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- <text id=91TT0180>
- <title>
- Jan. 28, 1991: Heresy Or Homage In Barcelona?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Jan. 28, 1991 War In The Gulf
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DESIGN, Page 92
- Heresy or Homage in Barcelona?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A chorus of protests greets plans to complete an unfinished
- basilica started by a Spanish genius
- </p>
- <p>By MARGOT HORNBLOWER/BARCELONA
- </p>
- <p> "The Sagrada Familia is...the reflection of the soul of
- the people. Woe the day that it is halted!"
- </p>
- <p>-- Catalan poet Joan Maragall
- </p>
- <p> "It would be a betrayal to even think of finishing the
- Sagrada Familia...without genius. Let it remain there, like
- a huge rotting tooth."
- </p>
- <p>-- Catalan painter Salvador Dali
- </p>
- <p> Sensual, spiritual, whimsical, exuberant--few buildings
- so symbolize a city as Barcelona's unfinished Sagrada Familia:
- the Expiatory Temple of the Holy Family. Architect Antoni
- Gaudi's masterpiece dominates the skyline of Catalonia's
- capital, attracting 700,000 visitors a year. Its art nouveau
- stonework, its mosaic-encrusted bell towers and its warped
- geometry brilliantly mock the banality of much modern
- architecture.
- </p>
- <p> But how can an interrupted work of imagination be completed
- decades after its creator is gone? In the years since Gaudi's
- death in 1926, such admirers as architects Le Corbusier and
- Walter Gropius and artists Joan Miro and Antoni Tapies have
- demanded a halt to construction, which has been under way in
- fits and starts since 1882. Continuing to work on the building,
- contends architect Josep Anton Acebillo, is "like adding arms
- to the Venus de Milo." Nonetheless, the building continues to
- be financed privately--and enthusiastically--by
- contributors ranging from Catalan nationalists to Japanese
- businessmen to American tourists.
- </p>
- <p> As Barcelona seeks international celebrity in playing host
- to the 1992 Summer Olympics, the smoldering controversy over
- the Sagrada Familia has flared anew. Last summer 200 Barcelona
- artists and intellectuals issued statements deriding new
- sculptures for the church by Catalan artist Josep Maria
- Subirachs as "boorish" and "kitsch." Protesters circled the
- church in a candlelight procession. Religious objections have
- also arisen: traditionalists are holding monthly prayer
- sessions, inveighing against the stark nudity of Subirachs'
- Christ.
- </p>
- <p> Subirachs' austere, squared-off style is the antithesis of
- Gaudi's ornamented surrealism. "My work has nothing to do with
- Gaudi's," says the sculptor, 63. Although Gaudi left a 1911
- sketch of the Passion facade, Subirachs changed the arrangement
- of the sculptures and added controversial touches like a
- macabre skull below the crucifix. He gave his Roman centurions
- helmets playfully copied from Gaudi-designed chimney pots on
- a nearby building. Subirachs denounces his critics as
- "hooligans, snobs." Ironically, Subirachs in 1965 signed a
- letter protesting the basilica's continuation. But when offered
- the sculptural commission, he changed his mind "because I was
- given complete freedom."
- </p>
- <p> The quarrel is entwined in Catalonian politics. A symbol of
- the Catholic right, the church was sacked by anarchists in
- 1936, during Spain's civil war. Gaudi's drawings and plaster
- models went up in flames, but molds and photographs survived.
- Architect Jordi Bonet, who supervises the construction budget,
- says the opponents are "people who don't want a church as the
- emblem of our city." Moreover, Subirachs has publicly scorned
- the abstract artists favored by city hall in its Olympic
- building binge--and the disdain is mutual. Says poet Joan
- Brossa: "Gaudi was avant-garde, but Subirachs is retro-garde."
- </p>
- <p> On the side of completion, however, was Gaudi himself, who
- told his biographer, "All particularly grandiose churches have
- taken centuries to complete." Devoutly religious, the aged
- architect begged for alms when contributions dwindled. Gaudi
- deliberately sketched only an outline of the final facade.
- Citing St. Peter's in Rome and cathedrals in Cologne and Reims,
- he said, "Another generation will collaborate, as is always the
- case with cathedrals that have facades not only by several
- authors but also in various styles."
- </p>
- <p> Architectural education is also a factor. "Gaudi invented
- a new system of architecture," says Catalan professor Joan
- Bassegoda. "Instead of the geometry of rectangles and circles,
- he took his structures from nature, studying what forms allow
- trees and humans to grow and stay upright." Hyperbolas,
- parabolas, helices and helicoids, the curving, open-ended forms
- Gaudi used, were calculated so precisely that computers have
- shown his measurements to be perfect. Today computer-driven
- diamond saws are cutting Gaudi-designed inclined columns to
- support the nave, replacing Gothic architecture's flying
- buttresses. "We're still learning from Gaudi's genius," says
- Bassegoda.
- </p>
- <p> With Olympic-era Barcelona featuring such sleek modernist
- architects as Richard Meier and Arata Isozaki, the Sagrada
- Familia, now 40% complete, may be maligned by some as an
- old-fashioned ugly duckling. But its admirers have faith that
- it will yet grow into a swan. Eventually, its central spire
- will climax in a gold cross reaching at least 170 meters toward
- the sky, making it Europe's tallest church. At the current
- construction rate, that will not happen until the 21st century.
- But as Gaudi once said, pointing heavenward, "My client isn't
- in any hurry."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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