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George Weigel

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Pugin at 200

The prospect of “redecorating,” or any other form of “home improvement,” generally gets me thinking, quickly, about a lengthy research trip abroad. Yet I can, and recently did, spend several pleasant hours contemplating ceramics, furniture, and—would you believe it?—wallpaper. But not at Home Depot, I quickly add; rather, in a book—Pugin: A Gothic Passion, published in 1994 by Yale University Press in association with London’s Victoria and Albert Museum.

I dug out Pugin—stuck among the oversized art books in my home library for the better part of two decades—when I learned that 2012 is the bicentenary of Augustine Welby Northmore Pugin, pioneer of the Gothic Revival style and one of the aesthetic geniuses of the nineteenth century. Best known for his work on the Palace of Westminster (home of the Houses of Parliament), Pugin was also an ecclesiastical architect of note, with almost 50 churches to his credit. And although the Luftwaffe and the Blitz wrecked what may have been his masterwork of church design, the Cathedral of St. George in Southwark, there are still Pugin churches to be admired throughout Great Britain, Ireland and Australia.

As I suggested at the top, however, Pugin’s genius was not limited to architecture and other grand schemes of design. He also worked magic on a much smaller scale: custom-designed wallpaper; magnificent pieces of furniture (dining-room cabinets, armoires, tables, desks and tables); beautifully intricate ceramic tiles, plates, and dinner and tea services—all of them a delight to the eyes.

Born on March 1, 1812, Pugin was received into the Catholic Church in 1835, and his passion for the Gothic (by which he meant, not hair-raising horror novels but the civilization of the Middle Ages and its distinctive aesthetic) was obviously enmeshed with his religious convictions. For the Gothic, as Pugin understood it, communicated even more than that sense of transcendence that is palpable in a great medieval cathedral like Chartres. The Gothic bespoke a sensibility about this world, the human place in it, and the moral life appropriate to men and women made in the image and likeness of God. Buildings tell us something about the people who live, work and worship in them, Pugin, believed: they tell us what those people think of themselves, their destiny and their responsibilities.

Thus in an 1836 polemic, Pugin, arguing on behalf of the Gothic Revival to which he and Sir Charles Barry gave noblest expression in the Palace of Westminster, contrasted a medieval monastery with a nineteenth-century poorhouse. The monastery, Pugin noted, was a place where the monks grew their own food, made their own clothes, shared what they grew and made with others, and offered the poor a decent place to be buried. Compare this, Pugin wrote, to “a panopticon workhouse where the poor were beaten, half-starved, and sent off after death for dissection. Each structure was the built expression of a particular view of humanity: Christianity versus Utilitarianism.”

Considering which, we may well hope that the Department of Health and Human Services never gets into the architecture business.

Pugin’s magnificent ecclesiastical architecture and church decoration, like the extraordinary interiors he designed for the Palace of Westminster, were, to adapt Blessed John Paul II, material exercises in philosophical anthropology—expressions of an idea of the human person. Pugin’s churches were built for people whose baptism had given them a unique dignity: through the eternal priesthood of Christ, exercised through the ordained ministry of the Church, the baptized were empowered to offer true worship to the Father. The same was true of the Houses of Parliament. They were designed by Barry and Pugin to reflect the dignity of self-governance among free citizens, whose participation in public affairs was another expression of their innate human dignity.

Churches that look like Pizza Huts are expressions of a dumbed-down theology and (if you’ll pardon the word twice in one column) anthropology. On Pugin’s bicentenary, the Church might well reflect on how it can do better than that.

George Weigel is Distinguished Senior Fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C.

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Comments:

5.2.2012 | 2:51am
Don Roberto says:
Yes. Bishops take note. We need to know we are in a church. Being physical as well as spiritual, sometimes we need to "touch the hem of Christ's garment." The cathedral in Oakland is an example of extravagent efforts to be original that (in my humble opinion) failed. And originality is not all it's cracked up to be. (Note to Bishop Cordileone: please consider tinting the windows in the shape of a cross so that one approaching can tell it is a church!)

5.2.2012 | 11:48am
James says:
I concur with Don Roberto. I walk past the Oakland Cathedral every day and cannot say I've ever been really inspired by it, and have only entered it perhaps a half dozen times. I find it rather chilly, and the first time I went in had the impression that it had been decorated by Ikea. In contrast, I visited Chartres for the first time last summer, and was awestruck; I cannot imagine a citizen of Chartres not wanting to pray there daily.

I have always had a problem with the idea of 'progress' and comparing those two cathedrals convinces me more that there ain't no such thing.
5.2.2012 | 1:05pm
Paul Pluth says:
I recommend Rosemary Hill's excellent 2009 biography of Pugin, titled "God's Architect".
5.2.2012 | 9:07pm
Patrick says:
It's interesting to me to compare two college campuses nearby, the University of Chicago and the University of Illinois - Chicago. The former is neo-Gothic, likely inspired by Pugin as it was built around the 1920's. The latter is brutalist, built in the 1970's. At the U of C, walking around the quads, you feel a sense of tranquility, and it's easy to curl up in one of its nooks and crannies for an afternoon read or a conversation. It's great fun to explore its winding hallways and the whole environment puts one at ease. While still grand and impressive, the details are human-size and, indeed, humanizing. At UIC, massive concrete edifices tower above one like a fortress. There are few organic flourishes, only straight lines and right angles. The buildings seem to stand in rigid defiance of the organic world, challenging rather than inviting. Gothic architecture impresses by sweetness, warmth, and majestic beauty -- modern architecture impresses by making one feel small.
5.9.2012 | 3:24am
nick says:
Pugin made a turning point in Religious architecture but we can learn just as much about his ideas on form and space from Pugin's Paris, a splendidly illustrated guide to the contemporary architecture of that
humanely scaled city.
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