apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


Blogging Wired: August 2007

7-25-modern-stained-glass.jpg

Contemporary Stained Glass. In the latest issue of Wired, there is a 1-page story on the new stained glass window in Germany's Cologne Cathedral. Amazingly artist Gerhard Richter's new window doesn't feature religious icons but jewel-toned 4-inch "pixels" of glass. The original window was damaged in World War II. What a beautiful modern intrepretation!

 
 

Tags

Blogging..., window coverings, lighting, inspiration, materials - misc.

Related Links

Share

Comments (8)

Thank you for including Richter's Cologne window this afternoon. While it's unlikely that AT fans will soon embark on stained window renovations, simply including something this beautiful is a brilliant break from anything else one might be doing today.

Cologne is currently going through some civic turmoil over a proposed central mosque. Somehow this window bridges the aesthetic traditions of Christianity and Islam in a manner that might lead cooler heads to prevail.

Thank you this visual respite this afternoon.

posted by Marco on July 25th 2007 at 9:16am
view Marco's profile

brings to mind another modern artist's foray into the divine: mark rothko's beautiful non-denominational chapel: http://www.menil.org/rothko.html

if you're ever in houston, be sure to visit!

posted by k in ditmas on July 25th 2007 at 9:35am
view k in ditmas's profile

Since "God" is very much a concept both tangible and abstract, much the way light is, I find these very appropriate, and love that representations of faith and worship are not always left in the hands of the literal.

posted by patrick (the other one) on July 25th 2007 at 11:48am
view patrick (the other one)'s profile

I'm with Patrick, here - don't the religious believe that "God is everywhere"? Also, religious pictography was originally used because the vast majority of church-goers were illiterate - not the case anymore. This isn't about "avoiding" anything, and those who think that the non-believers are in control are kidding themselves.

posted by Joy R. on July 25th 2007 at 12:14pm
view Joy R.'s profile

re: "I miss the days when it was OK to have faith without worrying about offending those who don't."

That is soooo not the case here. Why would this church be worried about offending people ALREADY IN THE CHURCH?

posted by patrick (the other one) on July 25th 2007 at 4:56pm
view patrick (the other one)'s profile

Brilliant and evocative work.
G.R. never disappoints.
Thank you for this wonderful post.

posted by art donovan on July 25th 2007 at 6:02pm
view art donovan's profile

The problem with talking about what "the religious" believe is that a given house of worship belongs to a specific religion (or denomination within a religion) that has its own specific beliefs. Muslims don't put up images of important spiritual people because they believe that puts too much emphasis on the image rather than what the image represents. Catholics ordinarily go berserk with statues and pictures because they believe people need concrete reminders of what they're praying about. Both groups are "the religious," but they'd be appalled by trying to mimic each other's worship spaces.

Since Cologne Cathedral is Catholic, the pixels are definitely in the territory where the Building Committee pats themselves on the back for their innovative use of contemporary symbolism, while the parishioners grumble about how real windows show saints, darn it!

posted by wende in the twin cities on July 26th 2007 at 5:07am
view wende in the twin cities's profile

I like the effect of the "pixels" towards the top of the windows, in the smaller spaces. But I find the overall effect disappointing. I don't think they need to show saints, but by breaking down stained glass windows to ONLY color, with no form or composition, they become seriously underwhelming. Oh, and I'm an atheist.

posted by Samantha S on July 26th 2007 at 8:40am
view Samantha S's profile

Feeds

RSS icon New York

+ City Feeds