ABSTRACT

Social groups formed around shared religious beliefs encountered significant change and challenges between the 1860s and the 1970s. This book is the first collection of essays of its kind to take a broad, thematically-driven case study approach to this genre of architecture and its associated visual culture and communal experience. Examples range from Nuns’ holy spaces celebrating the life of St Theresa of Lisieux to utopian American desert communities and their reliance on the philosophy of Teilhard de Chardin.

Modern religious architecture converses with a broad spectrum of social, anthropological, cultural and theological discourses and the authors engage with them rigorously and innovatively. As such, new readings of sacred spaces offer new angles and perspectives on some of the dominant narratives of the nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first centuries: empire, urban expansion, pluralism and modernity. In a post-traditional landscape, religious architecture suggests expansive ways of exploring themes including nostalgia and revivalism; engineering and technological innovation; prayer and spiritual experimentation; and the beauty of holiness for a brave new world. Shaped by the tensions and anxieties of the modern era and powerfully expressed in the space and material culture of faith, the architecture presented here creates a set of new turning points in the history of the built environment.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Building the kingdom: architecture, worship and the sacred

part I|76 pages

Pilgrimage and modern journeys

chapter 1|15 pages

Sisterly love in Lisieux

Building the Basilica of Sainte-Thérèse

chapter 2|19 pages

Modernity consecrated

Architectural discourse and the Catholic imagination in Franquista Spain

chapter 3|21 pages

The construction of modern Montserrat

Architecture, politics and ideology

part II|68 pages

Monasticism and religious houses

chapter 5|16 pages

Prairie progressivism

George P. Stauduhar and St Benedict’s convent

chapter 6|16 pages

Modern, Gothic, Anglican

The society of St John the Evangelist, Oxford

chapter 7|16 pages

The ‘building sisters’ of Presteigne

Gender, innovation and tradition in modern-era Roman Catholic architecture

chapter 8|18 pages

Revolution and revelation

Luis Barragán’s monastery at Tlalpan

part III|74 pages

Urban cultures and holy cities

chapter 9|18 pages

Situating Jerusalem

Poiesis and techne in the American urbanism of Jemima Wilkinson and Thomas Jefferson

chapter 11|15 pages

Chicago’s Woodlawn neighbourhood

The case of St Gelasius

chapter 12|18 pages

Nuns in the suburb

The Berlaymont institute in Waterloo by Groupe Structures (1962)