The Classical Ascent: Michael Curtis on the Architecture of Virtue and the Modern Morass

In an era where specialization often fragments the artistic soul, Michael Curtis stands as a defiant archetype of the Renaissance man. Architect, sculptor, painter, and poet-his hands are as comfortable shaping the cadence of a verse as they are molding clay or drafting the columned facades of a courthouse.

His work resides in the Library of Congress and the Supreme Court, yet his gaze remains fixed on a horizon far broader than accolades. To speak with Curtis is to step out of the frantic, fragmented noise of the contemporary world and into a hall of stone and silence, where the light falls heavy with the dust of centuries.

Michael CurtisMichael Curtis

The Vanity of the Modern

There is a distinct friction when Curtis speaks of the “modern.” It is not merely a designation of time for him, but a directional choice-often a downward one. He recalls Jonathan Swift’s Battle of the Books, critiquing the inherent vanity of the present moment assuming superiority over the past simply because it arrived later.

Curtis challenges the Darwinian drift of cultural evolution-the assumption that art evolves linearly like a biological organism. Instead, he views “Modern Art” as a fractured collection of fleeting fashions, changing season to season like the cut of a shoe.

“The ‘Classical’ looks to wisdom; the ‘Modern’ looks to fact, and moderns hop on facts when wearing pointy caps, squealing, ‘See! See! Look at me, a-bouncing on my pogo-stick.'”

The distinction is directional. The classical view is an ascent-a climbing toward the ideal, toward virtue, toward a “light of understanding.” The modern view, conversely, often looks down into the “molding dirt,” fascinated by the decomposition of meaning. It is a choice between looking up at the stars to find the geometry of the soul, or looking down at the earth to catalog the chaotic scattering of dust.

Classical Academy ElevationClassical Academy Elevation

A Bath of Exquisite Beauty

When the conversation turns to the value of exposure-what we see and how we see it-the contrast sharpens. Curtis evokes William Blake, who possessed the vision to see a world in a grain of sand and heaven in a wild flower.

Compare this to the modern shock-artist Andres Serrano viewing Guido Reni’s Crucifixion not as a portal to the divine, but as a vessel for base bodily fluids. The difference lies in the quality of the observer.

Art, in Curtis’s estimation, is the mechanism by which the universe knows itself through the human mind. It is an act of remembrance, recalling the stardust from which we are knit. To engage with the classical-the best of what has been thought and made-is to ascend the ladder of being. To wallow in the “passions of the moment” is to risk descending beneath the worm.

The modern world, soiled by cynicism and irony, “stinks,” Curtis asserts with characteristic bluntness. What is needed is not more novelty, but a cleansing: “a fresh, healthy bath of exquisite beauty and abiding truth.”

The AEGEA Project

This philosophy of ascent is not limited to paper or canvas. It is currently manifesting in AEGEA, a colossal 58-square-mile undertaking in Florida. The name itself is a palindrome, an acronym, and an homage to the Aegean roots of Western civilization.

Curtis envisions this not merely as a resort, but as a permanent World’s Fair of civilization-eleven village colonies representing the great traditions of Grecia, Italia, Dacia, and beyond. It is a fortress of aesthetics, a “community of nations” designed to grow into the future without the corrosive rust of modernist deconstruction.

While the financial gears turn to raise the billions required, Curtis continues the artist’s labor: composing verse plays and sculpting models, including a twenty-four-foot “Striding Liberty.”

General Eisenhower by Michael CurtisGeneral Eisenhower by Michael Curtis

The Agon of Inspiration

Curtis admits his debt to the masters-Simonides, Martial, Shakespeare, and Pope. His aesthetic lineage traces back to the Attic Greeks; he favors the red-figure pottery style and the archaic rigidity that holds potential energy.

His critique of his predecessors is sharp: Dickinson he finds inclined to “quaintness,” Shelley seduces one into “breathlessness,” and Whitman is rejected entirely. Among contemporaries, he finds kinship in the competitive spirit-the Greek agon-with poets like Joseph Salemi and Leo Yakevich. It is a steel-sharpening-steel dynamic, vital for the survival of the craft.

The Solitary Classicist

To illustrate the position of the classicist in a modern world, Curtis offers an apologue-a narrative allegory of a King and a bedraggled multitude.

In the verse, a war-weary crowd approaches a great King, offering their misery and “baseness” as if it were a gift. The King, gazing from a tower of long sight, rejects them. He demands not their wounds, but their strength; not their dirt, but their cleansing.

“Clean your backsides, cleanse your minds, / Love into greatness, or in baseness die.”

As the multitude slithers away in “slickness and slime,” a single figure remains-a “spider of a man.” He avoids the filth, weaving a web of silver silk that mirrors the majesty of the King’s hall. It is a striking image of the artist who refuses to succumb to the collective decay, spinning geometry and light in the dark shadow of the tower.

In a world driven by techne-technology-Curtis grudgingly accepts the digital realm. It is, after all, the only way the scattered tribe of classicists can find one another across the vast, noisy distance, signaling like lighthouses over a dark sea.