"He was reminded of a Dutch book whose moral he often returned to: De Schoonheid van hoogspanningslijnen in het Hollandse landschap, written by a couple of academics in Rotterdam University, Anne Kieke Backer and Arij de Boode. The Beauty of Electricity Pylons in the Dutch Landscape was a defence of the contribution of transmission engineering to the visual appeal of Holland, referencing the often ignored grandeur of the towers on their march from power stations to cities. Its particular interest for Ian, however, lay in its thesis about the history of the Dutch relationship to windmills, for it emphasised that these early industrial objects had originally been felt to have all the pylons’ threateningly alien qualities, rather than the air of enchantment and playfulness now routinely associated with them. They had been denounced from pulpits and occasionally burnt to the ground by suspicious villagers. The re-evaluation of the windmills had in large part been the work of the great painters of the Dutch Golden Age, who, moved by their country’s dependence on the rotating utilitarian objects, gave them pride of place in their canvases, taking care to throw their finest aspect into relief, like their resilience during storms and the glint of their sails in the late afternoon sun. … It would perhaps be left to artists of our own day to teach us to discern the virtues of the furniture of contemporary technology."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
University of Cambridge alumniTelevision personalitiesNon-fiction authorsFellows of the Royal Society of LiteraturePeople from Zürich
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
p. 212.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Alain_de_Botton
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Alain de Botton
63 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Alain de Botton →
Related Quotes
"It would scarcely be acceptable, for example, to ask in the course of an ordinary conversation what our society holds…"
"It wasn't only fanatics and drunkards who began conversations with strangers in public."
"Deciding to avoid other people does not necessarily equate with having no desire whatsoever for company; it may simpl…"
"Life is near-death experience."
"I think where people tend to end up results from a combination of encouragement, accident, and lucky break, etc. etc.…"
"This ideal University of Life … would never take the importance of culture for granted. It would know that culture is…"
"Socrates compared living without thinking systematically to practicing an activity like pottery or shoemaking without…"
"There may be no good reason for things to be the way they are."
"It is by finding out what something is not that one comes closest to understanding what it is."
"Philosophy had supplied Socrates with convictions in which he had been able to have rational, as opposed to hysterica…"