GOETHE, BONTHEX AND SOANE Already amongst his earlier designs there is an amazingly personal blend of Baroque grandeur of composition with Grecian severity of detail. Soane was the first (except for Piranesi, the engraver) to understand the terr&ilitb of the Greek Doric order. Then during the nineties Soane discovered that the severity which was his aim could be achieved by sheer unadorned surface—a discovery which makes his work appear so topical to-day. He had been appointed architect to the Bank of England in 1788. The exterior, before it was converted by recent governors and directors into a podium for a piece of 20th-century commercial showiness, indicates this new and to the majority shocking austerity. The interiors, preserved though atrociously ill-treated, give an even clearer idea of his sense of surface integrity. Walls flow smoothly into vaults. Mouldings are reduced to a minimum. Arches sit on piers which they seem to touch only in points. No precedent is allowed to cramp the master's style. The Dulwich Gallery of 1811- 14 (damaged by bombs but not irreparably) and Soane's own house in Lincoln's Inn Fields (pi. xcvm), built in 1812-13 and intended to be carried on to more than double its width, are his most inde- pendent designs. The ground floor of the house has severely plain arcading in front of the actual wall; the first floor repeats this un- usual motif with the variation of a centre with Ionic columns sup- porting the thinnest of architraves, and wings where the weight of the piers is lightened by typically Soanian incised ornament. The top pavilions on die left and the right are equally original. Except for die Ionic columns there is not one motif in the whole facade that has a Greek or Roman ancestry. Here more than anywhere in archi- tecture England approached a new style unhampered by the past, and a style moreover that possesses the crispness and precision of the dawning machine age. Soane for all we know was not in special sympathy with that age, which in most of its social and visual aspects was still sordid enough. Soane was a wilful, obstinate and irritable character, and wilful is his almost Art Nouveau looking ornament. But its mining is clear. These delicate lines emphasise the planes into which they are cut, just as the lack of pediments on die flat roofs emphasise the cubic relations of such planes. From the beginning of his career Soane had been fascinated by this problem of cubic relations. He first expressed it with massive Doric columns and rustication, but later with flat surfaces of seeming skin or film or slab thinness. 195