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Art &
Architecture >
Cathedral
Mosaics
Part I - Trial and Error
When the Cathedral architect, John Bentley, died in early March 1902,
he left no finished mosaics in the Cathedral and very little in the way
of Mosaic drawings and designs. It was thus left to future architects,
donors and designers supervised, from 1936, by the Cathedral Art Committee,
to decide on the mosaics.
Bentley's 1895-96 drawings of the west and north elevations include small
pencil sketches of mosaics above both the main and north-west entrances,
and in 1899 he provided a written outline for the decoration of the Lady
Chapel and one of the chapels of the north aisle. But the only one of
these schemes to be adopted was that above the main entrance which was
put in place, with some alterations, in 1915-16.
Cardinal Vaughan, the Cathedral's founder, had also been considering the
question of the mosaics, and between 1899 and 1901 a total of twelve prominent
Catholics, half of them clerics and half laymen, had been asked to provide
written suggestions for a scheme for the nave. Vaughan had expressed the
view that this should tell the history of the Catholic Church in England
and most of the responses consisted of lists of scenes and saints illustrating
this theme. But Bentley's death, followed by that of the Cardinal in June
1903, put an end to the initiative.
Bentley's ideas can best be seen in the Chapel of the Holy Souls where
he worked with the artist, W C Symons, on the mosaics. Symons was an old
friend and fellow convert, and in 1899 Bentley had asked the Cardinal
that he should decorate one of the chapels (with Bentley himself doing
another). Correspondence between him and Symons in 1900 on the themes
for the mosaics of the Holy Souls Chapel reveals that Symons suggested
the Three Youths in the Burning Fiery Furnace for the west wall, while
Bentley suggested the Purgatory scene with the archangels Raphael and
Michael for the east wall. Symons also suggested portraying Adam and Eve
though Eve was later rejected in favour of Christ for the north wall.
Bentley's influence in the Holy Souls is evident. He wanted 'a severe
and very Greek style' and supervised the sketches and subsequent full-size
cartoon in Symons' studio, designing two garlands for the vault himself.
To install the mosaics, they chose George Bridge and his twenty-six young
lady mosaicists of Mitcham Park, Surrey, who had an Oxford Street studio
to which Bentley was a frequent visitor. Initially it was intended to
prepare much of the mosaic face downward on canvas in the studio (the
indirect method). But this was not a success and was soon abandoned. Instead
the direct method was adopted in which the glass tesserae, largely made
by Bridge himself, were inserted individually directly into the putty
(of lime and boiled oil) on the walls and vault.
Installation of the Holy Souls mosaics took eighteen months, from June
1902 to November 1903. The opus sectile glass tiles for the altarpiece
were made by George Farmiloe & Sons and they and the Great Rood (crucifix)
in the nave were painted by Symons also in 1903. But with a wife and nine
children he wanted the work to continue. Advised in a letter of April
1903 from George Bridge (who also wanted work) that a rival, the Venice
and Murano Glass Company, had bid to execute the mosaic above the main
entrance, Symons submitted his own design for this to the Cardinal in
May. But Vaughan died in June. So, urged on by Revd Herbert Lucas SJ,
one of the twelve who had put forward a general scheme for the nave, Symons
approached Vaughan's successor, Francis Bourne, seeking an interview to
discuss his mosaic designs for both the entrance and the Blessed Sacrament
Chapel.
But Bourne was not to be rushed and seems to have resented the pressure.
Nor would he agree to Symons' request in 1904 to be allowed to work on
one of the chapels as a model. The only commissions Symons received were
to design mosaic panels of St Edmund in the crypt, St Joan of Arc in the
north transept and the Holy Face in the Shrine of the Sacred Heart, all
executed by George Bridge and his mosaicists using the direct method in
1910-12. Symons' design for the Holy Face was death mask, disliked by
the donor, but he refused to change it. He died in 1911 and in 1916 the
Sacred Heart Shrine mosaics, all executed by Bridge, were taken down and
replaced by James Powell & Sons of Whitefriars at a cost of £780,
the new Holy Face being based on one in St Mary's Cadogan Terrace, Chelsea.
Patrick Rogers
First
published in Oremus the magazine of Westminster Cathedral July/August
2004.
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Read more about Cathedral Mosaics -
Part
II - Opus Sectile and the Italian Method
Part
III - The Arts and Crafts Men
Part IV
- The Impossible Dream
Part
V - A Russian Perspective
Part
VI - The Journey proceeds
Part
VII - The Mystery Mosaics

Symons'
design for Adam in the Holy Souls Chapel

The mosaic of Adam in the Holy Souls Chapel
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