![]() ![]() Oleksandr Klymenko’s brilliant idea was to use a different kind of wood: not a polished and treated panel, but the rough-hewn tops or bottoms of the boxes in bullets, grenades, and artillery shells were once stored. Icons written on wood using various types of paint are nothing new, of course many of the greatest icons in the history of Christian art were written that way. Whatever impact my words may have had, however, it was likely less than the thoughts and emotions stirred in the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception by an extraordinary display around the cathedral’s perimeter: icons written (painted) on the wooden lids of ammunition boxes by a husband-and wife team of two young Ukrainian artists, Sofia Atlantova and Oleksandr Klymenko. During my remarks (which can be found in full here, I spoke of Eastern Catholicism’s “gift of iconography” to the universal Church. This deeply Catholic instinct for transforming what is dead or death-dealing into something life-affirming and life-giving continues today in Ukraine, through a remarkable project known as “The Icons on Ammo Boxes.” I discovered it in Philadelphia in early June, while speaking at the celebrations marking the enthronement of my old friend Borys Gudziak as Metropolitan of the Ukrainian Catholic archeparchy of Philadelphia. Bartholomew on Rome’s Tiber Island - a place where the usual bustle and buzz of Roman churches is replaced by a hushed reverence, as if even the least well-catechized visitors realize that they’re in the supernatural presence of great witnesses. Many such relics are displayed at the shrine of the New Martyrs in the Basilica of St. The Venerable Francis Xavier Nguyen Van Thuan wore his pectoral cross suspended from a chain he made from the barbed wire of the Vietnamese communist concentration camp in which he was confined for years. Bibles and missals were handwritten on scraps of paper from memory. ![]() ![]() Crucifixes and Mass vessels were forged from scrap metal. Rosaries were constructed from bits and pieces of this-and-that. Throughout the 20th century - the greatest period of martyrdom in history - persecuted Christians used the dross of this world to make religious artifacts. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |