Tom MacWood said:
"In my opinion Raynor is the king of the 'Artistic Paradox & Aesthetic Tension'. Known for engineered features (notably his green complexes), Raynor's golf courses are among the most natural I've run across. He was fortunate to have been blessed with a number of extraordinary sites, and the sense to leave well enough alone between tee and green. An unaltered beautiful landscape juxtaposed with his man-made green sites creates an appealing tension."
Tom MacW:
Interesting observation or perhaps I should say preference on your part. I certianly agree with you that Raynor may be the king of artistic paradox and aesthetic tension simply because his man-made features are so engineered and angular looking juxtaoposed against the natural landscapes he used. To me that certainly creates a paradox and an aesthetic or artisitc tension. To me that's never been appealing looking, at least not until relatively recently. That (my feeling about Raynor's style) is still an enigma to me, though, in an aesthetic sense. I account it (recently) to how well I've recently seen most all Raynor's course actually PLAY. The angularity clearly creates much smaller and thinner "margins for error" in playing golf on Raynor courses or courses of that highly angular and engineered look, and I like that---I think it generally just makes them play interesting, challenging and sometimes much more intense for that very reason than courses on the other end of the spectrum that have an over-all far more natural look (ie man-made features that are seamlessly "tied in" to natural grades and natural "lines").
I do not agree, though, that Raynor could be consider at all unique in his particular era for 'leaving well enough alone', as you say, between tee and green. Raynor died in 1926 and in that early era not many golf architects ever did much between tee and green compared to architects today unless they absolutely had to to overcome some obstacle or problem to routing or the playing of golf. They simply didn't have the technology in equipment compared to architects today to easily do things like shape entire mid-bodies of holes and so they simply featured what they found more simply with man-made architectural supplements such as bunkering or mounds et al.
But the distinctions between what an architect with the style of a Raynor did and didn't do on any site is perhaps the most obvious and stark of all the major architects I'm aware of.
Architects sometimes talked about "hiding the hand of man" in an attempt to create a general natural look throughout a golf course---in a real sense to extinguish the demarcations between what they made and what they didn't touch. Some call this "tying in" their man-made features with the land (natural grades and such). In my opinion, an architect such as MacKenzie is on one end of the spectrum that way and an architect such as Raynor is on the other end of the spectrum.
Personally, I like the diversity of all of it as I think the vast differences in styles in golf architecture is the primary reason for the richness and variety of the entire art or golf architecture.