Coverbild Sacred Modernity
A two-page spread from a publication by Jamie McGregor Smith, featuring an essay in both English and German. The text is laid out in four columns. The English title on the left page reads IN SEARCH OF THE INEFFABLE, and the German title on the right reads AUF DER SUCHE NACH DEM UNBESCHREIBLICHEN.
A diptych of a church in the Brutalist architectural style. On the left, the jagged, geometric concrete exterior of the church rises against a blue sky and a green mountain. On the right, the cavernous interior features complex, angular concrete walls and ceilings over wooden pews, an altar, and a pipe organ.
A two-page book spread showing two photographs of Carlo Scarpa's Brion Tomb. On the left is an exterior view of a complex, stepped concrete structure on a green lawn with trees. On the right is an interior view of the building, featuring raw concrete walls and a large, circular entryway framed in blue that looks into an adjacent room.
The interior of a modern church with rows of simple wooden pews facing the altar. The room is filled with light from tall, translucent walls made of gridded panels. A large crucifix hangs from the exposed concrete ceiling in the center of the symmetrical space.
A two-page photo spread of a Brutalist church. On the left, the exterior is a windowless, angular building of ribbed concrete with a large wooden door, set in a parking lot with bare trees. On the right, the cavernous interior features a high, coffered concrete ceiling, massive geometric beams, and rows of pews on a green carpet, facing a simple altar.
A two-page photo spread of a modern church interior. The large, rectangular hall features an exposed steel truss ceiling and walls made of thin, translucent panels of golden marble, which fill the space with a warm, diffused light. The left image shows rows of simple wooden pews facing a large pipe organ on a balcony. The right image shows the pews from a side angle, facing a minimalist altar with a cross on the wall.
A two-page book spread showing two photographs of a modern, brutalist church in a mountainous region. The left image displays the circular interior, featuring concrete walls, tiered wooden pews arranged in a semi-circle, and a complex, layered ceiling. The right image shows the angular concrete exterior of the church, with a unique, abstract, openwork spire topped with a cross, set against a backdrop of mountains under a blue sky.
A two-page book spread featuring a modern church. On the left is the interior view down the central aisle, showing light wood pews and a complex, geometric wooden ceiling. On the right is the exterior, a stark white building with an angular, peaked roofline set against a backdrop of tall mountains, with a cemetery in the foreground.
A two-panel photo spread of the Chiesa di Santa Maria della Visitazione in Rome. On the left, the church's exterior features a unique Brutalist design with stacked, angular layers of concrete. On the right, the vast interior shows raw concrete walls and a complex geometric ceiling, with rows of wooden pews illuminated by light from stained-glass and clerestory windows.
A two-panel image showing the exterior and interior of a modern, brutalist-style church. The left photo displays the building's angular, multi-tiered, light-colored facade from a paved courtyard. The right photo reveals the vast interior, a dramatic space of raw concrete with a complex, geometric ceiling and walls, and rows of seats arranged in a semi-circle around a central altar.
A two-page spread from a book featuring two photographs of a Brutalist church. The left photo shows the exterior with its jagged, mountain-like concrete roof above a courtyard. The right photo reveals the cavernous interior, characterized by soaring, angular concrete walls and ceilings that create a dramatic, monumental space with rows of chairs below.
A two-panel image from a book showing the exterior and interior of Our Lady Help of Christians Church. On the left, the modern building's exterior features a large, turquoise, pleated roof with a jagged edge above a brick base. On the right, the interior shows a dramatic, high-vaulted concrete ceiling, grey block walls, stained glass windows, and wooden pews facing a central marble altar.
A minimalist two-page book spread on a white background. The left page is blank. The right page displays two parallel columns of black text. The left column is in English under the title INCARNATION, and the right column is a German translation under the title INKARNATION. Both texts explain the theological concept of incarnation.
A diptych of a modern church. The left image shows the concrete exterior with a flowing, dark roof and a large, separate cross-shaped structure by a road. The right image shows the cavernous interior, featuring a complex, sculptural ceiling of sweeping concrete forms above wooden pews and a simple altar.
A two-page spread from a book showing an essay by Jonathan Meades. The left page is in English, titled The Absentee Landlord. The right page is the same essay translated into German, titled Der Abwesende Vermieter. Both pages feature two columns of black text on a plain white background.
Sacred Modernity
The Holy Embrace of Modernist Architecture
€ 54.00
VAT included. Shipping costs will be calculated at checkout
By (artist): Jamie McGregor Smith
Photographs by: Jamie McGregor Smith
Edited by: Jamie McGregor Smith
February 2024, 208 Pages, 126 Photos
Linen Hardcover
248mm x 298mm
ISBN: 978-3-7757-5646-4

HATJE CANTZ VERLAG
Mommsenstr. 27
10629 Berlin
Germany
E-Mail: contact@hatjecantz.de


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A Photographic Pilgrimage
Sacred Modernity documents the dramatic shift in ecclesiastical architecture across post-war Europe. Spurred on by the modernizing impulses of the Second Vatican Council in the early 1960s, and in search for an appropriate architectural language that showed that the Catholic Church was still relevant to the modern world, this was the period when the church married the atheist architect, and bore a child of pure form. Among these structures, some exude a joyful antagonism, while others emanate a cold minimalism. Boldly designed, outrageous and provocative for their time, the aesthetic of this period still ignites great debate between modernists and traditionalists.
Half a century on, this study traces how their materials and ideals have matured and patinated. Remaining amongst the most unique buildings within our public sphere, they are future visions from the near past that seem to anticipate societies current shift away from organized religion towards an individual spirituality.
The book represents the first attempt by a photographer to collate the religious architecture of the mid-century high modern years that took many forms, from Brutalism to Structural Expressionism, under a singular artistic vision.

JAMIE McGREGOR SMITH (*1982, Weymouth, UK) studied photography at Staffordshire University, graduating in 2006. Inspired by the American New-Topographic movement, he began his documentary records with the defunct pottery industry in the British midlands, the collapse of the motor industry in Detroit, or the abandoned Athens Olympics stadiums. His works have been published by The New York Times, The Guardian, the Financial Times, Wallpaper*, Architectural Digest and Vanity Fair.
TU Wien

21.03.-04.04.2024
»Whatever the flavour of your religious persuasion, an impressive interior will have the power to inspire awe. That’s certainly the case for these architectural wonders, some little known and rarely visited.«
Jonathan Bell
Wallpaper*
»The new language of sanctity is diverse and at times surprising. (...) Regardless of their architectural language, these are spaces that inspire contemplation, meditation, and introspection.«
Maria-Cristina Florian
ArchDaily
»(...) unlike anything you’ve seen before - A new book by photographer Jamie McGregor Smith highlights the important role that architecture played in the Catholic Church’s mission to bring people back after WWII«
Elissaveta M. Brandon
Fast Company
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