To get this back on track, could someone show me where Mackenzie used the style of The Old Course in a way that would show that he loved the place. This should be easy.
(I struggle to articulate the point I want to make, so I apologize for a rambling post...)
My limited understanding of what Mac took away from TOC were his principles, that his way of working out what he liked about TOC was to discern hidden order or "truths" of a sort, that old Romanticist notion.
And then he tried to apply those principles, realizing that to copy TOC somewhere else was inartistic: maybe counter to that Behr distinction Tom Paul dredged up and offensive to him as an
artist. Or did he see himself as a draftsman?
And that he saw himself as an artist and that his work as an artist was to find the genius loci of that "somewhere else" and apply his principles. The result is a body of work that for me appears amazingly diverse in appearances.
I just find it fascinating this discussion is kinda sideways and seeking discussion: isn't that the effect of an artist, and could we have such discussions about very many GCAs?
MacKenzie is one of the few whose works defy stereotyping, isn't he? I for one have struggled to identify a "MacKenzie Green," even on courses where is he one of several GCAs whose work is represented. Instead, what it seems like he has are "periods," like a "Monterey Period" or a "Sandbelt Period" that are like entire schools of design or art. Of course maybe "period" is the wrong word, as these are tied to place as much as time.
I really struggle to see how Mac copied himself across his career. Help! I keep getting stuck at "inspiration," "homage," and
"influence," as opposed to: "here is Mac's RMW 10th rendered on a links /clay-based soil" etc etc. (And where the hell did RMW 10 come from? I tie it to Ganton 14 but there are a fair number of design steps from one to the other; is this a case of connecting dots that where no honest connection exists?)
His work for me defies easy categorizing. Try as I might, I can't stereotype his courses. To be honest, this drives me crazy. This is a man who designed wide open RM and straight jacket KH. The closest I can come are his crazy greens and a preponderance of a bunker style (CPC and Valley Club bunkers seem to look alike, but all I know is from pictures - and is that the extent of his repetition? If it's down to bunker styles on a few courses in the same area, I'm not sure that counts), but even there many have changed over time so we don't always know what the original looked like, or they were built by someone else. For example, I think many of those capes on the Melburnian bunkers were not part of Mac's original plans...yes?
Maybe in my ignorance I am giving him too much credit, but I do think it is a mistake to confuse a man's personal life with his work, whether he philandered or drank to excess or made a mess of his finances, or even a man's level of intelligence with a genius he might have, for the nature of genius is you can be an idiot or a cad in many respects and yet be in possession of this thing, or more accurately perhaps this "thing" be in possession of you!
And so - completely in my humble and (partially) ignorant opinion - JohnK, I don't agree with the underlying premise of your question, at least as far as I understand it, which probably is wrong or incomplete for I try never to underestimate your obviously high level of intelligence: "Mac loved TOC, therefore he would have copied it - and if he didn't, then he would not have copied it (in style)."
I figured he did not copy it in style or function, but he did seek to export its inherent qualities of function.
For me, I see what Mac thought of TOC via the large greens at Alwoodley and its curious nature of blindness and disorientation, in the wide, choice-laden playing corridors of RM West, in his flashing up of the bunker on Ganton 14 so that it could be seen off the tee.
Undoubtedly future posts will prove me a presbyopic idiot, but this is the way I have seen it, or not seen it, as the case may be!
Mark