By Kevin
D. Williamson
Thursday,
July 20, 2023
Augustus
boasted that he had found Rome a city of brick and left it a city of marble: “Marmoream
relinquo, quam latericiam accepi.” That doesn’t really seem to be true,
historically, though the opening of the marble quarries at Carrara did provide
the new emperor with raw materials for some new construction and a few
upgrades. Rome’s transformation wasn’t architectural but political: from
Octavian to Augustus, from republic to empire, from conservative restraint to
imperial grandiosity.
The way
things went, the Romans would have been better off with their sturdy city of
brick.
Two days
in Washington, D.C., our own imperial city of marble, is enough to remind me
how much I dislike this place.
Washington
has its share of urban problems, though from the street level it feels a lot
more squared-away than the typical major U.S. city. It remains in the top 25
when it comes to rates of violent crime, but its murders per capita run about
one-quarter of what they suffer in St. Louis, less than half what they endure
in Baton Rouge, and just over half of what they have to put up with in Kansas
City. It has a high rate of homelessness and a very visible vagrancy problem,
though not quite what one sees in Los Angeles or New York City. Its public spaces
feel relatively—relatively!—orderly and tidy compared to most other big cities
in the United States. Going by undergraduate and advanced degrees, Washington
is one of the most highly educated cities in the country; household incomes are
half-again as much here as in Jacksonville or Phoenix.
What I
find objectionable about Washington is the thing that brings so many tourists
here every year: all that marble. Not the marble itself, of course, but what it
stands for, which is, in Washington, the same thing it was in Augustan Rome:
the worship of power.
There is
something genuinely bizarre about our capital city. From the pilgrims to the
Founding Fathers, Americans often thought of themselves in Old Testament terms,
as new Israelites building a new Jerusalem, that inescapable “shining city on a
hill” of American political rhetoric. And what looms over Washington? Egypt, in
the form of a gigantic obelisk erected to the memory of the man after whom the
city is named. But, then, Washington isn’t really named after George
Washington, the man—it is named after Washington, the god-man, who is depicted
in the company of Roman deities (Minerva, Vulcan, Ceres), swathed in the purple
of a Roman imperator, seated on a throne, sword in one hand, the
other hand making a gesture of command. The divine attendant at his left hand
blows a triumphal trumpet, the one at his right hand bears a fasces.
The scene is titled, appropriately enough, The Apotheosis of Washington.
That
work, found on the inside of the Capitol dome, was painted by Constantino
Brumidi, whose previous clients had been the Vatican and Pope Gregory XVI, a
fact that surely would have scandalized the Puritans, whose horror of the pomp
and what they judged to be idolatry in Catholic and Catholic-adjacent religion
was so intense that they had passed a law calling for the execution of any
Jesuit who sneaked into Massachusetts. Somewhere between the modest New England
meetinghouse and the thoroughly pagan Greco-Roman temples and monuments of
Washington, something went wrong—from brick to marble.
Architecture
isn’t a mode of ideology, but it does capture and express a sensibility.
When autocratic nationalists in the early 20th century took up
the fasces as their symbol (giving us the word fascism),
they looked back to Augustan models even as they were giddy with the
potentialities of a modern technological age that was just coming into its own.
The Italian Futurists at times seemed to be interested in only two things:
airplanes and misogyny—both of which, they imagined, were related to strength.
Strength, in the fascist mind, solves all problems—it is not for nothing that
our “new right” in the United States is at least as interested in weightlifting
and a particularly cartoonish, cage-fighting form of performative masculinity
as it is in any political idea. To make power visible is fundamental to the
fascist aesthetic, and the fascist aesthetic has never been restricted to
fascists per se: Paul Phillipe Cret gave Washington the Eccles Building in 1937, while the capital
city was under the spell of Franklin Roosevelt, who had difficulty containing
his desire to gush about that “admirable Italian gentleman,” Benito Mussolini.
The Eccles Building, which houses the Federal Reserve, would have been right at
home in the Berlin imagined by Adolf Hitler and Albert Speer: one part Roman
Empire, one part Golden Age of Flight.
As
American sensibilities grew uglier, so did Washington. The FBI headquarters is very possibly the ugliest
public building in these United States—it hardly looks like it belongs to the
same civilization as, say, Philadelphia’s City Hall, and, in some important sense, it
doesn’t. Frank Gehry’s Eisenhower Memorial is perplexingly disconnected to its
subject and its times; the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., arguably the most
significant Christian minister in American history, is memorialized in a Soviet brutalist (Chinese
sculptor Lei Yixin’s earlier subjects had included Mao Zedong) relief
reminiscent of such works as the Monument of the Bulgarian-Soviet Friendship.
It is
not as though we have forgotten how to make monuments—Glenna Goodacre’s Vietnam Women’s
Memorial was a
product of the 1990s—but we have committed ourselves to another kind of public
life, another style of political life.
Washington’s
style is not limited to Washington, of course. Political grandiosity is a
feature of state capitals, too, and even of college campuses. Paul Phillipe
Cret’s other important public works include the clocktower at the University of
Texas at Austin, from which Charles Whitman inaugurated the modern age of mass
shootings. But it wasn’t Whitman’s massacre that caused the university to close
the observation deck to the public—it was accessible for years, until the
university finally decided that too many suicidal students had leapt to their deaths
off it. The tower is, given its bloody history, not an entirely inappropriate
symbol of American life.
All in
all, I’ll take a low-slung city of brick.
No comments:
Post a Comment