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THE ART OF BUILDING A HOME
should extend to the last detail of the furnished house. When his responsibility
ceases with the erection of the shell, it is natural that he should look very
little beyond this. There is no inducement for him to work out any definite
scheme for a finished room, for he knows that if he had any aim the decorator
and furnisher would certainly miss it and would fail to complete his creation.
If, when designing a house, the architect were bearing in mind the effect each
room would have when finished and furnished, his conceptions would be influenced
from the very beginning, and his attitude toward the work would tend to under-go
an entire change. At present he but too readily accepts the popular idea of
art as a thing quite apart from life, a sort of trimming to be added if funds
allow.
"It is this prevalent conception of beauty as a sweetmeat, something rather
nice which may be taken or left according to inclination after the solid meal
has been secured, which largely causes the lack of comeliness we find in our
houses. Before this idea can be dispelled and we can appreciate either the
place which art should hold in our lives or the importance of rightly educating
the appreciation of it, we must realize that beauty is part of the necessary
food of any life worth the name; that art, which is the expression of beauty
as conceived and created by man, is primarily concerned with the making of
the useful garments of life beautiful, not with the trimming of them; and that,
moreover, in its higher branches art is the medium through which the most subtle
ideas are conveyed from man to man.
"Understanding something of the true meaning of art, we may set about
realizing it, at least in the homes which are so much within our control. Let
us have in our houses, rooms where there shall be space to carry on the business
of life freely and with pleasure, with furniture made for use; rooms where
a drop of water spilled is not fatal; where the life of a child is not made
a burden to it by unnecessary restraint; plain, simple, and ungarnished if
necessary, but honest. Let us have such ornament as we do have really beautiful
and wrought by hand, carving, wrought metal, embroidery, painting, something
which it has given pleasure to the producer to create, and which shows this
in every lineāthe only possible work of art. Let us call in the artist, bid
him leave his easel pictures, and paint on our walls and over the chimney corner
landscapes and scenes which shall bring light and life into the room; which
shall speak of nature, purity, and truth; shall become part of the room, of
the walls on which they are painted, and of the lives of us who live beside
them; paintings which our children shall grow up to love, and always connect
with scenes of home with that vividness of a memory from childhood which no
time can efface. Then, if necessary, let the rest of the walls go untouched
in all the rich variety of color and tone, of light and shade, of the naked
brickwork. Let the floor go uncarpeted, and the wood unpainted, that we may
have time to think, and money with which to educate our children to think also.
Let us have rooms which once decorated are always decorated, rooms fit to be
homes in the fullest poetry of the name; in which no artificiality need momentarily
force us to feel shame for things of which we know there is nothing to be ashamed:
rooms which can form backgrounds, fitting and dignified, at the time and in
our memories, for all those little scenes, those acts of kindness and small
duties, as well as the scenes of deep emotion and trial, which make up the
drama of our lives at home."
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