almanac

MUTABLE SANCTUARY

LeCorbusier03

In the beginning, the gods didn't make house calls. They inhabited distant and unexplainable marvels of nature, locations impervious to human intervention. Rock ledges, sheer cliffs, darkened caverns, pristine clearings, restful harbors-these were the paradigmatic sacred places.

But, as generations were born and died, as political and technical revolutions altered social bonds, as a succession of cults swept into popularity and quickly turned to dust, the idea of the sacred mutated as well. People began to organize their own sacred spaces. Temples, shrines, tabernacles, synagogues, mosques, churches. With the construction of these buildings, the gods became accessible. You could meet them in your city, even right on your street. And if you moved-down the block or thousands of miles away-you could bring them with you, creating a new sacred space near your new home. Slowly, the sacred ceased to be an otherworldly category. It became something human.

"To organize a space," historian of religion Mircea Eliade wrote, "is to repeat the paradigmatic work of the gods." With every church, synagogue, mosque, temple, we honor the divine and at the same time exalt ourselves, mimicking the act of creation. When we construct our sacred spaces, they are not purely sacred. They're alloyed with human failings.

Which makes them inescapably, necessarily profane.

LeCorbusier02
Perhaps our understanding of liturgy and iconography and architecture is doomed to be primitive, the way most children draw pictures. What is a church? A building with a steeple and a cross on top. What is a mosque? A building with a minaret. What is a synagogue? A building with a six-pointed star. But the idea that these forms are sacred and eternal is wrong. Building types and forms of worship have fluctuated wildly over the years.

For instance, the first synagogues were secular. In early Jewish tradition, there was only one place where people could worship God. Initially, it was the linen and leather tabernacle that Moses and his tribe constructed and carried with them through the desert. Later, King Solomon built a temple in Jerusalem and centralized religious observance there. Then, sometime in the first or second century BC, a new building type arose-the synagogue.

Early synagogues were not designed for worship. Instead, they belonged to the civic world-an outgrowth of the city gate, not the centralized temple. The gate served as the commercial fulcrum of urban life. When Abraham needed a burial plot for Sarah, when Boaz wanted to marry Ruth, the men didn't simply pray-they went to the city gate. But crime was growing in the ancient world-and the gates to cities were often shut for protection. "Because of the development of artillery and weaponry," says Lee I. Levine, a professor of history and archeology at Hebrew University in Jerusalem whose book, "The Ancient Synagogue, the First Thousand Years," (Yale University Press, 2000), "the functions that once took place at the city gate moved into the synagogue."

So, though there was only one temple, every city could have one or more synagogues. And, Levine says, those early synagogues didn't assume an explicit religious function until the first century of the Christian era, around the time the Romans destroyed the temple in Jerusalem. And the buildings didn't have a religious hierarchy for almost 1500 years. "You don't need a rabbi to run a synagogue," Levine notes. "The first time we hear of a rabbi leading a synagogue is in 15th century Austria."

LeCorbusier01
In the Christian tradition, too, sacred space and liturgy have secular roots. Christian worship started in people's homes. "There was no special religious articulation of sacred space," says L. Michael White, director of the religious studies program at the University of Texas at Austin and author of The Social Origins of Early Christian Architecture. Worship moved from portions of people's homes into homes completely taken over by the church, and then into larger public spaces. It wasn't until the fourth century, when the emperor Constantine converted to Christianity and made it the official religion of the Roman empire (some say he was a canny convert and used religion to extend his domination), that the basilica became the official form of the Catholic church.

Liturgy hardened as churches spread throughout the empire. For instance, early Christians didn't have an entrenched hierarchy of priests and bishops. Sects like the Gnostics actually elected a new priest at every service. And, for most Christians, you didn't have to go to a church to celebrate communion. Any meal could be sacramental. Also, most baptisms took place in rivers or bath houses. It was only over time that churches designed special fonts for the ritual. Says White, "The baptismal space is created and liturgy grows to meet it. In some ways it's the architecture, or the need for space, that causes the liturgy to change."

Liturgy also changed due to practical and political influence. In the early church, priests officiated from within the congregation. Altars came later, to give religious leaders a bit more stature. "Christian leaders, now for the first time, tended to be regarded as authorities above and outside the church, rather than an authority in the church linked with her collective life," Louis Bouyer wrote in his study Architecture and Liturgy.

And, for much of the first millennium of Christian worship, kneeling for prayer was unknown in the early church. Some theorists suspect that the Catholic church added kneeling during the era when serfs were expected to kneel before the land-owners. As Andre Malraux noted in The Metamorphosis of the Gods, a study on the interplay of religion and art, "Until the institution of feudal homage, the characteristic attitude of Christian prayer during the last eight centuries-clasped hands and bended knees-was completely unknown."

LeCorbusier04
By the time of the Mohammed (6th-7th centuries AD), the message was clear-sacred space was fully portable. The prophet decreed that the world is masjidãthe : earth is a sacred place. Any building can be a mosque. And, indeed, many famous mosques-including the Ayasofia in Istanbul and the Great Mosque of Damascus-started life as churches and were only converted into Mosques after a Muslim conquest.

The most visible sign of that conversion is the addition of minarets. The minaret, a tall, slender tower, has become Islam's enduring architectural symbol. Yet history shows that minarets were an add-on to the mosques.

"The prophet said that the biggest thing you can waste your money on is building," says Jonathan M. Bloom, an independent scholar of Islamic architecture aand author of Minaret, Symbol of Islam (Oxford University Press). "Basically, in early Islamic architecture, religious buildings didn't have any towers or anything high. They were unprepossessing structures."

Bloom's architectural research suggests that the minaret was grafted onto the mosque in an attempt to give the religion more importance in civil society, only becoming standard equipment 200 years into the life of the religion. By the 9th century, mosques-which were born as restful communal retreats-had mutated into impressive architectural statements.

And liturgy developed to fit the form. Though Mohammed established the five daily calls to prayer around 623 AD, early Muslims prayed when the spirit moved them. It took almost three centuries for the calls to prayer to become the norm throughout the Muslim world. And only then did the minaret, which had been added to the mosque as a statement of power, take on liturgical significance as the place for the muezzin to broadcast the calls throughout the community.

To this day, it is very hard to conceive of a mosque without a minaret. For instance, Madina Masjid, on 1st Avenue and 11th Street in New York City, occupies a corner storefront next to a deli and restaurant. But the congregation added a purely decorative minaret on the back parapet of the building. Somehow, to them, it wouldn't be a mosque without it.

LeCorbusier13

~~~~~~ [secular meets sacred: a case study]


The building offers almost no clue that it's a church. Despite a plethora of unusual exterior shapes and treatments-huge armadillo-like metal panels to the north, a massive facade of Kalwall punctuated by slit-like windows to the west (looking like a giant glowing computer punch card)-the oversized stark silver seems shy and static-a monument that doesn't want to be monumental. It stands on a back street of a formerly industrial area now converted into shopping malls. Its entrance fronts a parking lot, not the main drag. And it offers no overt Christian symbolism.

This is the new home of the New York Presbyterian Church, the largest Korean-Christian church in the Korean Diaspora. It's more than just a church. It's a community center for its commuter congregation-with dining facilities for 1,000 people, 80 classrooms, and plans to add a gymnasium and basketball court. And the congregation is already talking about more: some senior housing and perhaps a larger sanctuary.

It's an admittedly conservative congregation, and its members certainly didn't set out to be modernist standard-bearers when they began planning their new church six years ago. They had a very down-to-earth reason for needing to expand: overcrowding.

New York Presbyterian was born 30 years ago when 12 people gathered to worship God in someone's living room. It expanded the way churches in antiquity grew-first taking over a house, and then a bigger house, and then a hall that had formerly been a catering facility. And when the congregation even outgrew that space, church leaders picked a new location-a 5.3-acre plot that had been home to the Knickerbocker Laundry. To finance the $18 million project, the congregation went into hock, selling $11.8 million in bonds through Great Nation Investment Corporation, of Amarillo, Texas, which specializes in financing Christian churches (the company takes its name from Genesis 12:2, where God promises Abram, "I will make of thee a great nation.")

Church leaders initially planned a traditional building, but they felt a little discomfort about the design and decided to talk with other architects. One church member promised to contact his brother, who was working in Chicago for architect Douglas Garofalo. Interested in the job, Garofalo brought in Greg Lynn (now practicing in California, but at the time based in Hoboken, N.J.). And Lynn contacted Cincinnati-based Michael McInturf to join the triumverate.

"We didn't have a concrete idea of what the building should look like," admits deacon Min Lee, treasurer of the church's building committee. And what the three architects brought forth was the opposite of anything they had expected. "From the beginning everything was controversial. It was all gray and purple and white and black-not the typical church colors. And the shapes were not really comfortable to our eyes."

But over time, church leaders warmed to the idea of creating a signature building. They felt it meshed with their aggressive growth plans, that its unusual profile might allow them to harness a very profane benefit: advertising. "If you have some kind of unique design, maybe a trend of history will follow," says Richard Park, who has belonged to the church for 29 years and chaired the building committee. He notes that 19th century churches were different than those constructed in the 18th century. "There's no reason to stick to a traditional concept if a new concept might accommodate things better. Here we had a chance to go beyond."

Still, there's some dispute over who wanted to make the building so somber. The architects say the congregation always argued for restraint-pulling them away from brighter colors and obvious religious symbolism. But church leaders now say that they would have liked a few more traditional religious symbols. Richard Park says he wants to mount a cross on top of the building. And he plans to erect an electronic sign board facing the Long Island Railroad track just across 37th Avenue, to advertise the church's message of faith to passing commuters.

LeCorbusier06
There's another non-religious reason why the church might have chosen a contemporary design. Immigrants, Garofalo says, are often very bold in what they build. "They take a lot more chances," he says. "They didn't come here to stick with any traditional styles. The idea of having a home that looks to the future is important."

The architects note that the church doesn't make reference to other religious buildings. Instead, they say, it takes its shape more from the mall culture of the surrounding streets than from any particular religious aesthetic. Says Lynn: "The church is really part of the whole demographic of the suburbanization of that neighborhood." And, he adds, the industrial aesthetic of the church arose not only because of architectural interest and to evoke the building's former life as a commercial laundry, but also "because it was a really low budget project, less than $100 per square foot-about the same price as the Toys R Us next door."

Church leaders believe the new tabernacle meshes well with their congregation's traditional focus. "Now that people are using it they have started to understand it," says deacon Lee. And the futuristic contours of the building say something about the church's evangelical mission. "Our church is a very fast-growing church," Park says. He insists that New York Presbyterian will boast 3,000 or 4,000 members within five years, and perhaps 10,000 by the end of the coming decade. If his predictions come true, the congregation will outgrow its new home in a very short time.

LeCorbusier15

~~~~~ [between profanity and spirit]

The role and form of a house of worship has changed dramatically in the 2,000 years they've been around. These days, the church has explicitly recognized that what may be a sacred space occupies the profane city.

The $163 million cathedral now under construction in Los Angeles, is a full-block development including a 2.5-acre plaza, all designed by Jose Rafael Moneo. Moneo's vision includes a church shorn of most traditional Catholic iconography. It doesn't have a steeple, isn't cruciform (though it mimics the cross shape inside), and, unlike most classical cathedrals, the side chapels will be arrayed outside the main sanctuary. To enter, parishioners will stroll down a long processional aisle before turning to enter the main space. Cardinal Roger Mahoney has suggested that the full block development, located near the government center and an enormous arts complex, will create a public space "linking the secular with the sacred" in downtown Los Angeles.

That may be a bit of an overstatement. Moneo's design may avoid standard religious motifs (some traditionalists have recently blasted the plan because it's not churchly enough), but it also turns its back on the city. Moneo has positioned the cathedral to front on the enclosed plaza, not on the street. So, though it may make reference to the secular world, this church will be firmly located in its own privileged sanctuary. Still, this is a high profile construction by a very conservative institution, and in choosing a non-traditional form, the Catholic Church, has recognized that church buildings play a role in the profane world.

LeCorbusier12
Fresh from his work with New York Presbyterian, Michael McInturf has taken on the design of a church complex in a small town in northeastern Ohio. It is a very personal job for McInturf because the church is an offshoot of the one he grew up attending. Though still in the early stages of design, he reports that he and the congregation are using the book of Exodus for inspiration and are even discussing creating a mock-up of the ancient biblical tabernacle for Sunday worship. But he also sees this church as part of a conversation on the nature and development of small American towns. Says McInturf, "When people move into these towns, they go there for the Mayberry, RFD feel-and then they destroy it with sprawl and growth." The church, he hopes, will offer more than a dialogue with the divine. He wants it to evoke a conversation about secular life too.

"What is a church?" Frank Lloyd Wright asked in a 1946 essay. The architect-the son, grandson, and great-grandson of preachers-offered this answer: "Isn't it a gratifying home for the spirit of human love and kindness? A certificate of faith in man himself as of God and for himself?"

That's the humanist interpretation: the house of worship as a place of light.

LeCorbusier16
Others have held darker views.

Critic Georges Bataille considered churches authoritarian. "Great monuments are erected like dikes opposing the logic and majesty of authority against all disturbing elements," he wrote. "It is in the form of the cathedral or palace that Church or State speaks to the multitudes and imposes silence upon them."

And political philosopher Henri Lefebvre went even further, arguing that without church buildings there might be no organized religion, that the medium is the message. "What would remain of a religious ideology-the Judeo-Christian one, say-if it were not based on places and their names: church, confessional, altar, sanctuary, tabernacle? What would remain of the church if there were no churches?"

Certainly, all monumental architecture is intended to fulfill a purpose. Churches, palaces, and government buildings have long been designed to evoke feelings of reverence, awe, and power. This can be, as Lefebvre implies, a form of coercion. But the sacred doesn't depend on monumental buildings for its appeal. Spirit has long had popular outposts on Main Street. And now more than ever. These days, you can take yoga at the mall, study tai chi in the suburbs, practice wicca at military bases. And religious groups such as Falun Gong-which was so popular in China that the communist regime has outlawed it and rounded up 35,000 practitioners-have thrived without formal buildings.

Indeed, if there are old-fashioned cathedrals being built today, they aren't churches. They're secular monuments-museums and libraries-that function as temples of public culture. Think of Richard Meier's oracular Getty Museum presiding over on its hilltop in Los Angeles. Picture Frank Gehry's prophetic Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, hailed in terms of revelation. Or even two of I.M. Pei's recent quasi-religious commissions-one literally a pop culture reliquary (the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland), the other a sanctuary (the Miho Museum, built for a Buddhist sect on a mountain top in rural Japan.) In everything from architectural form to the placement of the shrubberies, this mostly submerged structure (it was located in a nature reserve and couldn't be more than 13 meters high) seems more reverent than many temples.

Like these museums, houses of worship are windows between the profane and the sacred. They are fully human aspiring to the divine. And they symbolize the divine aspiring to be human. "All creation," French poet Edmond Jabes wrote, "takes for its place an enclosed space surrounded by the infinite." But, he added, these outposts in the infinite bring us closer to God but also give God an unsettling experience: "For the first time, [He] read Himself in the words of man. A foreigner to Himself."


    Vist Limn.com for
  • contemporary furniture
  • modern furniture
  • designer furniture
  • modern chair
  • modern bedroom furniture
  • designer sofas
  • modern sofa
  • modern coffee table
  • modern furniture San Francisco
  • european furniture
  • contemporary couches
  • contemporary dining tables
  • contemporary chairs
  • modern chairs
  • modern dining table
  • limn furniture San Francisco
  • modern coffee tables
  • modern dining room furniture
  • contemporary furniture San Francisco
  • designer chair
  • contemporary bedroom furniture
  • designer sofa
  • designer furniture San Francisco
  • contemporary dining room furniture
  • limn furniture
  • designer chairs
  • high end furniture
  • contemporary dining table
  • Modern sofas
  • contemporary coffee table
  • contemporary sofa
  • contemporary living room furniture
  • contemporary coffee tables
  • modern living room furniture
  • contemporary dining room table
  • european chairs
  • designer couches
  • contemporary furniture store
  • fine furniture
  • quality furniture
  • contemporary sofas
  • contemporary chair
  • modern furniture stores
  • designer home furniture
  • modern home furnishings
  • modern home décor
  • european design furniture
  • designer dining table
  • modern furniture store
  • quality bedroom furniture
  • contemporary couch
  • modern furniture store San Francisco
  • fine furnishings
  • limn furniture store
  • contemporary dining set
  • fine furniture San Francisco
  • designer bedroom furniture
  • modern dining tables
  • designer furniture stores
  • designer coffee table
  • modern dining set
  • modern couch
  • modern furniture stores San Francisco
  • designer home furnishings
  • high quality furniture
  • modern sofa San Francisco
  • designer living room furniture
  • modern dining room table
  • modern dining room tables
  • european bedroom furniture
  • contemporary furniture stores
  • contemporary furniture store San Francisco
  • quality sofas
  • designer sofa San Francisco
  • modern couches
  • fine chairs
  • high end furniture stores
  • high end furniture San Francisco
  • modern chair San Francisco
  • modern coffee table San Francisco
  • fine furniture stores
  • high end bedroom furniture
  • quality furniture stores
  • modern furnishings San Francisco
  • quality chair
  • european furniture stores
  • modern furniture studio
  • quality couch
  • designer chairs San Francisco
  • designer couch
  • modern home furniture
  • contemporary home furniture
  • designer furniture storeveuropean chair
  • european sofa
  • contemporary dining room tables
  • designer furnishings
  • designer furniture studio
  • fine home décor
  • european furniture San Francisco