Tuesday 19 February 2019

From Religious Symbols To Abstract Expression, Custom Stained Glass Windows San Diego

By William Gibson


Monasteries, cathedrals, and places of worships have shared the love for colorful windows since the Middle Ages. Stained glass has been used in the architecture of holy places for centuries to either represent religious figures or just brighten up a building. Although the trend may seem out of fashion, it still exists in many buildings across the world today and Custom Stained Glass Windows San Diego is recognized as an elegant form of decorative architecture for many stylish modern houses.

St. Joseph s Church in Le Havre, France was built in the 1950s after World War II. The church was designed by architect Auguste Perret as a memorial for the thousands of citizens who died during the war and formed part of a project to rebuild the city. The Neo-Gothic design of the church includes a 350-foot tower lined with tainted glass fenestra by Marguerite Hure. The bright, abstract design of the glass strays from the traditional symbolic imagery used in church.

In Barcelona, Spain is a giant Roman Catholic cathedral named La Sagrada Familia. The building of this structure started in 1882 and was designed by Catalan architect Antoni Gaudi. Although this building will only see completion in 2026, the rainbow tainted windows that adorn the multiple spires make it a beautiful architectural sight.

A Protestant church in Zurich, Switzerland was built during the twelfth century and has been working on up until this current century. The Grossmunster is built in a Romanesque design and has the features of thick walls and small fenestella. In the twentieth century, the Pop Artist Sigmar Polke designed windows for the building. The fenestra are made to look like dissected gemstones or round rocks and are vivid in color.

Stained fenestras are not only prevalent in Christian places of worship. The Nasir al-Mulk Mosque in Shiraz, Iran is beautifully decorated with stained windows and is commonly known as the Pink Mosque for its vivid reflection of rose colors that shine through the building. The mosque was built in the nineteenth century and is a breathtaking example of tainted fenestra used in Islamic architecture.

York Minster in York, England is a cathedral building with an attached, smaller building on the grounds called The Chapter House. The Chapter House forms part of the structure built in the seventh century and is beautifully designed with tainted glasses. The fenestella vary between plainly colored shapes and intricately formed religious scenes, like the martyrdom of Thomas Becket.

The Chapel of Thanksgiving in Dallas, Texas is a non-denominational structure of worship which welcomes people of any beliefs or spirituality. This building, beautiful physically and in its purpose, is characterized by the spiral ceiling which is decorated with tinted glasses. Built in 1976, the windows outline the spiral with different colors and glass fragments.

The various styles of fenestras remain the most striking feature of many well-known buildings across the world. Whether depicting religious figures and scenes or simply just patterns of color, this architectural decoration method, definitely, brings beauty and splendor to every building it touches.




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