That doesn't mean anything
Only in your mind because you bought into the Perennialist delusion that the Renaissance is the origin of the destruction of Western Civilization
Never mind the fact that the cultural movement of the Renaissance sprang naturally from the culture of the Late Middle Ages (i.e. it didn't appear in opposition)
The Renaissance had a wide range of artistic movements, which Naturalism was one of, and the Naturalism of the 19th century was distinct from the Naturalism of the 15th century, as the latter suffered many changes before it became the former
Besides Modernism was also, above all else, a reaction to the rapid changes of the industrial age of which the Renaissance isn't responsible for
So yes, Modernism beginning centuries after the Renaissance does mean something and it does matter, because it couldn't be a rebellion agaisnt that age
And there's still the 2nd part of my argument
The Church supporting the Renaissance was a mistake, yes.
Again a product of your Perennialist narrative
And again it goes back to the "Whose inward understanding?" question, as clearly the Perennialist understanding is antagonistic to the Church's
It's also funny to me that Perennialists should dislike the Renaissance this much, given that their philosophy is a weak "spiritual successor" to Renaissance Platonism
All ancient art is made the same way with almost no exception.
because formalism in art was their degeneration first.
Source: "My ass. Just trust me bro."
They all share the same root.
Now you have to prove this, which you can't because that would mean having to peruse all modernist art, which is unlikely for a single person
But given the sheer diversity of the movement, common sense holds this notion as virtually impossible
Also your claim extends to Perennialism as well
In reality, it was a descension.
Says you
The literary academic consensus says otherwise for a long time now
So again who is correct?
Again, the perspecive on "Ascension" was varied
For some it was viewed only through secular lens - some even purely materialistic but funnily those works are usually the ones less remembered - for others it was very much spiritual growth and rejuvenation
One such very famous example in poetry was TS Elliot's "The Waste Land", which took great inspiration from Eastern mysticism and even attempted a union with Western
Kinda like Perennialism
Really, and though you may try to deny it, Perennialists are Modernist reactionaries par excellence