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Prospect, Perspective and the Evolution of the Landscape Idea

Author(s): Denis Cosgrove


Source: Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, New Series, Vol. 10, No. 1 (1985),
pp. 45-62
Published by: Blackwell Publishing on behalf of The Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of
British Geographers)
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/622249 .
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45

Prospect, perspective and the evolution of


the landscape idea
DENIS COSGROVE
SeniorLecturerin Geography,Loughborough Leic.LEI1 3 TU
University,Loughborough,

RevisedMS received24 May 1984

ABSTRACT
The landscapeconceptin geographyhas recentlybeenadoptedby humanisticwritersbecauseof its holisticandsubjec-
Butthehistoryof the landscapeideasuggeststhatits originslie in therenaissance
tive implications. humanists'searchfor
certaintyratherthana vehicleof individualsubjectivity.Landscape was a 'wayof seeing'thatwas bourgeois,individual-
ist andrelatedto the exerciseof powerover space.The basictheoryandtechniqueof the landscapeway of seeingwas
linearperspective,as importantfor the historyof the graphicimageas printingwas for thatof the writtenword.Alberti's
perspectivewas the foundationof realismin artuntilthe nineteenthcentury,andis closelyrelatedby himto socialclass
andspatialhierarchy.It employsthe samegeometryas merchanttradingandaccounting,navigation,landsurvey,map-
ping andartillery.Perspectiveis firstappliedin the city andthento a countrysubjugatedto urbancontrolandviewedas
landscape.The evolutionof landscapepaintingparallelsthatof geometryjustas it does the changingsocialrelationson
the landin Tudor,Stuartand GeorgianEngland.The visualpowergiven by the landscapeway of seeing complements
the realpowerhumansexertoverlandas property.Landscape as a geographicalconceptcannotbe freeof the ideological
overlaysof its historyas a visualconceptunlessit subjectslandscapeto historicalinterrogation.Only as an unexamined
conceptin a geographywhich neglectsits own visualfoundationscan landscapebe appropriated for an antiscientific
humanisticgeography.

KEY WORDS: Landscape,Geometry, Perspective, Prospect,Humanism,Ideology, Graphicimage, Cartography,


Perspective,
Morphology,Survey,Space.
Painting,Seeing,Chorography,

Geographical interest in the landscape concept has geographical environment, aspects which
seen a revival in recent years. In large measure this is geographical science is claimed to have devalued at
a consequence of the humanist renaissance in best and at worst, ignored. Marwyn Samuels, for
geography. Having enjoyed a degree of prominence example,3 refers to landscapes as 'authored',
in the interwar years, landscape fell from favour in Courtice Rose thinking along similar lines would
the 1950s and 1960s. Its reference to the visible analyse landscapes as texts,4 and Edward Relph
forms of a delimited area to be subjected to mor- regards landscape as 'anything I see and sense when
phological study (a usage still currentin the German I am out of doors-landscape is the necessary con-
'landscape indicators' school)1 appeared subjective text and background both of my daily affairsand of
and too imprecise for Anglo-Saxon geographers the more exotic circumstancesof my life'.5 American
developing a spatial science. The static, descriptive humanist geographers have adopted landscape for
morphology of landscape ill-suited their call for the very reasons that their predecessors rejected it. It
dynamic functional regions to be defined and appears to point towards the experiential, creative
investigated by geographers contributing to econ- and human aspects of our environmental relations,
omic and social planning.2 rather than to the objectified, manipulated and
Recently, and primarily in North America, mechanical aspects of those relations. It is the latter
geographers have sought to reformulate landscape against which humanism is a protest, which Relph
as a concept whose subjective and artistic traces to the seventeenth century scientific revol-
resonances are to be actively embraced. They allow ution and its Cartesiandivision of subject and object.
for the incorporation of individual, imaginative and Landscape seems to embody the holism which
creative human experience into studies of the modern humanists proclaim.

Trans.Inst. Br. Geogr.N.S. 10: 45-62 (1985) ISSN: 0020-2750 Printed in Great Britain
46 DENISCOSGROVE
In Britain a revival of landscape is also apparent. domination over space as an absolute, objective
Here the humanist critique in geography has been entity, its transformation into the property of
less vocal. Recent landscape study has remained individual or state. And landscape achieved these
closer to popular usage of the word as an artistic or ends by use of the same techniques as the practical
literary response to the visible scene.6 Among sciences, principallyby applying Euclidiangeometry
British geographers interest in landscape was as the guarantor of certainty in spatial conception,
stimulated partly by perception studies, particularly organization and representation.In the case of land-
the short-lived excitement over landscape evalu- scape the technique was optical, linear perspective,
ation for planning purposes which surrounded the but the principles to be learned were identical
1973 reform of local government.7 This led to to those of architecture, survey, map-making and
various mechanistic theories of landscape aesthetics artillery science. The same handbooks taught the
which, like Jay Appleton's ethologically-founded I
practitionersall of these arts.1
and influential 'habitat theory' of landscape,8 had Landscape,like the practicalsciences of the Italian
little in common with the humanism proclaimed in Renaissance,was founded upon scientific theory and
North American studies. knowledge. Its subsequent history can best be
Epistemological divergence notwithstanding, understood in conjunction with the history of sci-
landscape is again a focus of geographical interest. ence. Yet in its contemporary humanist guise within
With that interest has come a refreshing willingness geography, landscape is deployed within a radically
by geographers to employ landscape representations anti-scientific programme. Significantly that pro-
-in painting, imaginative literature and garden gramme is equally non-visual. Recent programmatic
design-as sources for answering geographical statements of geographical humanism (and critiques
questions.9 The purpose of this paper is to support of it) in the pages of these Transactionsare notable
and promote that initiative while simultaneously for their concentrationon verbal, literaryand linguis-
entering certain caveats about adopting the land- tic modes of communication and for their almost
scape idea without subjecting it to critical historical complete neglect of the visual and its place in
examination as a term which embodies certain geography.12 The attack on science is characteristic
assumptions about relations between humans and of much contemporary humanist writing. But the
their environment, or more specifically, society and apparentlack of interest in the graphic image is more
space. These caveats go beyond landscape as such surprising.Consider the traditions of our discipline,
and touch upon aspects of the whole humanist its alignment with cartography and the long-held
endeavour within geography. belief that the results of geographical scholarshipare
Landscape first emerged as a term, an idea, or best embodied in the map. Consider too the human-
better still, a way of seeing'0 the external world, in ists' proclaimed interest in imagesof place and land-
the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. It was, scape, and yet their remarkable neglect of the
and it remains, a visual term, one that arose initially visual.13 Indeed the clearest statement of the
out of renaissance humanism and its particularcon- centrality of sight in geography that I know is found
cepts and constructs of space. Equally, landscape in William Bunge's Theoretical Geography, a
was, over much of its history, closely bound up with manifesto for spatial science: 'geography is the one
the practicalappropriationof space. As we shall see, predictive science whose inner logic is literally
its connections were with the survey and mapping visible'.14 Bunge's book may be closer in spirit to
of newly-acquired, consolidated and 'improved' the original humanist authors of the landscape idea
commercial estates in the hands of an urban than his contemporary humanist critics. The book
bourgeoisie; with the calculation of distance and after all is a celebration of the certainty of geometry
trajectory for cannon fire and of defensive fortifica- as the constructionalprincipleof space.
tions against the new weaponry; and with the In fact, the humanist attack on science and its
projection of the globe and its regions onto map neglect of the visual image in geography are not
graticules by cosmographers and chorographers, unconnected. They both result in some measure
those essential set designers for Europe's entry from the lack of critical reflection on the European
centre-stage of the world's theatre. In painting and humanist tradition, from the conflation of the spatial
garden design landscape achieved visually and theme in geography with a positivist epistemology,
ideologically what survey, map making and ord- and from a mystification of art and literature. All
nance charting achieved practically:the control and three of these aspects will be illustrated in a brief
of thelandscape
Evolution idea 47
exploration of the landscape idea as a way of seeing Gutenberg invention of movable type in the
in the European visual tradition, emphasizing that 1440s.16 In the quadrivium,always more theoretical,
tradition's most enduring convention of space rep- the critical advance came from the re-evaluation
resentation, linear perspective. In this exploration I of Euclid and the elevation of geometry to the
shall justify and elaborate the claim that the land- keystone of human knowledge, specifically its
scape idea is a visual ideology; an ideology all too application to three-dimensional space represen-
easily adopted unknowingly into geography when tation through single-point perspective theory and
the landscape idea is transferredas an unexamined technique. Perspective, the medieval study of
concept into our discipline. optics, was one of the mathematical arts, studied
since the twelfth-century revival of learning,
GEOMETRY, PERSPECTIVE AND as evidenced for example in Roger Bacon's work.
RENAISSANCE HUMANISM Painters like Cimabue and Giotto had constructed
Traditionally the seven liberal arts of medieval their pictures in new ways to achieve a greater
scholarshipwere grouped into two sets. The trivium realism (il vero) than their predecessors.17 But the
was composed of grammar, rhetoric and logic; the theoretical and practical development of a coherent
quadriviumof arithmetic,geometry, astronomy and linear perspective awaited the fifteenth-century
music. While in its narrowest definition humanism Tuscan Renaissance. That movement, despite its
referred to studies in the trivium (the recovery, emphasis on classical texts, grammar and rhetoric,
secure dating and translation of texts), many early revolutionized spatial apprehensions in the west.
renaissancehumanists were equally fascinatedby the For the plastic and visual arts: painting, sculpture
materialof the quadrivium,seeking a unity of know- and architecture,and for geography and cosmology,
ledge across all the arts.15 The fifteenth century saw all concerned with space and spatial relations,
revolutionary advances in both sets of studies, it was from the quadrivium, from geometry and
advances which altered their organization, social sig- number theory, that form and structure were
nificance and role in the production and communica- determined-even if their content was provided by
tion of human knowledge of the world and our place the trivium.
within it. In the arena of words, language and writ- In 1435 the Florentine humanist and architect
ten expression the most striking advance was the Leon Battista Alberti published his Della Pittura(On

Median rays
Extrinsicrays
"- - ----- Centric ray
FIGURE 1. The visual triangle as described by Alberti (from Samuel Y. Edgerton Jr, The Renaissancerediscoveryof linear perspective,
Harper and Row, London, 1975, reproduced with permission)
48 DENISCOSGROVE
painting),18a work whose authority in artistic the- appreciated (Fig 2). We need not concern ourselves
ory endured beyond the eighteenth century when here with the details and accuracy of Alberti's con-
Sir Joshua Reynolds, first president of the Royal struction (except perhaps to note the definition of
Academy, used it as the foundation for his lectures pyramid, lifted directly from Euclid).But we should
on pictorial composition, beauty and the hierarchy observe certain consequences that flow from it. First,
of genres. In Della Pittura Alberti demonstrates a form and position in space are shown to be relative
technique which he had worked out experimentally rather than absolute. The forms of what we see, of
for constructing a visual triangle which allowed the objects in space and of geometrical figures them-
painter to determine the shape and measurementof a selves, vary with the angle and distance of vision.
gridded square placed on the ground when viewed They are produced by the sovereign eye, a single
along the horizontal axis, and to reproduce in pic- eye, for this is not a theory of binocular vision.
torial form its appearance to the eye. The con- Secondly, Alberti regards the rays of vision as hav-
struzione leggitima gave the realist illusion of ing origin in the eye itself, thus confirming its
three-dimensional space on a two-dimensional sur- sovereignty at the centre of the visual world.
face. This construction, the foundation of linear per- Thirdly, he creates a technique which became
spective, depended upon concepts of the vanishing fundamental to the realist representation of space
point, distance point and intersecting plane. Alberti and the external world. The artist, through perspec-
describes it as a triangle of rays extending outwards tive, establishes the arrangement or composition,
from the eye and striking the object of vision. There and thus the specific time, of the events described,
are three kinds of ray (Fig 1). determines-in both senses-the 'point of view' to
be taken by the observer, and controls through fram-
The extrinsicrays, thus circlingthe plane-one touch- ing the scope of reality revealed. Perspective tech-
ing the other, enclose all the plane like the willow nique was so effective that the realist conventions
wands of a basket cage, and make... the visual which it underlay were not fundamentally chal-
pyramid.It is timefor me to describewhatthe pyramid lenged until the nineteenth century.20
is and how it is constructedby these rays... The
Realist representation of three-dimensional space
pyramidis a figureof a body fromwhose baselinesare
drawnupward,terminatingat a singlepoint.The base on a two-dimensional surface through linear per-
of the pyramidis the planewhichis seen. The sides of spective directs the external world towards the
the pyramidare the rays whichI have calledextrinsic. individual located outside that space. It gives the eye
The cuspid,that is the point of the pyramid,is located absolute mastery over space. The centric ray moves
withinthe eye wherethe angleof the quantityis.19 in a direct line from the eye to the vanishing point,
to the depth of the recessional plane. Space is
The visual pyramid here described is familiar to measured and calculated from this line and the rest
every geographer who reads Area, although its of what is seen constructed around the vanishing
geographical significance may not always be fully point and within the frame fixed by external rays.

Observation

2. A seventeenth-century
FIGURE to readersof Area)
'wayof seeing'(familiar
Evolution idea
of thelandscape 49

'GoodGovernmentin the City'detailfromPalazzoPubblico,Siena(ditta0. B6hm)


FIGURE3. AmbrogioLorenzetti:

Visually space is rendered the property of the Peter the Keys to the Kingdom of Heaven (Fig 4)
individual detached observer, from whose divine painted on the wall of the Sistine Chapel in 1481, the
location it is a dependent, appropriated object. A significance of perspective is clear. Lorenzetti shows
simple movement of the head, closing the eyes or us the city as an active bustling world of human life
turning away and the composition and spatial form wherein people and their environment interact
of objects are altered or even negated. Develop- across a space where unity derives from the action
ments from the fifteenth century may have altered on its surface.
the assumed position of the observer, or used per-
These pre-perspectiveurbanlandscapesshow not so
spective analytically rather than synthetically as muchwhat the towns lookedlike as what it felt like to
Alberti and his contemporaries intended,21 but this
be in them.We get an impressionof the towns not as
visual appropriation of space endured unaltered.
they mighthave looked to a detachedobserverfroma
Significantly, the adoption of linear perspective as fixedvantagepointbut as they mighthave impresseda
the guarantor of pictorial realism was contemporary
pedestrianwalkingup the streetsand seeing the build-
with those other realist techniques of painting: oils, ings frommanydifferentsides.23
framing and production for a marketof mobile, small
canvases. In this respect perspective may be By contrast, in Perugino's ideal city a formal,
regarded as one of a number of techniques which monumental order is organized through precise
allowed for the visual representation of a bourgeois, geometry, constructed by the eye around the axis
rationalistconception of the world. which leads across the chequerboard piazza to the
The term bourgeois is appropriate,for linear per- circulartemple at its centre. The piazza, geometrical
spective was an urban invention, employed initially centre of this city, becomes in this genre symbolic of
to represent the spaces of the city. It was first the whole city.24 The hills and trees beyond reflect
demonstrated practicallyby Alberti's close associate, the same regimented order as the urban architecture.
Filippo Brunelleschi,in a famous experiment of 1425 The people of the city, or rather within it, for they
when he succeeded in throwing an image of the Bap- reveal no particular attachment to it, group them-
tistery at Florence onto a canvas set up in the great selves in dignified and theatricalposes. In the 'ideal
portal of the cathedral.22If we compare Ambrogio townscapes' of the late fifteenth-century Umbrian
Lorenzetti'swell-known frescoes in the Palazzo Pub- school of Piero della Francesca humans scarcely
blico at Siena (Fig 3) which represent good govern- appear. They have no need to for the 'measure of
ment in the city, painted in the 1340s, with Peitro man', so neatly captured in Leonardo da Vinci's Man
Perugino's representation of Christ giving to St in a Circleand a Square,is written into the measured
50 DENISCOSGROVE

FIGURE4. Pietro Perugino: 'Christ giving to St Peter the Keys to the Kingdom of Heaven' Vatican City, Sistine Chapel (ditta 0. Bohm)

architecturalfacades and proportioned spaces of the appear in printed book form, following only two
city, an intellectual measure rather than sensuous years after the first printed geometry and setting the
human life.25 This alerts us to the fact that perspec- model for a collection of later texts. Pacioli devotes
tive and its geometry had a greater significance than the second book of the volume to geometry and the
merely its employment as a painting technique. measurement of distance, surface and volume. He
The mathematics and geometry associated with points out the value of such skills for land survey
perspective were directly relevant to the economic and map making,.forwarfareand navigation. From a
life of the Italian merchant cities of the Renaissance, text like this Italian merchants learned to calculate
to trading and capitalist finance, to agriculture and visually or 'gauge' by eye and using n the volume of
the land market, to navigation and warfare.Michael a barrel,a churn, a haystack or other regular shape, a
Baxandall26has shown that merchants attending the valuable skill in an age before standard sizes and
abbaco or commercial school in their youth under- volumes became the norm. This visual gauging was
took a curriculumwhich provided the key skills of regarded as a wonderful skill. In the words of Silvio
mathematics for application in commerce: account- Belli writing of visual survey in 1573: 'certainly it is
ing, book-keeping, calculation of interest and rates a wondrous thing to measure with the eye, because
of return, determining proportions in joint risk ven- to everyone who does not know its rationale it
tures. One of the most commonly used tests sum- appears completely impossible.'28 It has been
marizing the various merchant skills was Fra Luca argued that the search for accurate visual techniques
Pacioli's Summa di Arithmetica, Geometria,Propor- of land survey held back Italian innovations in
tione et ProportionaliHa (1494).27 Its author, a close instrumentation for many decades,29 but the signifi-
friend of Leonardo, acknowledges Alberti as well as cance accorded to it indicates the importance
Ptolemy and Vitruvius, and of course Euclid among attached to the power of vision linked to intellect
his sources. While Piero della Francescahad himself through geometry, and how the principles which
written an earlier text, De Abbaco, Pacioli's was the underlay perspective theory were the everyday
first complete manual of practical mathematics to skills of the urbanmerchant.
idea
of thelandscape
Evolution 51
Not all land survey was by eye. The astrolabe, creation in which God was to be found at the centre
quadrantand plane table were in use and discussed and circumference of the cosmos. A regular
in the texts cited. For map makers and navigators geometry proceeding from the perfection of the
these were crucial instruments. But they required circle underlay the structure of both spiritual and
geometrical calculation to make their results temporal worlds. Geometry and proportion took on
meaningful. The Italian renaissance was a carto- therefore a metaphysical significance, one that was
graphic as much as an artistic event. Ptolemy whose given even greater weight with the translating and
Almagest had always ranked as a key geometrical misdating of the Corpus Hermeticumby Marsilio
source became known too for his Cosmografia, Ficino in 1464 and the introduction of cabalist num-
brought as a Greek text to Florence at the beginning ber theory by Pico della Mirandola in 1486.34 The
of the fifteenth century. Alberti produced an accu- circle, the golden section, the rule of threes, all of
rately surveyed map of Rome, Leonardo one of them part and parcel of the intellectual and practical
Pavia. These were regarded as revelations of the baggage of the Renaissance merchant, sailor,
rational order of created space produced by the surveyor and chartmaker,could be related to the
application of geometry. Perhaps more closely most erudite metaphysical speculation. Above all it
related to landscape painting was the pianta prospet- was the human intellect, human reason, that could
tiva, the bird's eye view of cities which became so apprehend this significance and seek the certainties
popular at the turn of the sixteenth century. Among of geometry. And the human body, created in the
the best known of these is Jacopo de 'Barbari's1500 image and likeness of God, replicated in microcosm
map of Venice, like so many of its type as much an the divine proportions, as Leonardo's human figure
ideological expression of urban dominion as an enclosed in divine geometry makes clear. At the
accurate rendering of the urban scene.30 The view- centre of Renaissance space, the space reproduced
point for these maps is, significantly, high above the by perspective, was the human individual, the
city, distant, commanding, uninvolved. It is the same measure of his world and its temporal creator and
perspective that we find in Bruegel's or Titian's land- controller. Like God, the microcosm, man, also
scapes, panoramasover great sweeps of earth space, appears at the circumference of Renaissance space,
seas, mountains and promontories. high above the globe, seeing it spread before the
Linearperspective organizes and controls spatial sphere of his eye in perspective on the map, the
coordinates, and because it was founded in piantaprospettivaor the panoramiclandscape.
geometry it was regarded as the discovery of The authority attributed to man35 was exercised
inherent properties of space itself.31 In this, perspec- in a hierarchy that was at once spatial and social, a
tive had a deeper culturalsignificance,as Pollaiuolo's hierarchyin which the landscape idea played a signi-
bas-relief of Prospettivaas a nubile goddess, sculp- ficant, if subordinate role. Referring to architecture,
ted on the tomb of Sixtus IV in 1493 might suggest. the 'queen of the arts', Alberti discusses the decor-
One of the earliest and most widely influentialof the ation suitable to differentbuildings:
Renaissance thinkers, the Paduan humanist Nicholas
of Cusa, theologian, cosmographer and mathema- Both paintingsand poetry vary in kind.The type that
tician, challenged the Aristotelian scholastic world portraysthe deeds of great men, worthy of memory,
view in his De Docta Ignorantiaof 1440 by appeal differsfrom that which describesthe habitsof private
to the Euclideangeometry.32 Rejecting the idea that citizensand again from that depictingthe life of the
there could be no empirical knowledge of the peasants.Thefirst,whichis majesticin character,
should
be used for publicbuildingsand the dwellingsof the
spiritual sphere by men confined to the temporal,
and thus no direct knowledge of God, Cusanus pro- great,while the last mentionedwould be suitablefor
gardens,forit is the most pleasingof all.Ourmindsare
claimed the significance of indirect evidence in a cheered beyond measureby the sight of paintings,
neoplatonic sense. He pointed out that in the depictingthe delightfulcountryside,harbours,fishing,
infinitely large circle the circumferenceand tangent hunting,swimming,the games of shepherds-flowers
coincide in a straight line while the infinitely small andverdure.36
circle was a point. This is the foundation of a con-
tinuous geometry relating all Euclid'sseparate prop- The reference is to the genres of painting which
ositions and giving forms a qualitative as well as replicate those of poetry: from the most elevated,
quantitative character.33Equally, it gave support to storia (epic or historic events), to portraiture
Cusanus'argument for a pattern running through all and domestic scenes, and finally the least serious,
52 DENISCOSGROVE

landscapes and rural scenes. Geographically, the importance of perspective is in no doubt: 'for
centre of the city, where public buildings and Leonardo, as for Alberti, painting is a science
monuments adorn the main piazza, is the setting for because of its foundation on mathematical perspec-
great men and should record their epic deeds. In the tive and on the study of nature'.42Leonardo himself
urban palaces and private houses of the patriciate wrote that
appear portraits and family groups while in the
countryside, far away from and subordinate to the Among all the studies of naturalcauses and reasons
power at the heart of the city, the peasants-'beasts light chiefly delights the beholder-and among the
of the villa' -disport themselves in their rude greatfeaturesof mathematicsthe certaintyof its dem-
manner, while gentlemen relax, follow appropriate onstrationsis what pre-eminentlytends to elevate the
mindof the investigator.Perspectivemustthereforebe
leisurely pursuits and enjoy the beauty of nature.37
In the theatre, whose auditorium design, spatial preferredto all the discoursesand systems of human
learning.43
arrangements and stage sets were exercises in
applied geometry and perspective construction-
even cosmological theory38-this hierarchy was Geometry is the source of the painter's creative
power, perspective its technical expression. For
carefully articulated for the three forms of drama. Leonardo, perspective 'transforms the mind of the
Tragedy was played against settings of the ideal city
and its monumental architecture, romance in the painter into the likeness of the divine mind, for with
a free hand he can produce different beings, animals,
palace interioror closed garden, and comedy or farce
in the sylvan setting of a rural landscape. Control plants, fruits, landscapes, open fields, abysses and
fearfulplaces'.44 Linearperspective provides the cer-
and power radiate down a socio-spatial hierarchy
tainty of our reproductions of nature in art and
along the orthogonal lines reaching out from the underlies the power and authority, the divine
piazza of an ideal city to transect recognizably
distinct landscape types. creativity of the artist.
Leonardo, despite these comments and his map-
ping experiments, is not remembered as a landscape
LANDSCAPE, PERSPECTIVE AND REALIST painter, although his geographical contributions
SPACE were by no means meagre.45 More interesting from
this point of view is the work of the Venetian
It is known that the first artist references to specific
Christoforo Sorte in the later Renaissance.Sorte was
paintings as 'landscape'(paesaggio)come from early a cartographer and surveyor, employed by the
sixteenth-century Italy. One of the most often Venetian republic as one of the 'periti' or land
quoted is that from 1521 referring to Giorgione's surveyors and valuers of the Provveditori sopra i
Tempesta.39Both Kenneth Clarkand J. B. Jackson,in beni inculti, the reclamation office which supervised
discussions of landscape in this period, sense a rela-
marshland drainage and dryland irrigation in the
tionship between the new genre and notions of second half of the sixteenth century. He was a skilled
authority and control. Noting the appearance of
'realist' landscape in upper Italy and Flanders, the cartographer whose maps are regarded as being
second mercantile core of early modern Europe, among the finest records of the Venetian state at this
time (Fig 5).46 Sorte was also a landscape painter
Clark claims that it reflected 'some change in the
who has left us a remarkabletreatise on his art47 in
action of the human mind which demanded a new
the form of a reply to a letter from a Veronese noble,
nexus of unity, enclosed space,' and suggests that
Bartolomeo Vitali, requesting information on how
this was conditioned by a new, scientific way of
Sorte had succeeded in reproducing
thinking about the world and an 'increased control
of nature by man'.40 Jackson refers to a widespread the true green of the pastures, the variety of the
belief that the relationship between a social group flowers,the range of green plants,the density of the
and its landscape could be so expertly controlled as forests, the transparencyof water... the distancesof
to make appropriate a comparison between perspectives.48
environmental bonds and family bonds,41 thereby
allowing landscape to become a means of moral The work that Vitali refers to is sadly unknown.
commentary. Perspective was the central technique But from textual evidence it is clearly part-map
which allowed this control to be achieved in the new part-landscapedrawing: a chorography in plan and
paintings of landscape. In Leonardo's writings the perspective of the province of Verona, carefully
I

I 2- l

FIGURE5. Christoforo Sorte: Map of Venetian boundaries at Cadore (Venice, Archivio di Stato, Provv. Camera dei Confin
54 DENIS COSGROVE
coloured and considered a work of art. Sorte, in his dimensions, but ratherexhilaratedby the potency of
reply, modestly refers to himself as merely a practi- extension in depth, a controlled, axial entry into the
cal man (un puro prattico) rather than a philosopher picture plane achieved by linear perspective. This
or an artist. He is a chorographer. But his chorogra- is the achievement ot all the great landscapists,
phy is securely based in science. From Ptolemy's of Bruegel's and Titian's cosmic panoramas, of
Cosmographiahe has learned how to organize his Giovanni Bellini's carefully located figures and
map according to the four cardinalpoints, and he has modulated bands of light and shade, of Claude's
'located the said chorography with its true relations stage-like wings, coulisses and recessional planes
and distances on the map'.49Once these geometrical along the axis, and of J. M. W. Turner-himself Pro-
essentials are completed he can discuss the colouring fessor of Perspective at the Royal Academy-who
of the map. Colours are used partly to avoid too once claimed that 'without the aid of perspective, all
many words, partly to produce a representation of art totters on its very foundations'.52
reality. Thus different shades of green allows us to Perspective then is critical to landscape painting,
recognize fertile and infertile lands and forests. The and it is significant,if beyond the scope of this paper
careful and observant use of colour helps us to to explore in detail, how close are the historical
'create the image of a landscape (paese)on canvas in parallels between the great advances in perspective
gouache and according to perspective'. Indeed the geometry and innovations in landscape art. Alberti
text ends with a discourse on perspective, of which wrote his treatise at the time of Van Eyck and the
Sorte describes two methods, one theoretical earliest Italian landscapists;Pelerin, who refined the
founded in distance and angle measurement and a distance point construction in 1505 was the con-
second, more practical,for which he employs a mir- temporary of Leonardoand Giorgione; Vignola who
ror marked with a graticule. For Sorte perspective is showed in 1535 that Pelerin and Alberti's construc-
'the foundation of painting' without which nothing tion produced the same geometrical results wrote at
can be painted of any value. And this skill of paint- the time of Titian's and Bruegel's maturity and was
ing is itself fundamentalto the work of the chorogra- published in the productive years of Paolo Veronese
pher: 'niuna potra esser corografo, che non sappia and Jacopo Bassano. The great advances of Pascal
disegnare o dipingere'.50 and Desargues in the 1630s in establishing the con-
The relationship between perspective and land- vergence of parallellines and showing their apparent
scape could scarcely be more clear than in Sorte's visual convergence to be a necessary consequence of
text where the practical surveyor and topographer point, line and surfacedefinitions devoid of Euclidian
offers one of the earliest treatises on the art of paint- metrical assumptions, coincide with the Dutch
ing landscape. The early twentieth-century art supremacy in optics and its great school of land-
historian BernardBerenson agreed with Sorte. 'Space scape. Geometrical continuity and new transform-
composition' he wrote, is the 'bone and marrow of ational rules between geometrical forms are
the art of landscape'.Referringto the early Umbrian propounded in a treatise by Poncelet written at the
landscapists Pietro Perugino and Raphael, Berenson same time that Constable and Turnerwere exploring
claimed their triumphlay less in the subtle modelling light and atmosphere in landscape in ways that
of atmosphere and elaborate study of light and implicitly challenged the dominance of linear per-
shade such as we find in the Venetians than in the spective for space composition. Finally von Staud in
technique of space composition. Although Berenson the 1840s eliminated metricalideas from perspective
speaks of this ability to compose space as 'a structure geometry, revealing the possibility of a
of feeling' rather than a specific technique based on non-Euclidian space and n-dimensional construc-
sophisticated geometrical theory, he is well aware of tions. His work was completed by F. Klein in 1875 a
that sense of power and control over space that the little before modernists eliminated perspective from
spectator derives from the perspective organization space composition and at the same time as the first
of landscape painting: patents were taken out for modern photographic
in suchpictures,how freelyone breathes-as if a load printing techniques.53
had just been lifted from one's breast,how refreshed,
how noble,how potentone feels. 1 LANDSCAPE, PROSPECT AND VISUAL
IDEOLOGY
No longer is the spectator delighted only by surface While it is not suggested that perspective stands
pattern and the arrangement of forms across two alone as the basis for realism and landscape painting
Evolution
of thelandscape idea 55
-the demand for il vero in Renaissance art was a The Italian word for perspective is prospettiva.It
complex social and culturalproduct54-it is argued combines senses which in moder English are dis-
that the realist illusion of space which was revol- tinct: 'perspective' and 'prospect'. Perspective itself
utionized more by perspective than any other tech- has a number of meanings in English, but as the pro-
nique was, through perspective, aligned to the jection of a spatial image onto a plane it first appears
physical appropriation of space as property, or ter- in the later decades of the sixteenth century. This
ritory. Surveyors' charts which located and usage is found for example in John Dee's Preface to
measured individual estates, for example in England the first English translationof Euclid(1570). Dee, the
after the dissolution of monasteries; cartographers' Elizabethan mathematician,navigational instrument
maps which used the graticule to apportion global maker and magician, links this use of perspective to
space, for example the line defined by Pope painting in a classically renaissanceway:
Alexander VI dividing the new world between
Portugal and Spain; engineers' plans for fortresses great skill of Geometrie,Arithmetik,Perspectiveand
and cannon trajectories to conquer or defend Anthropographie with many otherparticulararts hath
national territory, as for example Vauban's French the Zographer need of for his perfection... This
work or Sorte's for the Venetian defences against mechanicalZographer(commonlycalledthe Painter)is
marvelousin his skil, and seemeth to have a divine
Austria; all of these are examples of the application
of geometry to the production of real property.55 power.58
They presuppose a different concept of space
ownership than the contingent concept of a feudal Dee is writing at the opening of a decade which will
society where land is locked into a web of interde- see Saxton's county maps published and when a new
pendent lordships based on fief and fealty. The new 'image of the country' was being produced as an
chorographies which decorated the walls of six- aspect of Elizabethan patriotism, using maps and
teenth-century council halls and signorial palaces,56 landscape representations as instruments of Tudor
and the new taste for accurate renderings of the power and nationalist ideology.59
external world which gradually moved from back- By 1605 we can find reference to perspective as a
ground to main subject matter, were both organized form of insight, a point of view, as in the phrase 'get-
by perspective geometry and achieve aesthetically ting something into perspective', or seeing it in its
what maps, surveys and ordnance charts achieve true light, its correct relationship with other things.
practically.Landscapeis thus a way of seeing, a com- Many of the early references quoted in the Oxford
position and structuring of the world so that it may English Dictionary to support the definition of per-
be appropriatedby a detached, individual spectator spective as a drawing contrived to represent true
to whom an illusion of order and control is offered space and distance relations refer to landscape and
through the composition of space according to the garden layout.60 The visual ideology of perspective
certainties of geometry. That illusion very and of landscape as ways of seeing nature, indeed a
frequently complemented a very real power and true way of seeing, is certainly currentin the English
control over fields and farms on the part of patrons Renaissance.When we turn to the word prospectwe
and owners of landscape paintings.57 Landscapedis- find it used to denote a view outward, a looking for-
tances us from the world in critical ways, defining a ward in time as well as space. By the end of the six-
particular relationship with nature and those who teenth century prospect carried the sense of 'an
appear in nature, and offers us the illusion of a world extensive or commandingsight or view, a view of
in which we may participate subjectively by enter- the landscape as affected by one's position'.61 This
ing the picture frame along the perspectival axis. But neatly reflects a period when command over land
this is an aesthetic entrance not an active engage- was being established on new commercially-run
ment with a nature or space that has its own life. estates by Tudor enclosers and the new landowners
Implicit in the landscape idea is a visual ideology of measured monastic properties. That command
which was extended from painting to our relation- was established with the help of the surveyors'
ship with the real world whose 'frameand compass' 'malicious craft', the geometry which wrote new
Elizabethansso admiredand which Georgian English perspectives across real landscapes.62
gentlemen would only approach through the langu- By the mid-seventeenth century 'prospect' had
age of landscape painting or the optical distortion of become a substitute for landscape. The command
their Claude Glass. that it implied was as much social and political as
56 DENISCOSGROVE

FIGURE6. Rousham garden, Oxfordshire. The Bowling Green: a Claudian landscape by William Kent

spatial. Commanding views are the theme of ing a fine view. The prospect of the eye was equally
country house painting, poetry and landscaping commercial, such woodland in the landscape was an
throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth cen- economic investment. It represented prospecting in
turies (Fig 6), and a number of recent studies have wood, as those who scoured the landscape in the fol-
revealed the degree to which landscape was a lowing century seeking gold would be described.64
vehicle for social and moral debate during this
period.63 The prospects designed for men like the LANDSCAPE AND THE HUMANIST
Duke of Marlborough at Blenheim who had made
their fortunes from war had an appropriately mili- TRADITION IN GEOGRAPHY
tary characterin their blocks of woodland set against Landscape comes into English language geography
shaven lawns. This no doubt reinforced the image of primarily from the German landschaft.Much has
power and authority, at least for those who wielded been written about the fact that the German word
it. The survey skills which calculated and laid out means area, without any particularly aesthetic or
these landscapes produced fortification plans, ord- artistic, or even visual connotations.65 My own
nance charts and campaign maps as well as serving knowledge of German usage is too meagre to con-
the requirementsof the parliamentaryenclosers. It is test this claim, but some comment is warranted. In
not surprisingthat in his critique of emparkmentand Humboldt's Kosmos, regarded by many as one of
landscaping Oliver Goldsmith in The Deserted Vil- the two pillars upon which German geography was
lage should describe the park that has replaced erected, a whole section is devoted to the history of
Sweet Auburn in military metaphors: 'its vistas the love of landscape and nature up to the time of
strike, its palaces surprise'. In those great English Goethe whom Humboldt greatly revered and who
landscape parks prospect also signified the future. was a major visual theorist.66 English geographers
Control was as much temporal as spatial. Their could have taken their landscape concept from John
clumps of oak and beech would not be seen in full Ruskin and discovered a usage not very different
maturity by those who had them planted, but from Humboldt's.67 More directly, Landschaftin the
security of property ensured for later scions of the work of Hettner and Passarge, the main sources for
family tree the prospect on inheritanceof command- English language geographers like Carl Sauer and
Evolutionof thelandscape idea 57
R. E. Dickinson of the landscape concept, was pling, survey or detailed inventory,he achieves the
confined to the study of visible forms, it was the comprehensive butsyntheticperspectiveof the helicop-
eye which determined their selection and inclusion. ter pilot or balloonistarmedwith maps,photographs
Moreover, Landschaft,as Sauer's classic paper- anda pairof binoculars.72
'Morphology of Landscape'-makes clear,68 was to
be studied by the chorological method and its results The distinction seems spurious, it is drawn at the
transmitted descriptively in prose and above all by level of technique rather than aims and objectives.
the map. Given what we know of the traditional Given what we know of Leonardo's detailed notes
links between cartography, chorography and land- on how light falls upon different rock formations, or
scape painting it is difficult to accept the argument of Constable's inventories of cloud formations and
that Landschaftsustained in German geography the atmospheric conditions, of Turner's strapping him-
entirely neutral sense of area or regionas its English self to a ship's mast the better to observe the move-
and American devotees of the inter-war period ment of the storm, or of Ruskin's instructions to
claimed. Certainly there is a thread of interest in painters to rival the geologist, botanist and
German geography for Gestaltende Geografie, meteorologist in their knowledge of topography,
study of aesthetic holism in landscape, that runs geology, vegetation and skies, it is likely that had
from Humboldt through Ewald Banse to Gerhart they had access to the battery of techniques with
Hard.69 which Mikesell would arm his geographer they
Anglo-Saxon geographers introducing landscape would all have made good use of them. Certainly
as an areal concept were not unaware of the prob- Christoforo Sorte would have revelled in their use to
lems caused by its common usage as a painters'term. improve his 'chorographicart',and both Bruegel and
But in the interests of a scientific geography they Titian produced landscapes that have a perspective
were keen to distance their concept of landscape far above the ground and are as comprehensive and
from that of painters or literary writers; poets and synthetic as Mikesell could wish for. Above all the
novelists. Thus the links between landscape, per- geometry which underlay perspective, the construc-
spective and the control of space as property-the tional principle of landscapes, and which gave cer-
visual ideology common to landscape painting and tainty to their realism, is the same geometry which
cartography-have gone unrecorded and unex- determines the graticule of Mikesell's maps and
plored by geographers. This is particularly surpris- delimits the boundaries or locates the elements of his
ing today when we are far clearerabout the role that geographical landscapes.
geography has played in the evolution of the Beyond the issue of specific techniques there are
bourgeois concept of individual and national also methodological similarities between landscape
space.70 Landscaperemains part of our unexamined in painting and in geography, similaritieswhich have
discourse, to be embraced by humanist geographers allowed geographers to adopt unconsciously some-
as a concept which appears to fulfil their desire for a thing of the visual ideology integral to the landscape
contextual and anti-positivist geography. Whereas idea. Like other area concepts in geography, region
in the past landscape geographers actively distanced or pays, landscape has been closely associated in
their concept from that of common usage, today geography with the morphological method.73 Mor-
writers like Samuels, Meinig, Wreford Watson and phology is the study of constituent forms, their
Pocock take the opposite position.71 In both periods isolation, analysis and recomposition into a syn-
of its popularity in geography landscape as an art- thetic whole. When applied to the visible forms of a
istic concept is given the role of potential or actual delimited area of land this is termed chorology.74
challenger to geographical science. Marwyn The result of a landscape chorology is a static
Mikesell's claim (with its interesting referenceto per- pattern or picture whose internal relations and con-
spective) is an example of this view: stituent forms are understood, but which lacks pro-
cess or change. Indeed, one of the criticisms of
the perspectiveof the geographeris not that of the
individualobserverlocatedat a particular chorology in the post-war years was precisely that it
point on the failed to
ground.The geographer'swork entailsmap interpret- explain the processes giving rise to the
ationas well as direct6bfer-vation,-and
hemakesno dis- forms and spatial relations it described. The idea of
tinction between foreground and background.The change, or process, is very difficult to incorporate
landscapeof the geographeris thusvery differentfrom into landscape painting, although there are certain
that of the painter,poet or novelist.By meansof sam- conventions like the memento mori or the ruined
58 DENISCOSGROVE

building which occasionally do so. But one of the ing implicit in much of our geography still awaits
consistent purposes of landscape painting has been detailed examination. At the most obvious level, we
to present an image of order and proportioned con- warn students of the pitfalls of accepting the auth-
trol, to suppress evidence of tension and conflict ority of numbers, of the dangers of misused stat-
between social groups and within human relations in istics, but virtually never those of accepting the
the environment. This is true for the villa landscapes cartographic, still less the landscape, image. Less
painted by Paolo Veronese in the strife-ridden obviously, but more significantly for geographical
Venetian countryside of the later sixteenth century, scholarship, geography and the arts, or geography
it was equally true for the arcadianimage of English as art, is frequently presented as a refuge from ten-
landscape parks in the Georgian period of ruralcon- dentious social and political debates within the disci-
flict and transformation.In this sense the alignment pline, and the 'soul' of geography a resort in which
of geographical landscape with morphology serves we can express our 'passions' in the neutral and
to reproduce a central dimension of the ideology of refined area of subjectivity and humane discourse,
the landscape idea as it was developed in the arts. expressing ourselves in those reverential tones that
Despite appearancesthe situation is little different serve purely to sustain mystification. Geography
in much of contemporary geographical use of land- and the arts are too important for this. Both bear
scape. Too often geographical humanists make the directly upon our world, both can challenge as well
mistake of assuming that art and within it, landscape, as support the ways we structure, modify and see
are to do with the subjective, somehow standing that world.
against science and its proclaimed objective certain- In TheoreticalGeographyBunge came closer than
ties.75 The subjectivism of art is a recent and by no any other recent geographical writer to acknowledg-
means fully accepted thesis, a product above all of ing the significance of the graphic image in geo-
the artistic self-image generated in the Romantic graphy. His later, brilliant use of cartography as a
movement. Originally, as we have seen, landscape subversive art bears testimony to his insight.79
was composed and constructed by techniques which Bunge was equally clear that geometry was the
w'ereconsidered to ensure the certainty of reproduc- language of space, the guarantor of certainty in
ing the real world. Equally, again as we have seen, geographical science, visually and logically. As
there is an inherent conservatism in the landscape shown, the relationship between geometry, optics
idea, in its celebration of property and of an and the study of geographic space is very strong in
unchanging status quo, in its suppression of tension European intellectual history since the Renais-
between groups in the landscape. When we take sance.80 In Bunge's thesis spatial geometry was
over landscape into geography, and particularlyinto aligned to a powerful claim for geography as a
public policy we inevitably import in large measure generalizing positivist science, a very different con-
the realist, visual values with which it has been ception of science from that understood by the
loaded: its connections with a way of seeing, its dis- founders of modem geometry and perspective,
tancing of subject and object and its conservatism in many of whom still recalled the magic of Pythagoras
presenting an image of natural and social harmony. and regarded metaphysics as being as much a branch
John Punter has pinpointed the place of these social of science as empirical study,81 and for whom the
and visual values in contemporary discussions of trivium and quadriviumwere equal contributors to
landscape and the conservation and planning of the seven liberal arts. In rejecting science tout court,
areas defined as having 'landscape value'.76 A vast humanist geographers have severed links with
field awaits research into contemporary visual and spatial geometry, concentrated on the material of
social values in landscape77 the trivium and failed, among other things, to
To return, however, to the opening point of this develop a proper critiqueof landscape.
paper. Humanist geographers have spent a great Such a division was not true of Renaissance
deal of time and energy challenging the orthodoxy humanist geographers. John Dee was as close to
of positivism, they have opened up a debate on the Ortelius and Mercator as he was to Sir Philip Sidney,
language of geography-the constraints and admired the magician Cornelius Agrippa's work as
of
opportunities language. Some have even begun to much as he did that of Copernicus. Cusanus' closest
explore the ideological assumptions inherent in our friend, the executor of his will, was Piero dal Pozzo
concepts of space itself.78 All of these are important Toscanelli. Toscanelli, from a Florentine merchant
matters. But the ideology of vision, the way of see- family, was a doctor, student of optics and the
Evolutionof the landscapeidea 59
foremost geographer of his day. As a member of the 6. See the discussion by PUNTER, J. V. (1982) 'Land-
Greek Academy at Florence, he studied one of its scape aesthetics: a synthesis and critique',in GOLD, J.
greatest intellectual trophies, Ptolemy's Cosmogra- and BURGESS,J. (eds) Valuedenvironments(London)
fia brought from Constantinople in the early years of pp. 100-23
the fifteenth century. In this work Ptolemy describes 7. PENNING-ROWSELL,E. C. (1974) 'Landscapeevalu-
a projection for the world map which uses the same ation for development plans', J. R. Tn Plann. Inst., 60:
930-4
geometrical construction as the Florentinehumanists 8. APPLETON, J. (1975) The experienceof landscape
employed to develop linear perspective.82 With the
(London)
aid of this study Toscanelli produced a map which 9. POCOCK, D. C. D. (ed.) (1981) Humanisticgeogra-
he sent with a letter to Christopher Columbus phy and literature:essays in the experienceof place
encouraging the Genoese navigator's exploration (London); DANIELS, S. J. (1981) 'Landscaping for a
west on the grounds that the distance from Europe manufacturer: Humphrey Repton's commission for
to China was shorter than was then commonly Benjamin Gott at Armley in 1809-10', J. hist. Geog.,
believed by cartographers.The geographical conse- 7: 379-96; COSGROVE, D. (ed.) (1982) 'Geography
and the Humanities', LoughboroughUniv. of Techn.,
quences of this collaboration of art, science and
skill need not be out here. But the Occ. Pap.,No. 5
practical spelled 10. This phrase is taken from BERGER,J. (1972) Ways of
example of this geographical colleague of the great
seeing (London), where some of the social impli-
humanists Alberti and Brunelleschimay remind con- cations of visual conventions are challengingly
temporary humanists in geography to pay equal explored
attention to the Albertian revolution as to that of 11. Examples are numerous. One of the earliest is
Gutenberg. FRANCESCO FELICIANO (1518) Libro d'aritmetica,
e geometria speculativa, e practicale,more commonly
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Scala & Grimaldelli(Venice). One of the most compre-
I would like to thank the following people for their hensive was Cosimo Bartoli (1564) Del modo di mis-
urarele distantie... (Venice)
help in improving upon earlier drafts of this paper:
12. MEINIG, D. (1983) 'Geography as Art' Trans.Inst. Br.
Stephen Daniels, Cole Harris, Robin Butlin and
Trevor Pringle, and those who contributed at Geogr. NS. 8: 314-28; WREFORD-WATSON, J.
(1983) 'The soul of geography', Trans.Inst. Br. Geogr.
various seminars. Some of the Italian materials were NS. 8: 385-99; BILLINGE,M. (1983) 'The Mandarin
collected during a period of study in Italy funded by dialect', Trans. Inst. Br. Geogr. NS. 8: 400-20.
a grant from the BritishAcademy. POCOCK, D. C. D. (1983) 'The paradox of human-
istic geography', Area, 15: 355-58
NOTES 13. As always, there are exceptions, although to my mind
R. (1978)'Thelandscapeindicatorsschoolin
1. GEIPEL, none have examined the visual in relation to
German geography', in LEY, D. and SAMUELS, M. geographical study as such: POCOCK, D. C. D.
(eds) Humanisticgeography:prospectsand problems (1981) 'Sight and Knowledge', Trans.Inst. Br. Geogr.
(London) pp. 155-72 NS. 6: 385-93; TUAN, YI-FU (1979) 'The eye and the
2. See for example the comments on landscape in mind's eye', in MEINIG, The interpretationof ordin-
HARVEY, D. (1969) Explanation in geography ary landscapes(NOTE 3) pp. 89-102
(London) pp. 114-15 14. BUNGE, W. (1966) Theoreticalgeography (2nd ed.
3. SAMUELS, M. (1979) 'The biography of landscape', Lund),p. xiv
in MEINIG, D. (ed.) The interpretationof ordinary 15. YATES, F. A. (1964) Giordano Bruno and the
landscapes(Oxford) pp. 51-88 Hermetic Tradition(London) pp. 160-1 discusses the
4. ROSE, C. (1981) 'William Dilthey's philosophy of his- relations of quadrivium and trivium in Renaissance
torical understanding: a neglected heritage of con- humanism, arguing that 'the two traditions appeal to
temporary humanistic geography', in STODDARD, entirely different interests. The humanist's bent is in
D. R. (ed.) Geography, ideology and social concern the direction of literature and history; he sets an
(Oxford) pp. 99-133 immense value on rhetoric and good literary style.
5. RELPH, E. (1981) Rational landscapesand humanistic The bent of the other tradition is towards philosophy,
geography(London) p. 22. This sense of landscape as theology, and also science (at the stage of magic)'.
an all inclusive, quotidian phenomenon owes a great This argument depends on a very restricted definition
deal in North American geography to the work of J. B. of humanism (see her fn. 3, p. 160), ignores the visual
Jackson.See for example the most recent collection of arts which combined literary reference (ut pictura
Jackson's landscape essays (1980), 'The necessityfor poesis) with 'scientific' skill, and fails to account for
ruinsand othertopics'(Amherst) the large number of Renaissance scholars equally at
60 DENIS COSGROVE
home in philosophy and science as they were con- agrimensuraitaliana dai tempi antichi al secolo XVII
cerned with grammar, rhetoric and classical texts, for (Torino)
example Giangiorgio Trissino and Daniele Barbaroin 30. SCHULZ, J. (1978) 'Jacopo de 'Barbari's view of
sixteenth-century Venice Venice: map making, city views, and moralized
16. EISENSTEIN, E. L. (1979) The printing press as an geography before the year 1500', The Art Bull., LX:
agent of change(Cambridge) 425-74; MAZZI, G. (1980) 'La repubblica e uno
17. MARTINES, L. (1980) Power and imagination: strumento per il dominio', in PUPPI, L. (ed.) Architet-
City-Statesin RenaissanceItaly (London) tura e utopia nella Venezia del cinquecento(Milano)
18. ALBERTI, L. B. (1966) On painting (trans. J. R. pp. 59-62. It has been pointed out that, like con-
Spencer, London) temporary ideal townscapes, the Barbarimap lacks all
19. Ibid pp. 47, 48 human presence
20. Even photography was constricted by conventions of 31. Renaissance writers never tire of emphasizing that
perspective realism, landscape painting having far geometry provides certainty. eg. Pacioli, Summa di
more influence on early photography than vice-versa. arithmetica... (note 27) p. 2r 'e in la sua Metaphysica
See GALASSI, P. (1981) Beforephotography:painting afferma (Euclid) le scientie mathematiche, essere nel
and the inventionof photography(New York) primo grado de certezza'
21. Ibid. pp. 16-17 32. McLEAN, A. (1972) Humanismand the rise of science
22. For a detailed discussion of Brunelleschi'sexperiment in TudorEngland(London) pp. 112 ff. For a full dis-
see EDGERTON, S. J. Jr. (1975) The Renaissance cussion of Cusanus' work and its impact on Renais-
rediscoveryof linearperspective(London)pp. 143-52 sance thought see CASSIRER, E. (1964) The
23. REES,R. (1980) 'Historical links between geography individual and the cosmos in Renaissancephilosophy
and art', Geogr.Rev. 70: 66 (New York)
24. This group of paintings, produced before the centrally 33. IVINS, W. M. Jr (1946) Art and geometry,a study of
planned church became architecturally popular, spaceintuitions(New York) pp. 79-80
includes Raphael's Spozalizio and Carpaccio's Recep- 34. There is no space here to explore the fascinating
tion of the English Ambassadors in the St Ursula implications of Renaissance magic theories for
cycle. The sacred significance of the circle and centre attitudes to nature and naturalbeauty. These theories
is an enormous topic with cross-cultural implications. are of course fully discussed in Yates, Giordano
See TUAN, YI-FU (1974) Topophilia: a study of Bruno... (note 15)
environmental perception attitudes and beliefs 36. There is no escaping the use of 'man' here. We are
(London) dealing with a specifically 'male' view of the world
25. The distinction between mind, or intellect, and sense 36. ALBERTI, L. B. (1965) Ten books on architecture
was central to much Renaissance thought, and is dis- (trans. of J. Leoni, 1755; facs. copy, London) p. 194
cussed in Yates, Giordano Bruno (note 15) p. 193. 37. SARTORI, P. L. (1981) 'Gli scrittori Veneti d'agraria
Geometry is of course an intellectual activity. Nicolo del cinquecento e del primo seicento. Tra realta e
Tartaglia calls it 'the pure food of intellectual life' (il utopia' in Tagliaferri, E. (ed.) Venezia e la terraferma
puro cibo della vita intellettuale) EuclideMagarense, attraverso le relazione dei rettori (Milano) pp.
philosopho(Venezia, 1543) p. FlI, in the first trans- 261-310. See particularly the last three 'days' of
lation of Euclid into Italian. None the less, one of the GALLO, A. (1565) Le dieci giornate della vera agri-
reasons why humanists like Alberti accepted the sig- culturae piaceredellavilla (Vinegia)
nificance of numbers and proportions was that the 38. ZORZI, L. (1977) II teatroe la citta. Saggia sulla scena
same proportions which pleased the intellect also italiana (Torino). On the links between theatre and
seemed to please our eyes and ears. This is a corner- cosmological theories see YATES, F. A. (1966) Theart
stone of Renaissance aesthetics of memory(London)
26. BAXANDALL, M. (1972) Painting and experiencein 39. GOMBRICH, E. (1971) 'The renaissance theory of art
fifteenth-century Italy (London) and the rise of landscape', in Gombrich, E. Norm and
27. FRA LUCA PACIOLI (1494) Summa di arithmetica, Form: studies in the art of the renaissance(London)
geometria, proportione et proportionalita (Venice). 109
See the reference to the significance of this work in 40. CLARK, K. (1956) Landscape into art (Harmond-
BRAUDEL, F. (1982) Civilization and capitalism, sworth)
15th-18th Century. Vol. II: The Wheels of Commerce 41. Significantly, the title of the essay by JACKSON, J. B.
(London) p. 573 (1979) 'Landscape as theatre' in Landscape,23: 3; and
28. SILVIO BELLI (1565) Libro del misurar con la reprinted in JACKSON, The necessityfor ruins (note
vista ... (Venezia) preface, pp. 1-2 ('certamente e cosi 5)
meravigliosa il misurarcon la vista, poi che ogni uno, 42. BLUNT, A. (1962) Artistic theory in Italy 1450-1600
che non sa la ragione par del tutto impossible') (Oxford) p. 26 Italics added
29. ROSSI, F. (1877) Groma e squadra,ovvero storia dell' 43. Quoted in Ibid. p. 50
Evolutionof the landscapeidea 61
44. Leonardo was a master not merely of linear perspec- 1500-1600', in Ferro, G. (ed.) Symposiumon histori-
tive but also of that other and distinct form of per- cal changes in spatial organisation and its experience
spective, aerialperspective, which plays a complemen- in the Mediterranean world (Genova) pp. 133-56;
tary role in creating the illusion of space through the DANIELS, D. J. (1982) 'Humphrey Repton and the
manipulation of tone, light and shade and colour morality of landscape', in GOLD, J. and BURGESS,J.
intensity. While based on optical theory and exper- (eds) Valuedenvironments(note 6) pp. 124-44
iment, aerial perspective is not geometrically founded. 58. Quoted in McLEAN, Humanism and the rise of
Leonardo's work with colour and chiaroscuro allowed science... (note 32) p. 138. The translation of Euclid
him to convey the 'mood' of space, and he saw the was by Billingsley. For Dee's importance for geogra-
superiority of painting over other arts to lie in its phy and cartography see TAYLOR, E. G. R. (1954)
ability to employ aerial perspective The mathematical practitionersof Tudor and Stuart
45. ALEXANDER, D. 'Leonardo da Vinci and fluvial England(London) pp. 26-48. For Dee and magic see
geomorphology', Am. J. Sci. 282: 735-55 YATES, GirodanoBruno(note 15) pp. 148-50
46. SCHULZ, J. (1976) 'New maps and landscape draw- 59. MORGAN, V. (1979) 'The cartographic image of the
ings by Christoforo Sorte', Mitteilungen der Kuns- country in early modem England', Trans.R. Hist. Soc.
thistorischenInstitutes in Florenz XX: 1; MAZZI, G. 29: 129-54
(1980), 'LaRepubblicae uno strumento per il dominio' 60. The whole issue of garden design along circular and
in PUPPI, L. (ed.) Architetturae Utopa nella Venezia orthogonal lines is too large to discuss here but is
del Cinquecento(Milano) pp. 59-62 obviously very closely related to the geometry under
47. SORTE, C. (1580) 'Osservazioni nella pittura', discussion, to spatial theory and those of microcosm,
reprinted in BARROCCHI, P. (ed.) (1960) Trattati macrocosm and medicinal concepts. The first such
d'arte del cinquecento:fra manierismo e controriformo garden was designed in Padua in the late sixteenth
Vol. 1 (Bari) pp. 275-301. This text merits detailed century by Daniele Barbaro, translater of Vitruvius
geographical study, not only as a discussion of land- and commentator on Euclid. See JACKSON, J. B.
scape and cartography but equally because Sorte (1980) 'Nearer than Eden' and 'Gardens to Decipher'
appears to anticipate by a century the recognition by in The necessity for ruins (note 5) pp. 19-35 and
JohnRay of the realmovement of thehydrologicalcycle 37-53
48. Letter from Vitali to Sorte, reprinted in Barrocchi, 61. OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY (OED), italics
Trattatid'art. .. (note 47) p. 275 added
49. SORTE, 'Osservazioni nella pittura' (note 47) p. 282: 62. THOMPSON, F. M. L. (1968) Charteredsurveyors:
'Inoltre ho posta detta Corografia con le sue giuste the growth of a profession(London); HARVEY, P. D.
misure e distanze in pianta'. In other words, the work A. (1980) The history of topographicmaps: symbols,
was based on a planispheric survey. On the relations picturesand surveys (London). The idea that survey-
between such survey and perspective see Edgerton. ing was a malicious and magical art was founded in
TheRenaissancerediscovery(note 22) part on the negative consequences for traditional land
50. SORTE, 'Osservazioni nella pittura'(note 47) p. 283 rights of new concepts of private property enshrined
51. BERENSON, B. (1952) Italian painters of the Renais- in the legal document that the surveyor produced, in
sance'(London) p. 12 part on the recognition of connections between the
52. Quoted in WILTON, A. (1980) Turner and the geometry of survey techniques and that of hermetic
sublime(London) p. 70 magicians. In the book burnings under Edward VI
53. IVINS, Art and geometry (note 33) pp. 105-10; books containing geometrical figures were particu-
GALASSI, BeforePhotography(note 20) larly at risk
54. MARTINES, Power and imagination(note 17); BAX- 63. TURNER, J. (1979) The politics of landscape:rural
ANDALL, Paintingand experience(note 26) scenery and society in English poetry 1630-1690
55. A point that has not gone entirely unnoticed by his- (Oxford); ADAMS, J. (1979) The artist and the
torical geographers. See for example Ian Adams' work country house. A history of country house and garden
on the role of land surveyors in eighteenth-century view painting in Britain 1540-1870 (London);
Scottish agrarian change. ADAMS, I. H. (1980) 'The BARRELL,J. (1980) The dark side of the landscape:
agents of agrarian change', in PARRY, M. L. and the rural poor in English painting 1631-1741 (Cam-
SLATER, T. R. (eds) The making of the Scottish bridge); ROSENTHAL, M. (1982) British landscape
countryside(London) pp. 155-75, esp. pp. 167-70 painting(London)
56. For example the great gallery of maps painted by 64. The OED notes that the verb 'to prospect' emerged in
Ignazio Dante in the Vatican (1580-83) or the similar the nineteenth century referring to the particularly
commissions to Christoforo Sorte to paint walls in the capitalist activities of speculative gold mining and
Ducal Palace at Venice (1578 and 1586) playing the stock exchange. It is interesting to note
57. COSGROVE, D. (1982) 'Agrarianchange, villa build- how 'speculation' has itself roots in visual
ing and landscape: the Godi estates in Vicenza terminology
62 DENIS COSGROVE
65. MIKESELL,M. (1968) 'Landscape', in International 71. Notes 3 and 12
encyclopaediaof the social sciences (New York) p. 72. MIKESELL,'Landscape'(note 64) p. 578
577-79. DICKINSON, R. E. (1939) 'Landscape and 73. Explicitly so by SAUER, 'Morphology of Landscape'
Society', Scott. geogr. Mag. 55: 1-15; HART- (note 67), and equally in physical geography where
SHORNE, R. (1939) The nature of geography.A sur- landscape in the title suggests a morphological study
vey of currentthought in the light of the past (Lancas- of landforms
ter, Pa.) 74. VAN PAASEN, C. (1957) The classical tradition of
66. HUMBOLDT, A. VON (1849-52) Cosmos:a sketch geography(Groningen)
of a physical description of the Universe (London), 75. See for example the diagram which serves as the
Vol. II. The relationship between the landscape idea foundation for the discussion of spatial concepts in
and attitudes to nature in the nineteenth century is SACK, R. D. (1980) Conceptionsof space in social
of course enormously complex. On Goethe and thought: a geographical perspective (Minneapolis) p.
geography see SEAMON, D. (1978) 'Goethe's 25
approach to the natural world: implications for 76. PUNTER, J. 'Landscapeaesthetics...' (note 6)
environmental theory and education', in LEY and 77. Some of the essays in GOLD, and BURGESS, Valued
SAMUELS, Humanistic Geography (note 1) pp. environments(note 6) begin to broach this field, as
238-50 have papers presented in recent IBG sessions of
67. COSGROVE, D. (1979) 'John Ruskin and the 'Geography and the Media'
geographical imagination' Geog.Rev. 69: 43-62 78. SACK, Conceptionsof Space... (note 74)
68. SAUER, C. 0. (1926) 'The morphology of landscape', 79. BUNGE, W. (1973) 'The geography of human
reprinted in LEIGHLY,J. (ed.) (1963) Land and life: survival',Ann. Ass. Am. Geogr.63: 275-95
selections from the writings of Carl Ortwin Sauer 80. This is distinct from the relations of Greek geometry
(Berkeley and Los Angeles) which apparently were derived from a tactile-
69. BANSE, E. (1924) Die Seele der Geographie muscular apprehension of space, an apprehension
(Brunswick);HARD, G. (1965) 'Arkadien in Deutch- which was non-visual. IVINS, Art and geometry (note
land', Die Erde,96: 31-4 33)
70. HARVEY, D. (1974) 'What kind of geography for 81. YATES, GiordanoBruno(note 15) pp. 144-56
what kind of public policy', Trans. Inst. Br. Geogr.; 82. EDGERTON, The Renaissance rediscovery... (note
HARVEY, D. (1984) 'On the history and present con- 22)
dition of geography: an historical materialist
manifesto', Prof.Geogr.35: 1-10

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