White Spirit: Situating Whiteness in Contemporary Church Architecture
Auteur(s): |
Kate Jordan
|
---|---|
Médium: | article de revue |
Langue(s): | anglais |
Publié dans: | Architectural Histories, 10 mars 2023, n. 1, v. 11 |
DOI: | 10.16995/ah.10154 |
Abstrait: |
In his polemical tract, The Present State of Ecclesiastical Architecture in England published in 1843, AWN Pugin condemned the ‘vogue’ for whitewashed church interiors that had characterised Protestant iconoclasm: for him, the return to colour and darkness was an indispensable backdrop to the reawakening of ritual, tradition and the sacred. In 19th-century Christian theologies, colour (or the lack of it) was profoundly important: no decorative scheme was ever applied without considering the religious implications. The long history of whiteness as a trope in Christian visual culture has been well documented but little attention has been paid to its meaning in late modernity. In the 21st century, whiteness is understood as a polyvalent and freighted concept, bearing implications that reach beyond the religious and into secular critical discourses. In this essay, I explore the contemporary vogue for whiteness as a motif in church architecture, focusing on its political and cultural significance in relation to the decline of traditional Christian worship and the rise of ‘believing without belonging’. |
- Informations
sur cette fiche - Reference-ID
10752967 - Publié(e) le:
14.01.2024 - Modifié(e) le:
14.01.2024