Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1into the Repreſentation of God, ought to be
the
nobleſt Material that can be had.
Next to
the
nobleſt is the rareſt; and yet I would not be
for
making them of Salt, as Solinus informs us
the
Sicilians uſed to do; nor of Glaſs, like
ſome
mentioned by Pliny; neither would I
have
them of maſſy Gold or Silver, not that
I
diſlike thoſe Materials for being produced of
a
barren Soil, or for their ſickly Hue; but for
other
Reaſons: Among which one is, that I
think
it ſhould be a Point of Religion with us
that
thoſe Repreſentations which we ſet up to
be
adored as Gods, ſhould bear as much Re­
ſemblance
to the Divine Nature as poſſible.
For this Reaſon, I would have them made im­
mortal
in Duration, as far as it is in the Power
of
mortal Men to effect it.
And here I cannot
help
enquiring, what ſhould be the Reaſon of
a
very whimſical, though very old Perſuaſion,
which
is firmly rooted in the Minds of the Vul­
gar
, that a Picture of God, or of ſome Saint in
one
Place ſhall hear the Prayers of Votaries,
when
in another Place the Statue of the very
ſame
God or Saint ſhall be utterly deaf to them?
Nay, and what is ſtill more nonſenſical, if you
do
but remove the very ſame Statue, for which
the
People uſed to have the higheſt Venerati­
on
, to ſome other Station, they ſeem to look
upon
it as a Bankrupt, and will neither truſt it
with
their Prayers, nor take the leaſt Notice of
it
.
Such Statues ſhould therefore have Seats
that
are fixed, eminent and peculiar to them­
ſelves
.
It is ſaid, that there never was any
beautiful
Piece of Workmanſhip known in the
Memory
of Man to be made of Gold, as if that
Prince
of Metals diſdained to owe any thing to
the
Skill of an Artificer.
If this be true, we
ſhould
never uſe it in the Statues of our Gods,
which
we ſhould deſire to make ſuitable to the
Subject
.
Beſides that, the Thirſt of the Gold
might
tempt ſome not only to rob our Statue
of
his Beard, but to melt him quite down.
I
ſhould
chuſe Braſs, if the lovely Purity of fine
white
Marble did not oblige me to give that
the
Preference.
Yet there is one Conſiderati­
on
which weighs very much in Favour of Braſs,
and
that is its Duration, provided we make our
Statue
not ſo maſſy, but that the Odium and
Deteſtation
of ſpoiling it may be much greater
than
the Profit to be made by melting it down
for
other Purpoſes: I would have it indeed no
more
than if it were beat out with a Hammer,
or
run into a thin Plate, ſo as to ſeem no more
than
a Skin.
We read of a Statue made of
Ivory
, ſo large that it would hardly ſtand under
the
Roof of the Temple.
But that I diſlike,
for
there ought to be a due Proportion obſerv­
ed
as well in Size, as in Form and Compoſiti­
on
: Upon which Accounts too the Figures of
the
greater Deities, with their gruff Beards, and
ſtern
Countenances, do not ſuit well in the
ſame
Place with the ſoft Features of Virgins.
I
am
likewiſe of Opinion, that the having but
few
Statues of Gods, may help to increaſe the
People
's Veneration and Reverence to them.
Two, or at moſt three, may be placed proper­
ly
enough upon the Altar.
All the reſt may be
diſpoſed
in Niches in other convenient Places.
In all ſuch Repreſentations of Gods and Heroes,
the
Sculptor ſhould endeavour as much as poſ­
ſible
, to expreſs both by the Habit and Action
of
the Figure, the Character and Life of the
Perſon
.
Not that I approve of thoſe extrava­
gant
Attitudes which make a Statue look like
the
Hero of a Droll, or a Prize-fighter; but I
would
have ſomewhat of a Dignity and Maje­
ſty
both in the Countenance, and all the reſt
of
the Body, that ſhould ſpeak the God, ſo that
he
may ſeem both by his Look and Poſture to
be
ready to hear and receive his Adorers.
Such
ſhould
be the Statues in Temples.
Let others
be
left to Theatres, and other profane Edifices.
59[Figure 59]

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