achmet prove , although the style began to be individualised . Thus we see the style originated by the Mahometan conquests of the Arabs , by degrees receive form and local impress—this latter

character , generally predominating in those countries ^ where the victorious Arabs left the subjected people their own forms of architecture , merely influencing them with the peculiarities of the Mahometan faith ; and we see it was not till these were combined that a tolerably homogenous character which resulted in the imaginary and poetic fancy which such a sparkling brilliance to some

gave varieties . Natural imitation , especially human representation , prohibited by the Koran , was replaced by that conventionalism of ornament , combined with those flights of Eastern fancy glowing with colour and gold , which so profusely enrich the mosque of Cordova , and blaze still more in the palace of the Alhambra Moors of Granada . It has been reasonablsuggested by some that the

y stalactite arches , the diapering , and other features which are so remarkable in the Arabian and Moorish buildings , tell of their tent-archetype ; and we may also note the semblance of the interlacing character of their ornament generally , with the like character so significant of Byzantine ornamentation .

Thus the Saracenic styles , exhibiting as they do such fertility of form , still retain analogies to antecedent types —many early varieties , as we have seen , being hardly distinguishable from Byzantine . We might multiply examples to show how sparingly other styles of architecture have introduced radical changes ; and , when they have , how slowly they have supplanted preceding types .

Plan , no less than architectural detail , has evidenced the same gradual development which we have been considering . The change from square parallelogramatic forms , to circular and complex , seems to have been slow . The varied requirements of luxurious nations chiefly effected this change . The monumental character of Egyptian , Assyrian , and other architecture ; the templar

character of Grecian and Gothic ; and the palatial character of Persian , Eoman , and other architecture , may have influenced , more or less , the forms of arrangement common in these different nations .

It is interesting to see how the Eoman basilica , for instance , grew into the medi _ eval cathedral ; how the forum , or atrium , became the Early Christian , narthex , or porch ; how the circular baptistery was supplied by the font ; how the Pagan apse developed into the Christian chancel ; till the perfected cruciform cathedral was producedThe by which the early timber

. processes roofs of the basilican churches were gradually supplanted by cylindrical and groined vaults , as well as the stages of spire and dome growth , were naturally conducive to complex ichnography ; and show , moreover , that love for elaborating existing forms which we have before noticed .

Were it necessary , we might go on enumerating examples to substantiate those principles and views of Architectural development we have advanced ; though many will readily suggest themselves to our readers in proof of what ive have said . Exceptions there are to every rule , and eases might be instanced as exceptional , at first thought , to some of our conclusions , though , on

closer investigation , they will be found to confirm them . Whether we take Assyrian , Grecian , Eoman , Byzantine , Saracenic , Eomanesque , or the Gothic developments , the principles of selection or discriminate imitation of features , is , more or less , found in all ; the principle of adaptation or an indigenousness of character , is also clear in the most distinctive styles ; while the process of elaboration has shown itself in all those varieties whose prolific and fertile elements were susceptible of growth or capable of refinement . —Budding News . '

Our Public Statues And Memorials.

OUR PUBLIC STATUES AND MEMORIALS .

The great decennial Exhibition which we have just closed , comprised , nothwithstanding all its mismanagement and shortcomings , such an aggregation of the arts and industries of the whole civilised world , as they existed in the year 1862 , as did not fail attract vast numbers of foreign visitors of all countries to our metropolis . Men of science , literature , and art naturally formed an

unusually large proportions of the vast multitude of strangers drawn together on such an exceptional occassion ; and we have consequently had to undergo a course of criticisms which , thong occasionally severe and often unjust , was yet , iu the main , truthful ; often exposing shortcomings of various kinds to which our national self-sufficiency induced us to close our eyes . If . is well

to be occasionally reminded , of our national defects , especially through the medium of foreign visitors ; who , viewing us from their own stand , which is very different from ours , naturally perceive blemishes ( occasionally rather remarkable ones ) which we had never looked for , and of which , in our insular self-sufficiency , we had not indeed believed the existence possible .

Nothing so much , struck the artistic section of our crowds of foreign visitors during the present season as the extreme poverty of our public memorials and honorary statutes . They appeared to our continental critics utterly unworthy ofthe intellectual and artistic eminence of our nation ; and so , in fact , they are ; and the foreign critics , however sarcastically unpleasant they may haye correct in

been in their mode of stating it , were perfectly their general verdict . Let us ourselves examine a few of our public statues and memorials , from the dingy kings in the dingy outof-the-way squares , to the caricature of the Great Duke at Hyde-park-corner , the monstrosities of Trafalgarsquare , and the clumsy masonry of the monument of Waterloo-place . We have , as a rule , adopted bronze statuary instead of

marble , on account of our variable climate , which proves speedily fatal to the beauty of the fair Carrara product . This necessity ought to have led to a more careful study of statuesque out line ; for is is the character and general perfection of the main external lines of a group or figure that can alono impart attractive effect to bronze statuary , which soon changes its naturally deep hue to one of

positive black . Characteristic outline is as necessary to a bronze statue , unless gilt , as to a shadow on the wall , as no details within the external line can be made expressively visible , when blackened by a London atmosphere , except in a very favourable light . Tet this necessary feature in bronze statuary has not been successfully studied in any of our principal public statues . Like

Take , for instance , that of Pitt , in Hanover-square . _ many others , its general outline is entirely without meaning ; the figure being , after a kind of artistic superstitution which prevails amongst ns , muffled up in a kind of cloak or toga . It is true that this statue of Pitt , by Sir Erancis Chantrey , on of the artist ' s best works , has dash of characteristic life about itinthe

outa , _ stretched arm , and in the fine head , which is thrown back with that defiant air which the orator often assumed in rebutting the attacks of a talented and powerful opposition . But here all effective outline ceases ; the rest of the figure bundled up in a mass of unmeaning cloak , such as assuredly Pitt never wore while addressing the House , nor we should think under any other

circumstances . There is , moreover , a little lump of this wrappering gathered together just above the left arm which , at a little distance , is altogether unintelligle . Only the other morning , while taking a round among our public monuments , guided by the official list recently called for in Parliament , we stood beforo this work , at about the proper focal distance , pondering upon what could be the meaning of the lump of something over the left arm ; and it was not till after a much closer aud very careful examination of the nature of the excrescence , that its

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