The Anatomy of Sacred Art
Part II:
Ad quid venisti? Quo Vadimus?
Or, can we still discover the New World?
By Anthony Visco
“You are also God’s building. Using the gift God
gave me, I did the work of the expert builder and laid the foundation,
and another man is building on it. But each of us must be careful how
he builds. For God has already placed Jesus Christ as the one and only
foundation and no other foundation can be laid.
St. Paul ; 1 Cor. 3.10
The foundation of the cross shelters all who are homeless. “I was
a stranger and you received me into your home.”
We live in a time whereby it is more likely to run into difficulty for
doing something well than doing it poorly. Both Church art and secular
art have reached an all time low. It is as always, easier to understand
how this can happen to secular art but how did it happen to sacred art
as well?
As the Church’s desire to become relevant culturally between the
two world wars, the Church in America found itself in a peculiar situation.
On one hand it still had what it saw as its second hand European hand-me-downs
of art and architecture. It also had to differentiate itself from Anglo
Saxon Protestant society so prevalent in the US. We became suspicious
of our own works as it were the art under the scrutiny of the Reformation.
Our own nudity and all of its metaphorical meanings have all but disappeared
from civic and ecclesiastic art, in particular Catholic art. We have returned
to the bushes, shaking, unable to answer God’s question as to who
told us we were naked. It’s as if we had forgotten that by the time
Ghiberti had completed his second set of baptistery doors, the four types
of nudity established in Church art were being expressed throughout. “Nuditas
Virtualis” such as the young Baptist casting off his garments to
demonstrate his abandonment of worldly goods, or “Nuditas Temporalis”
conditional nudity as in the Susanna at the bath, “Nuditas Criminalis”
in the expulsion from the Garden, or the drunkenness of Noah and “Nuditas
Naturalis” as in the Creation of Adam and Eve, all took their proper
place and role in church art. However with political correctness abound,
subjects such as the nudity of Noah would not be permissible and considered
counter symbolic since it is insensitive a person’s dealing with
substance. Theologically, we have remained Catholic. Culturally we have
become protestant with overtones of iconoclasm. But as Joseph Cardinal
Ratzinger so aptly puts it, “Iconoclasm is not a Christian option”.
The study human anatomy was thrown out of the curricula in art schools;
drafting the orders was being eliminated from the schools of architecture.
Just as the American Renaissance had placed its architecture, classical
sculpture and painting were to have followed had both not been interrupted
by the Second World War. From 1950 onward, the figurative languages of
both artist and architect, the “anatomy” of both, had become
useless tools in the inept hired hands of the modernists. As modernism
needed flatness to express nihilism, it was unable to use human anatomy
and the orders properly; thus, they were kept from students who wanted
to use them. Conversely, the modernist jargon of non-representational
flatness became as equally burdensome to Christians as artists of the
Incarnation. Yet there were many who believed that this was the new way
of the Church! Under the weight of modernism, anatomy, the sense of “embodiment”
in both ecclesiastical art and architecture became all but impossible
to find in the American church. Architecturally, when we abandoned bilateral
symmetry, we abandoned the body. Sadly, the Catholic Church followed the
hired hand of the modernist into fields where the flocks literally were
scattered and the good grass was trampled and the waters muddied.
We have learned much by looking to other artists who have heard the
call from Eternity and responded as contemporary artists throughout time.
If we listen, we can perhaps gain a better idea of ourselves as the created
as well as what the Caller asks of us now. Yet we must be mindful that
the masterpieces of the past, present and future are like the stars in
the heavens. They can indeed give us our location but we must wait for
the darkness and hope for a clear night in order to see them better. Perhaps
our darkness was indeed modernism; perhaps our clear night is arriving.
Then, once our location in the Third Millennium is learned, the greater
question for the maker of sacred arts will be where do we go from wherever
we are?
We must ask then, how did modernism break this covenant?
As modernism spoke only of the self, it became a gift to self rather
than a gift of self.
There were two attributes of modernism that violated the covenant as it
was governed by two major conventions of thought. First, there was “traditional
modernism”, the need to sacrifice, to omit, to discard something
in order to make something unique and novel. But sacrifice does not mean
omit. It means to make holy. Just as a contract is not a covenant, a sacrifice
is not an omission. The second attribute of modernism, “conventional
modernism” was when a risk must be taken, no matter how needless
or fruitless. Combined they were to make something “original”,
something that hadn’t been done or seen before. Quality thus came
from novelty and replaced beauty with “new” formalist relations.
With originality as its goal, modernism sought to invent its own language;
it took metaphor and replaced it with irony. In its need to sacrifice,
it took the alphabet of all classical art and architecture and threw out
the vowels. In its need to be original, it took this new alphabet without
vowels and only consonants, and made words illegible, intelligible, and
unpronounceable, a language that could mean anything and called it “untitled”.
We soon came to realize that “untitled” was very much indeed
a title. If modernism spoke at all, it said, “I will not serve.”
Modernism had convinced an entire populace to expect nothing great from
art or artists. Now used to avant-guardism, the public has grown suspicious
of themselves if confronted with art they can understand. For Roman Catholics
in particular, the modernist collision happened in the Sixties when the
secular art form, the “pop” the “folk” the avant
guard styles were adopted and mingled with a most misinterpreted version
of the Vatican II message encouraging the use of contemporary art and
music in liturgy. Contemporary was never meant to mean modernist; it never
meant non- representational. For the first time in history, instead of
leading the secular art world as it had done for centuries, the Church
now followed it. For the liturgical artist and architect, for the painter
and sculptor of religious works, it couldn’t have come at a worst
time. Its outcome was already being foretold in 1964, by Pope Paul VI,
a global advocate for the entire world of sacred arts, in his meeting
with artists in 1964:
“We can say at times we have placed against you a leaden burden;
please forgive us! And then we have abandoned you. We have not explained
our things; we have not introduced you into the secret cell where the
mysteries of God make man’s heart bounce with joy, hope, happiness,
and exaltation. We have not had you as students, friends, interlockers
so you have not known us. Thus your language for the world has been docile,
yes, but also tied up, labored, incapable of finding its voice. And thus
we have felt this artistic expression unsatisfactory…We have treated
you worst, we have turned to surrogates, oleography to works of art of
little value and less expenditure, also because we did not have the means
to commission things which were great, beautiful, and worth being admired”.
Things seemed to changing in 1976 at the 41st International Eucharistic
Congress hosted the Exhibition of Liturgical Art in Philadelphia. Both
the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and Catholic patrons alike commissioned
several works with the centerpiece of the Congress being the commission
of one permanent sculpture. It became a standing bronze Christ to be made
by Walter Erlebacher and placed in front of the Cathedral of Saints Peter
and Paul. It is an Apollo-Christ, clearly reminiscent of our Early Christian
world in which a beardless young man with the physical attributes of an
Apollo are fused and brought to realization in Christ. It is the Eucharistic
Lord, the Second Adam, reborn, as he stands young and old, virile and
effeminate, living and dying, with arms extended, still bleeding form
his costal wound while offering to all his broken bread. As it was and
still remains counter to church renovations of its time, it was definitely
contemporary but not modernist.
Yet with its many commissions given to the some of the country’s
most popular gallery artists of the day, (all in storage now) the show
itself was a hodge-podge of styles of art about art, art for art sake,
art about the artist, with only a smattering of that was truly religious
or liturgical. This disdain for quality, for the utilitarian, for the
classical was further echoed in the exhibition’s catalogue liner
notes as they went on to denounce the Quattrocento: “In fact, what
historians might indicate to be the apex of Church art and art in general
may actually signal the real decline, possibly the decadence of sacred
art in the West…the Renaissance.”
This argument that the Greco Roman and the Renaissance were pagan in
origins and therefore unsuitable, or unworthy for contemporary church
art and architecture has long needed to be put to rest. Countless Christian
attributes predate the birth of Christ as the Mystery entered Its own
creation from the beginning. As we are called on to acknowledge the “anonymous
Christian” in those who have not heard the teachings of Christ yet
lead their lives in the spirit of Christ, so are we, along with the Church,
called to acknowledge the anonymous Christian in art and architecture.
The truth is Christianity has more classical structures than pagan antiquity
has ruins.
To follow this anti-classical logic through, would call on us to not
show our God as not having taken on human form, not to show that the Mystery
became flesh. After all, the idea to anthropomorphize one’s god
was not primarily Christian as it can be found in both pagan and nature
religions pre dating the Incarnation. Yet it is ironical that these same
critics who despise the use of the classical for its pagan origins or
“political incorrectness” seem to have no problem in appropriating
the designs of other pre Christian nature religions for our churches.
As Stonehenge replaces the altar and sanctuary and “medicine wheel”
seating replaces the nave, our “worship spaces” becomes theatres
in the round. When the corporeal reality of place is lost to bad art and
architecture, the spiritual reality of place is lost with it. The true
freedom to make something beautiful for the Church and its faithful is
placed in exile and its faithful with it.
The beauty due in sacred art and architecture cannot be subject to political
correctness as if it where a matter of political rationing. Beauty contains
the measure of gift within itself, not the percentage allotted in the
art budget. Modernist art and architecture will not be catalogued by some
future Vitruvius. There will be no Brunelleschi and Donatello traveling
to a modernist Rome to measure its proportions. If modernism broke the
covenant, it did so simply on the basis of not giving. When faith and
aestheics do not share a common gaol, both are degraded. When aesthetics
affairs are so orderde as in modernism that there is no recognition of
either the moral or visual aesthetic, there can be expected a belittling
of the faithful. The faithful have a right to a response from the artist
and architect that is a reflection of their beliefs. Wherever, whenever
and however this right is dislocated, the very notion of a serving aesthetic
is sacrificed, omitted, for the santitiy of individualism. Thus, so-called
sacred art will have no meaning other than that projected by the artist’s
ego. There can be no covenant when the goals of the art are separated
from the goals of the faith. Sacred art without the faith and faithful
being served is a parody and an injustice. The covenant is broken.
Even among our best religious paintings of the twentieth century Salvador
Dali goes unrecognized for his contribution to sacred art. His “Last
Supper” is hung as to not be seen or read as it is placed on a stairwell
going to the basement in the National Gallery in Washington DC. Ironically
just as the Christ it depicts, it holds the place of embarrassment, a
“stumbling block” that the modernist curator cannot explain
to his visitors that the art historian would rather her students skip
over. Yet Dali holds a place for the extension of Catholic art. His was
and is the art of ongoing conversion. However it neither received proper
notice from the church officials or the art critics. For the sake of Dada,
art history prefers and needs Dali to be its “bad boy” and
would rather not be reminded of his slips into religious art.
In his “ Discovery of the America by Columbus”, sometimes
called the “Dream of Columbus” Dali` depicts the discovering
of the New World out of time and place. Here he presents “Christo-Foro”,
the Christ Carrier who brings the Ship of Christ with all its crosses
as well as his Eglesia to the New World. But simultaneously he, the man,
also arrives and discovers this New World found in the Resurrection of
Christ. As this Christforo emerges from the waters of Baptism, he pulls
his ship, his cross to a new shore never to return to his point of departure,
never leave his new discovered true home in Christ. Here this pictorial
discovery gives evidence that neither the works inspired by Franciscan
or Ignatian Spirituality belonged to a certain period of art or Church
history. Sadly, in our anxiety to be relevant, this art become intelligible
to us as we allowed modernism to appropriate our Catholic language.
Now through what is called post modernism, we may have learned that
religious, sacred or liturgical art can not serve the art community as
art does secular world. The artist of religious work is usually self-educated
in the signs and symbols, the forms, the colors and geometry and proportions
of sacred art. When we meet others like us, it is the smaller if not the
smallest circle of artist friends. Once installed, our commissions are
not visited by curators or reviewed by any art reviews. Our works are
often reproduced on holy cards, church calendars, books, yet we remain
“anonymous”. Our slides are not submitted but we are not eligible
for any NEA grants. Artists and architects may be called “Church
Ministers” but too often, they remain nameless, something that Paul
the VI knew in the long run hurt the Church more than her artists. If
we have learned anything from modernism and our history, we know that
religious art does not receive notoriety for being novel, from being ironic
or being clever. To have one’s work be such an attraction in the
secular world is to be a success. To do so in the religious sector, it
is to have failed at your mission. Obviously this is not work for those
without a calling. The paintbrush or chisel in the hand of the “uncalled”
is as worthless as the crosier held by the “hired hand”. The
former would open windows that lead the flock nowhere while the latter
would simply close or renovate our churches and leave the flocks to scatter.
We are left with the question as to how people find us.
Yet despite the efforts and arguments made by art historians, critics,
galleries, museums, and teaching institutions, as well as those within
the Church hierarchy, classicism, like the Church, the Bride herself,
cannot be chronologically framed. It, unlike modernism, is not a linear
fashion of one style begetting another and another. Here the modernist
view would like us to think that Michelangelo if alive today, he would
be a “liturgical mime performance artist”.
At best, our recent past can provide us with a sense of where we may
find ourselves today. By the end of the Second Millennium, American artists
had been working along side, if not within the secular, thus being both
modernist and puritan. The modernist believing that artist was freest
when not tied to the burden of representationalism and the puritan needing
to believe all art is by nature superficial, controversial, and always
to appear out of place. By their combined definitions, modernism and Puritanism
produced an art from that was only acceptable if and when it seemed shocking,
if and only when it was inappropriate, and if and only when it was non-representational,
all of which sacred art cannot do if it indeed accepts the Incarnation.
Should it be any wonder why the tympani reliefs of Creation for the National
Cathedral in Washington DC by Fredrick Hart went unnoticed by both the
art world and the religious world alike when unveiled in 1984?
But if our works are to find themselves in beauty, that must be centered
in love. As St. Paul writes in his letter to the Ephesians,
“I pray that you may have your roots and foundation in love,
so that you together with God’s people may have the power to understand
how broad, and long, how high and deep is Christ’s love.”
If we take these dynamics and apply the dimensional aspects of the Christ’s
love for us in his Church as his Bride, as Daughter, as Mother, and as
Sister, we can then apply these same dynamics to our works as artists
in Christ.
As Bride she is forever erect, upright. She is always dressed, with her
lamp lit and ready for action. Her stature demonstrates her being His
chosen. Her height tells of her devotion. Attentive, she is never squat.
As she patiently awaits her Master, she wears her veil in the form of
a façade. Its design gives us hint to her inner beauty, of her
true face, which she takes on as she meets the Groom at the altar. As
the Bride of Christ she must be adorned with the finest furnishings, moldings,
and ornaments fitting for the holiest occasion. Yet all that she wears
from her vaulted ceilings and domes to her tiled floors, points to whom
she awaits. In all, she must be well suited for that place where time
and eternity meet and heaven and earth kiss.
As the Mother she is the great breadth of the Church as she is also
the seat, the cathedra in which she holds the infant Christ Child as well
as the Pieta whereby she holds her dying Son. Yet as mother to all she
is also womb, the place for where we are all born in Christ, a chair,
a cathedra in which she cradles the Christ child as the Incarnation and
as the mother of her crucified son. As Mater Eclessciae, all her forms
wrap around her children in stone, in words or images, all are durable,
substantial, made of the finest materials possible. She would give us
nothing less, nothing artificial even as part of the meal or portion of
our nourishment.
As Sister with her nave as the deck, she is the length of our ship as
she accompanies us to our journey to meet our Brother in Christ. Her spires
as masts, her stained glass portals she is a mighty ship prepared to take
us on this journey and provides us with the proper sacraments and sacramental.
This ship she says, can take the entire city, no, the entire world along
with her.
As Daughter, in her depth she remains in the loving care of the Father.
She is the first born of the First Born of the dead. She as is the product
of the loving will and therefore houses all that was done with loving
will. Her artists and artisans along with her listen to the Holy Spirit
and as the New Eve, she with them in turn cares for the Father in His
needs to provide for his other children giving them the works for his
family in us.
The Bride Church is a labor of love and faith of the Groom Christ in
and for us, his creation. So in kind, our art works, our labors must be
of love and imbued with faith if they are to reach others. Like Bride
and Bridegroom they must bear the resemblance of the lover and the beloved.
If art does not serve the Creator, how can it serve his creation? Conversely
if it cannot or will not serve His creation, how can it serve Him?
As Meister Eckhart states, “To be properly expressed, a thing
must proceed from within, moved by its form”. Here form means pure
idea. This could be easily seen as absent in modernist works as they became
more obtuse and self centered. Yet they did nothing less than mirror our
contemporary liturgies. As the translation of “Et cum spiritu tuo”,
and with your Spirit, became “and also with you” our art began
to imitate our liturgy. Our salutation to the Holy Spirit within each
other as community became an individual greeting to the celebrant’s
ego.
We have learned now that when faith and aesthetics do not share a common
good, as happened in modernism and Puritanism, sacred art and architecture
degrade the faithful and deprive them of any higher vision. Their view
remains no higher than the naked physical properties and processes of
the works. The artwork fails to rise with the faithful to its higher capacity.
Like galleries and museums, many churches still cling to solutions that
modernism could never afford, nor was ever willing to give to Ecclesiae.
American churches have grown lazy in their search for the best. In many
cases, with its order of iconography, it clings to a model that trivializes
spirituality, placing catalogue Mary and catalogue Joseph on either side
of the altar (or block) as if they were the salt and peppershakers for
the Lord’s Supper. The statuary is most often purchased from catalogues
for prices beyond the cost of a commission, to have all done by the day
of dedication. The only one and comforting thought that we must continually
give ourselves is the fact that the Church is never complete in time and
space. Nor should it be.
As we leave the laboratory of modernism, we face new problems. Like
a pickled lab frog connected to the batteries of museums, galleries and
magazines, modernism doesn’t know that it’s dead, that its
kicks are not real. How do we pull the plug? We will have some problems
here. Modernism tried and to some extent succeeded in trying to make beauty
untrustworthy. As a result, we live in a time whereby it is more likely
to run into difficulty for doing something well than doing it poorly.
Thus, conviction and faith must pervade the painting and sculpture eof
religious art if it is at all to succeed in its mission. Great sacred
art should point to our expectations. In this it remains forever contemporary
in its ability to point and lead us to our higher goals. Here, art history
and fashion can and will be put aside as the faithful become willing once
again to submit to and trust the influence of willful belief in beauty.
The only reality for the true artist is true Beauty and the only true
Beauty is God.
The American Catholic Church longs for a renaissance; not a renovation.
It longs for a renaissance, not as an art movement to be replaced with
another, but a rebirth of its qualities that reflect the covenant. Like
our architecture, our painting and sculpture need to bring us closer to
and include us in the mysteries of our faith. Their mission, their message
cannot be withered and waisted by the desire to be novel or the fear of
borrowing from within our own traditions. To deny our qualities is nothing
less than a denial of our transfiguration.
Of course the greatest aspect of transfiguration, of transformation
is still the liturgy, is still the ongoing work of the Church. As such,
sacred art remains the work of the new in that it is the work that can
always be reborn and like the Church, extend itself. It is an inclusive
and open form that allows for rebirth both within and without. Yet if
sacred art and architecture are to function as guide posts along the way,
then they must point in a guided direction, not misleading. If our destination
is Eternity, it is inevitable a renaissance will occur. For now we must
wait for the Church to wake up from the slumber of modernism, to regain
its ability to distinguish the difference between novelty and renascence.
We may then ask, does the Catholic Church need a “renaissance”.
Ultimately, the answer is always “yes”. The Church needs renaissance
because the Church is renaissance.
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