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Art
& Environment |
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Nave
Mark
Adams: Mural & Nave Windows
In
memory of Mark Adams (1925-2006)
Research
by Mary Ann Hurtubise
Source:
Johnson, Robert Flynn, Paul Mills and Lorna Price. Mark Adams (San
Francisco: Chronicle Books, 1985).
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Within
St.Thomas More Catholic Church, there is a brilliant portrayal of
Jesus Christ’s Passion and Resurrection as displayed by Mark
Adam’s mural, Resurrection, and his bays of stained glass nave
windows. Mark Adams
is a West Coast artist well known for his interest in liturgical
art by his murals, water colors, and stained glass windows. His
art work is displayed in many Christian churches and synagogue
settings. In 1967 he was commissioned by Saint Thomas More
Catholic Church in San Francisco to design a mural for the main
altar area, and then again in 1974 he was commissioned to design
the stained glass windows. Being
Catholic himself, these works of art reflect his interest--and the
St. Thomas More community’s interest--in liturgical art during
this time period.
In
Adams’ Resurrection, Christ rises from the tomb all white and
silver, draped in color, a giant figure, arms outstretched, orange
and gold rays of light behind him.
The lower background colors are in red and blacks, the
colors of the Passion; they move upward toward oranges and golds,
softer, more glorious colors.
Christ’s robe is in bright pastel colors “like a
promise of spring,” Adam says. Behind Christ’s head is a narrow halo
of fluorescent
paint. It achieves a
surprising separation of Christ’s head from the background.
Christ is shown from the knees up; he
is standing down in the tomb, which lies unseen below the church
floor level, and is just stepping up onto our floor and into our
world. As vast as the church space is, Adams suggests another
awesome space, that of the tomb below.
He has created a vision of Christ grand enough and large
enough to conquer both these spaces.
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The stained glass
nave windows represent the sky at the moment of the
Resurrection.
They depict not the light but darkness, the darkness that
came upon the face of the land at midday when Christ was
crucified. One looks
out the windows at the sky entirely filled with heavy, ominous
clouds, deep rubies, browns and blacks, purples and greens. Adams says of these windows, “Although it is the morning of
the Resurrection, the sky still has the colors of the Passion in
the clouds; it is a turbulent sky, and yet the stars are shining
through, and dawn is beginning to appear at the bottom.”
The
glass chosen for the windows at Saint Thomas More is traditional
hand-blown antique glass made in France, Germany, and England.
Adams tells of making his selections: “I went to the
importer’s warehouse in New York to pick out the sheets I
wanted. These dark,
rich reds were created because there’s a ruby flashing over
another color, a pale blue, or ruby flashed on a pale green.
They’re the kind of thing you can get by choosing each
sheet yourself.” The
bright stars in these windows are achieved in a traditional
manner. “They’re painted with black glass paint that is
actually ground glass with a binder; the fine rays are scratched
out and then fired in a kiln.”
Adam’s
describes the long process of developing each window: “I worked
from the architect’s blueprints and made a scale sketch, a
transparent model of the windows with the mullions painted in
acrylic on clear acetate. Behind
that, I’d work layers of tracing paper and transparent inks and
watercolors. From
that I blew up each panel in a full-size black and white cartoon.
Each shape was numbered to correspond to the colors of
glass I had chosen in New York, and after they were cut, we would
set them up on a sheet of plate glass--what they call easeling--so
that we could see light through them and see what the color
relationships were. Often
we would make changes in color or value, and, if necessary, would
recut the piece. Then
they were leaded and soldered on one side.
Before the other side was soldered, we would set them up in
the window for a final check to be sure that they were right.”
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