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Fashion, Design Ideology in Sacred Architecture: A Review of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels
Crisis Magazine ^ | October 23, 2012 | Nikos Salingaros

Posted on 10/24/2012 1:49:15 PM PDT by NYer

Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels

Where to begin? Well, there are hardly any right angles in this building. Broken forms, discontinuities, and protrusions in its geometry both inside and outside characterize the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels. Such imbalance and departure from mathematical harmony is usually explained away by labeling it a “postmodern-deconstructivist” building, as if style were sufficient reason to violate tectonic harmony and geometrical coherence. We have here a celebration of asymmetry, which might be understandable if there were a sound reason for it coming either from design necessities, or from religion. But there is none. The building’s asymmetry serves an essentially negative purpose: to deny coherence and harmony.

Ornament is rigorously (religiously?) forbidden. The worshiper is given the nicely executed representational hanging tapestries by John Nava to enjoy. The architect, however, eschews any architectural ornamentation. You are allowed decoration in the form of tapestries but little else to connect to, for that is ruled out by the design ideology. Not outlawed by Christianity or Catholicism, mind you, but by a sort of “geometrical fundamentalism” responsible for this building. Furthermore, the tapestries are hung so that they appear unattached to the walls. This is a telling detail. The deliberate impression is that they are an afterthought: not an integral part of the Cathedral’s essential surface geometry, but a compromise to religious art that poses no risk to the ideological purity of the architect’s forms.

The cement imported from Denmark defines a sparse and minimalist interior, making the naked concrete walls ultimately unpleasant. Critic Marian Horvat called this building a “desacralized” church because it lacks connective ornament. According to architect Duncan Stroik, “it’s just a big space rather than a transcendent space.” To counteract this empty impression, which is close to becoming overwhelming because of the size, an enormous amount of imported Spanish alabaster—a semiprecious stone—was used for the windows (3,110 square meters of 1.5 cm thick panels). Also, the floor is lined with 60,000 imported Spanish limestone pieces. At least these provide a “natural” surface that cannot be faulted. But, despite using extravagantly expensive materials, it still doesn’t feel like a Catholic Cathedral. A great architect can do a marvelous job with rather modest materials: one need only look at the example of Antonio Gaudí.

The total cost of the Cathedral was $190-265 millions (according to different sources). Isn’t it a time-honored tradition to use the most expensive available materials for the House of God? True, but much more basic than the materials is a sense of coherence, which not coincidentally ties into the harmony that religion bestows upon society, here largely missing. In fact, this violent style of architecture breaks forms and undoes geometrical harmony deliberately; otherwise the overall design would be “too traditional.” Yet in organized religion itself, what the Church teaches is firmly rooted in an evolved tradition, and thus has a natural affinity with traditional architectural expressions of coherence. Here, tradition is rejected, not for any betterment of society, but in favor of an image-based modernity.

What Modern and Post-Modern Churches Lack
This approach is typical of a major confusion from the past century that continues today. Romano Guardini and his architect friend Rudolf Schwarz adopted Bauhaus stylistic rules for Catholic Churches in the 1920s. Raw concrete surfaces are an obligatory part of the Bauhaus creed, which focused upon wiping out all of tradition, including organized religion. Was it a wise decision to adopt an anti-traditional (and anti-sacred) ideology for church architecture? Post-modernism and Deconstructivism, it can be argued, perpetuate the industrial vocabulary of Modernism while adding more details and odd asymmetries. But such details as are introduced are strictly prevented from cooperating to achieve harmony. Let’s look for these in the Los Angeles Cathedral.

Emotions that I wish I could experience directly from the structure (but don’t) would include a common joy shared by worshippers from all backgrounds, and not only some peculiar aesthetic imposed by an elite; a visceral love of the spaces, shapes, colors, and material surfaces; and a feeling of humility through simple harmonious forms rather than unresolved tension. None of that is found here. The Los Angeles Cathedral’s stubborn insistence on horizontality in windowpanes, ceiling slabs, and articulations on the exterior walls contradicts the link between verticality and spirituality of our most glorious examples of church architecture throughout history. This, too, conforms to a modernist diktat. The conflict between the horizontal and the vertical generates incoherence.

All organized religions utilized timeless geometrical principles and typologies to connect to God. There are further specialized prototypical forms that characterize Christianity, and even more particularly, Roman Catholicism. Qualities that imbue a structure with sacredness begin with Biophilia—connecting by means of instinctively recognizable biological patterns—and from applying certain spatial patterns discovered throughout human history. Those architectural typologies were developed during our long search for life’s meaning, and are not created ad hoc. Therefore, they cannot be discarded without incurring a tremendous loss. Equally important as prototypical biophilic and sacred patterns is an intuitive search for mathematical coherence. This mathematical integration of components is what is actually responsible for perceiving a form as sacred.

Some architects deny this evolved vocabulary of patterns and insist that they don’t matter. Geometrical harmony is declared inconsequential to the architect’s free expression. But shouldn’t the architect of a church understand its purpose? Isn’t the liturgy a message of love, inclusiveness, communion, compassion, and nurturing? These concepts, as well as the image of the body of Christ, are served not by abstraction, but by nested subsymmetries, axiality, hierarchical scaling, polychromaticism, and scrupulous attention to the human scale; i.e. everything found in more traditional churches. Instead, transgressive messages embodied in recently built churches erect a barrier to communion. Doing violence to form and rejecting connective components are design practices antithetical to the sacraments, preventing us from achieving spiritual connection with a structure designed to conceptualize sacred space.

It pains me to give a rather negative review of the Los Angeles Cathedral, since there are so many contemporary churches that are far, far worse. Some of those have been condemned as being totally unsuitable as houses of religious worship because parishioners encounter an atmosphere of dread, gloom, and foreboding—thankfully, that’s not the case here. Its broken forms and lack of harmony, however, classify the architecture as solidly within a typology that violates geometrical coherence as the basis of its design. More charitable critics dismiss these violations as a harmless “expression” of the architect. I, on the other hand, think them not accidental. The anti-traditional orientation of the Harvard Graduate School of Design began when Bauhaus founder Walter Gropius started teaching there in 1937, and Rafael Moneo was Chair of Architecture from 1985 to 1990.

Here is an example of a Church designed by a member of that elite international club of fashionable architects, all of whom have been validated by receiving the Pritzker Architecture Prize. Moneo was the 1993 choice, and was commissioned for Our Lady of the Angels in 1996. Members of the Pritzker jury, along with past prize recipients, recommend those same architects to groups, corporations, religious institutions, and governments wishing to build a museum, art gallery, theater, or church in a fashionable style. While there is nothing wrong with this promotion, people tend to take it as a guarantee of architectural quality. I don’t agree. It is more an advocacy of stylistic preferences. And it does narrowly limit new signature buildings—including new churches to the rather abstract “look” much in fashion in today’s architecture schools and among the artistic avant-garde.

Fortunately, several contemporary architects in the US and elsewhere who specialize in religious buildings have built many wonderful examples using form languages ranging from Art Deco to more or less traditional styles. If the Church wishes to commission works that prioritize fashion statements over more traditional architectural values, then it is unlikely to get in return a building of lasting religious importance. Architecture critics heavily promote fashion, but it turns out to be of only fleeting interest. The critics listened to for authority—those who praise post-modernist and deconstructivist churches—are hardly religious: they tend to belong to the atheistic avant-garde, and therefore their opinions cannot be relied upon. Nevertheless, critics influence public opinion and marginalize architects genuinely capable of designing sacred spaces, who are then excluded from major commissions.

Defenders of the typology employed in the Los Angeles Cathedral alarm me. Some Catholics and, significantly, individuals from within the Church hierarchy, do like this Cathedral. It appears to me that they are letting images of a crude mechanical modernity disguised as “purity of form” overwhelm their perception of natural complexity. Yet it is the latter that gives rise to life on earth, to human existence, and which is eventually responsible for the personal communion with God. We cannot ignore our deep visceral response to forms and surfaces, and both minimalist and broken forms trigger anxiety. For me, a house of worship should offer refuge from inhumanity rather than join in the assault against what it means to be human and to be alive. Furthermore, these notions can be defined in geometrical terms, not through philosophy that can be distorted to serve an agenda.

I read of the alleged “honesty” of the Los Angeles Cathedral’s raw concrete interior surfaces. Again, this is a propaganda slogan from Bauhaus ideology that brutally suppressed ornament and surface detail. This lie about “honest” materials and surfaces that are invariably depressing and unfriendly has been utilized for decades as an excuse to build brutalist buildings that nobody loves (except their architects and fellow architectural ideologues). The best thing one can say about the Cathedral’s walls is that the concrete incorporates yellow pigment, thus avoiding the gray morgue impression of other modernist churches. Even so, the mustard color has also been harshly criticized for sticking out.

To conclude, the search for meaning and truth in religious architecture can lead a person to either of two antithetical positions. One path finds solace in images of a sleek mechanical and intolerant modernity, which is supported by anti-religious post-structuralist philosophers and by a trillion-dollar construction industry. It lends the additional glamor of belonging to the fashionable elite. The other path is at the same more humble and courageous, since it defies the prevailing dogma disseminated by the media. It involves rediscovering timeless truths about the mathematical relationship between human beings and life in the universe, anticipated in traditional knowledge that was made sacred by established religions. This path is one with our love for living beings and for our creator. Modern science reinforces this second viewpoint, shedding light on geometrical qualities that help to make a building sacred.

This is a revised version of an essay written for the Exhibition on New Catholic Architecture: “Genius Loci, Chiesa e Dialogo: Due Continenti a Confronto Tra Memoria e Modernità,” held at the Diocesan Museum of Milan, Italy, November 2012 to January 2013, and organized by the Brera Academy of Milan under the supervision of Leonardo Servadio.



TOPICS: Catholic; Ministry/Outreach; Religion & Culture; Worship
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To: NYer

I so prefer ancient cathedrals with lots of carvings and beautiful stained glass windows.


21 posted on 10/24/2012 4:03:42 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point. CSLewis)
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Mahoney has done more damage to L.A. than just that cathedral. For instance, the rule of communion at mass is that the communion procession starts from the last row/pew and the first pew is last. People stack the rear of the church and the front pews are fairly sparse. Arse Backwards!


22 posted on 10/24/2012 4:19:57 PM PDT by RBStealth
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To: RBStealth

I would expect Gomez to change this in the near future...me hopes!


23 posted on 10/24/2012 4:20:53 PM PDT by RBStealth
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To: NYer; RBStealth; muawiyah; madison10; norton; ottbmare; Joe 6-pack; livius; Mach9; ...
If this church thing doesn't work out, they can easily sell this building as a hotel or office space.


Communist Goals (1963)

22. Continue discrediting American culture by degrading all forms of artistic expression. An American Communist cell was told to "eliminate all good sculpture from parks and buildings, substitute shapeless, awkward and meaningless forms."

23. Control art critics and directors of art museums. "Our plan is to promote ugliness, repulsive, meaningless art."

24 posted on 10/24/2012 5:00:38 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (On Sesame Street, Obama is brought to you by the letter O and the number 16 billion. - Mitt Romney)
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To: livius

I wish I could be there, since St Mary of the Lake has a special place in my heart, my family history, and my faith formation. Unfortunately, I’m nearly a thousand miles away, and Mundelein is quite a hike for me.


25 posted on 10/24/2012 6:13:56 PM PDT by ottbmare (The OTTB Mare)
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To: ottbmare
los Angeles has a 'style' ~ semi-industrial ~ large open buildings with strange roofs ~ been there many times ~ this place fits. Bet some of the most objectionable design features were guided more by concerns about earthquake damage than just making an ugly building.

For those who really prefer Gothic style when it comes to Cathedrals, there are a number of lessons available to those willing to read lengthy tretises about how Beauvais Cathedral was built ~ and partly fell apart, and how iron external supports may inflict less damage on such a building than steel internal supports.

Beauvais was intended to be the biggest of its kind ~ it'd probably crash to the ground 10 minutes after opening in Los Angeles.

Not that the architects are right to try something different in LA, but many designs that work well elsewhere do not have a chance this near to the San Andreas Fault!

26 posted on 10/24/2012 6:15:51 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah

I understand your point, but there are many styles of architecture suitable for churches and cathedrals besides the Gothic. In general, it’s the experiments that tend to fall apart (c.f. I. M. Pei’s National Gallery East Building) because they employ building techniques that haven’t withstood the test of time. As I wrote, it’s possible to build new buildings in a “modern” style that aren’t so irredeemably ugly and clumsy. Yes, you can comply with building code in earthquake country without making buildings that are a grotesque lump of concrete.

Most architects today build to enhance their own resumes. They build to please design award committees and to elicit the admiration of their colleagues by doing things that are “edgy,” and creating beauty for the sake of beauty, glorifying God, and lifting the hearts of men to heaven is not on the agenda. Most church buildings are put up by committees who are persuaded by drawings and models, and they aren’t even aware that there are alternatives to the modernist or postmodernist approach. Or they’re misinformed that traditional approaches would be too expensive, which is not necessarily the case.


27 posted on 10/24/2012 6:45:32 PM PDT by ottbmare (The OTTB Mare)
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To: ottbmare
Sorry, been to LA too many times and seen too many new buildings. The demand of earthquake standards is such that ALL new buildings are ugly, and will get uglier.

Give you an example ~ you cannot suspend industrial machinery from above in CA no matter how strong the roof. You must install poles and support the machinery from the poles.

Talk about some U G L Y S T U F F (inside of course).

Exterior door access is another problem ~ that Beauvais cathedral could never have sufficient exit doors!

They can fake the appearance on one and two story buildings, but you go above something like 24 feet you are in the earthquake zone and it's gotta' be clunky with giant girders bolted at diagonals ~

28 posted on 10/24/2012 6:58:02 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah

I don’t understand why you keep referring to the Beauvais cathedral. No one is advocating trying to reconstruct a Gothic cathedral in LA.

Yes, we all, or most of us, have been to LA quite often. The building code is indeed restrictive. But note the criticisms of the LA cathedral: asymmetries, useless protrusions, coarse industrial exterior cladding, a very dated massing. Obviously the diagonal structural supports are an inconvenience but LA building code does not require doing everything in the ugliest manner possible. There are some very handsome tall office buildings there, including new construction. Buildings are ugly because the architects are imagination-free, not because the code requires ugliness.


29 posted on 10/24/2012 7:26:49 PM PDT by ottbmare (The OTTB Mare)
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To: Albion Wilde

All true. Ugly is the enemy of perfection.


30 posted on 10/24/2012 7:32:28 PM PDT by Mach9
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To: ottbmare
Hey, they sure coulda' fooled me.

Just about every building approved since the Northridge earthquake has been far more earthquake resistant than those that came before, but they are all incredibly industrial ~ it really is the code.

31 posted on 10/24/2012 7:54:25 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: ottbmare

“[M]any styles of architecture suitable for churches and cathedrals besides the Gothic.”

Yes, of course (Romanesque, Byzantine, Baroque, even Norman). And all that’s modern isn’t ugly. It’s what the architect (or his client) tries to say that may turn out to be ugly. Deliberately avoiding traces of religion in a “modern” church tends to be ugly, by one definition or another. There’s a modern (built within the last 20 years) Catholic church in Grosseto (near Livorno, Italy) that is darn near a parody of Romanesque architecture. First impression is distrust—the church is a joke. But the interior is solidly, traditionally Roman Catholic even while it appears to poke fun at Romanesque architecture.

The most potent example of what I’m talking about is La Sagrada in Barcelona. It’s modern, edgy, ironic, but not remotely blasphemous. Your description, “creating beauty for the sake of beauty, glorifying God, and lifting the hearts of men to heaven,” makes all the difference. Unfortunately, though, defining “sacred” is bit like defining pornography—you know it when you see it.


32 posted on 10/24/2012 7:54:41 PM PDT by Mach9
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To: RBStealth

“Are we playing word games?”

I hope not. It reminds me of a statue of Astarte, and I don’t mean that in a complimentary way. (Also, btw, Ceres, other earth goddesses.) Preposterous.


33 posted on 10/24/2012 7:57:51 PM PDT by Mach9
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To: muawiyah
The issue is whether or not someone intends to complete it

Like with Sagrada Familia isn't that always the issue?

34 posted on 10/24/2012 8:02:11 PM PDT by aposiopetic
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To: muawiyah

The code does not say, “You must put ugly brownish concrete on the outside of every building,” or “You may not put up a building whose footprint is in the shape of a cross,” or “You must construct your building with pointless boxes and side things sticking out of it,” or “You may not have windows that catch the light and make it fall beautifully on the interior decorations,” or “You can’t have a building that’s symmetrical,” or “You can’t install large ceremonial doors.”

The buildings in LA are built to comply with code, fulfill their function, be fashionable, and do all that at the lowest cost. As far as I can tell, clients are entirely nontraditional in their tastes, so there’s no motivation to make structures beautiful or inspiring. But it could be done. A basic, strong box with structural engineering that makes the building inspectors happy is the basis, but the box can be made in different proportions, and with ornament, materials, siting, sizing, and lighting that can make the it beautiful. No flying buttresses necessary.


35 posted on 10/24/2012 9:42:02 PM PDT by ottbmare (The OTTB Mare)
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To: NYer
This is the Mormon Temple in La Jolla, CA. If they can do this in So. CA, why couldn't the Catholics build a majestic, inspiring place of worship?
36 posted on 10/24/2012 9:43:03 PM PDT by married21 (As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.)
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To: CdMGuy
Ave Maria Cathedral

The Ave Maria church near Naples, Florida has cement and steel architecture. It looks impressive - no wood could withstand the humidity.

37 posted on 10/25/2012 3:18:13 AM PDT by x_plus_one (Leaving Islam?...http://freedomdefense.typepad.com/leave-islam/)
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To: ottbmare

lotsa luck with that idea. Ever take a good look at the Disney Center in downtown LA? http://www.you-are-here.com/los_angeles/disney.jpg Great roof, eh, but look over there on the South End (which is across the street from the museum ) ~ see that abrupt termination in a big ol’box ~ that’s there not because the property line ended or there’s a street ~ it ends that way because they are at the point the code decides somebody can run in 20 seconds to get out from underneath what may be a falling building.


38 posted on 10/25/2012 5:48:06 AM PDT by muawiyah
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Comment #39 Removed by Moderator

To: NYer

40 posted on 10/25/2012 7:49:27 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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