Proportion is of two distinct kinds. Apparent: when it takes place between
qualities for the sake of connection only, without any ultimateobject or casual necessity; and constructive: when it has reference to some function to
be discharged by the quantities, depending on their proportion. From the
confusion of these two kinds of proportion have arisen the greater part of the
erroneous conceptions of the influence of either. oil painting online
Apparent proportion, or the sensible relation of quantities, is one of the
most important means of obtaining unity between things which otherwise must have
remained distinct in similarity, and as it may consist with every other kind of
unity, and persist when every other means of it fails, it may be considered as
lying at the root of most of our impressions of the beautiful. There is no sense
of rightness, or wrongness connected with it, no sense of utility, propriety, or
expediency. These ideas enter only where the proportion of quantities has
reference to some function to be performed by them. It cannot be asserted that
it is right or that it is wrong that A should be to B, as B to C; unless A, B,
and C have some desirable operation dependent on that relation. But nevertheless
it may be highly agreeable to the eye that A, B, and C, if visible things, should have visible
connection of ratio, even though nothing be accomplished by such connection. On
the other hand, constructive proportion, or the adaptation of quantities to
functions, is agreeable not to the eye, but to the mind, which is cognizant of
the function to be performed. Thus the pleasantness or rightness of the
proportions of a column depends not on the mere relation of diameter and height,
(which is not proportion at all, for proportion is between three terms at
least,) but on three other involved terms, the strength of materials, the weight
to be borne, and the scale of the building. The proportions of a wooden column
are wrong in a stone one, and of a small building wrong in a large one,and this owing solely to mechanical
considerations, which have no more to do with ideas of beauty, than the relation between the arms of a
lever, adapted to the raising of a given weight; and yet it is highly agreeable
to perceive that such constructive proportion has been duly observed, as it is agreeable to see that
anything is fit for its purpose or for ours, and also that it has been the
result of intelligence in the workman of it, so that we sometimes feel a
pleasure in apparent non-adaptation, if it be a sign of ingenuity; as in the
unnatural and seemingly impossible lightness of Gothic spires and roofs. oil paintings online
Now, the errors against which I would caution the reader in this matter are
three. The first, is the overlooking or denial of the power of apparent
proportion, of which power neither Burke nor any other writer whose works I have
met with, take cognizance. The second, is the attribution of beauty to
the appearances of constructive proportion. The third, the denial with Burke of
any value or agreeableness in constructive proportion. art oil painting online
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