December 08, 2002|By Edward Gunts | By Edward Gunts,Sun Architecture Critic
Behind the altar in the recently restored chapel at the College of Notre Dame of Maryland hangs a new mural of the Virgin Mary that is strikingly different from conventional depictions.
The young woman in the painting is surrounded by traditional religious symbols: scrolls represent the word of God, sunlight streams through stained-glass windows, an angel hovers overhead. But the figure itself is thoroughly contemporary in character, a strong, young woman with a modern hair style and stance.
This prominent mural, clearly designed to be accessible to Notre Dame students, can be seen as a metaphor for the way the chapel itself has been changed in the past two years.
Built in 1896, the Romanesque sanctuary began as a serene space with elegant proportions and a beauty derived from simplicity. It was marred in 1968 by a misguided modernization. As a result of the latest renovation, the space feels new again, with colors that make it warm and inviting. Yet it also imparts a strong sense of tradition that reflects the chapel's role as a center of worship. In many ways it has reclaimed its rightful place as heart and soul of the Notre Dame campus.
The $2.5 million transformation underscores Notre Dame's "vitality and identity as a Catholic college in the 21st century," said president Mary Pat Seurkamp. "At the same time, the attention given to the project as a 'restoration' honors the tradition and legacy of the college."
Momentous occasion
The 300-seat chapel will be dedicated at 5 p.m. Saturday at a Mass presided over by Cardinal William H. Keeler. It's a momentous occasion for Notre Dame, the first Catholic women's college in the United States to offer a baccalaureate degree and, as of September 2003, the only women's college remaining in Maryland.
The sanctuary has been renamed the Marikle Chapel of the Annunciation, after Wanda and Henry Marikle. They're the parents of 1969 graduate Helen Marikle Passano, who along with her family donated $2 million for the restoration. The new name sounds a lot like 'miracle chapel' -- and that's pretty much what it has been for this campus. It's nothing short of a miracle that the college had such a hidden treasure, knew enough to restore it and marshaled the resources to complete the work as quickly and expertly as it did.
This restoration is part of a national trend in which institutions of all types are restoring historic spaces to their former grandeur by stripping away drop ceilings, wood paneling and worn carpet installed during the 1960s and 1970s.
Marikle Chapel is one of the first instances locally in which a place of worship has been "re-renovated" to address architectural sins committed during an earlier renovation. Even before the recent construction was complete, it was cited in a book about ecclesiastical design as a positive example of ways to restore beauty and tradition to today's churches.
"The innovative forms used by church architects in the '60s and '70s look not only outdated at the dawn of the new century; they look ugly," author Michael Rose argues in his 2001 book Ugly As Sin: Why They Changed Our Churches From Sacred Places to Meeting Spaces -- and How We Can Change Them Back Again.
"The non-churches of the '80s and '90s that can pass for libraries, post offices, or nursing homes are so uninspiring and banal that they fail to attract, to evangelize, or to raise the hearts and minds of man to God," Rose continued. "Simi-larly, the insensitive renovation of traditional churches... not only denuded a physical place, but also altered the worship and beliefs of the people."
Chapel renovations
Notre Dame's chapel occupies the second floor of Theresa Hall, a five-story building designed by noted Baltimore architects E. Francis Baldwin and Josias Pennington. It originally featured a high vaulted ceiling, round arches, carved wood wainscoting and pews, and finely crafted ornamentation, including eight stained-glass windows made in Munich, Germany.
The space was brutally altered in the late 1960s, when much of the original detail was covered up or removed during an unsympathetic renovation designed to add air conditioning and seats and provide a more contemporary space for students to celebrate Mass. The renovation was launched shortly after the Second Vatican Council recommended that every Catholic church become more of a communal space, with priests facing worshippers instead of turning away from them. It also reflected Modernist attitudes about design, wiping away historical finishes rather than saving them.
As part of the 1968 alterations, contractors installed a flat ceiling to conceal air conditioning ducts; cut down the stained-glass windows to fit within the lower ceiling, hid the pine floor with mustard-colored carpeting, replaced the marble altar with a wood one, and removed the old communion rails, choir loft and organ. The once bright and soaring space became dark and austere -- more like a club basement than a worship space.