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Heinz Tesar: Christus, Hoffnung der Welt, Donau City, Wien - Opus 42 Series (German, English, Hardcover)
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Heinz Tesar: Christus, Hoffnung der Welt, Donau City, Wien - Opus 42 Series (German, English, Hardcover)
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Text in English and German. The church rises to the challenge of
providing a spiritual centre for Donau City, the new residential
and commercial centre on the opposite bank of the Danube -- not as
an act of coronation for the city in the sense of Taut's urban
crown, as a temple or cathedral, but as miniature, as a
demonstration of the power of the quiet as opposed to the loud, as
an 'oasis in the diaspora', to use Karl Rahner's formulation about
the parishes of the future. The building gives an impression of
starkness: a hard cube, cut off at the corners, clad with sheets of
black chromium steel. But it is only stark at first glance. A
second glance shows that the hardness is a friendly hardness:
because of the reflections that the material admits; because of the
grid of the large-format sheets, to which the brightly gleaming
drill-holes that cover the walls like fine gossamer respond;
because of circular apertures that allow light to shine outwards
after dark; because of large, rectangular windows in the receding
corners that create a contrast with the closed quality of the
building. Inside the starkness gives way altogether: a light space,
which one comes into through an art-fully designed entrance.
Originally a sparse covering for the space, which thrives mainly
because of the light material -- birch wood -, because of the
arrangement of the pews, which is as lively as it is peaceful --
segments of circles of different sizes, surrounding the dark
syenite altar block in the form of an open circle -- and especially
because of the wide range of circular light sources that render the
introverted interior transparent, the large windows that create
islands of light, the free-form aperture in the ceiling, which
sends light gliding down on to the altar. Heinz Tesar's church
continues a tradition of forward-looking modern church building,
from Rudolf Schwarz's Fronleichnamskirche in Aachen via Egon
Eiermann's Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedachtniskirche in Berlin, Franz Fueg's
Piuskirche in Meggen on Lake Lucerne to the new Herz-Jesu-Kirche in
Munich by Allmann, Sattler and Wappner; and alongside all this
there is also the tradition of a genuinely Viennese development of
this theme, from Otto Wagner's Kirche am Steinhof to Ottokar Uhl's
parish church Katharina von Siena.
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