The Cathedral of St. John the Divine, located the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York
City is the largest cathedral in the world.
St. Peter's Basilica in Rome is larger, but it's not a cathedral, but a church, because the cathedral is the designated principal church within a
diocese. There are a lot of interesting facts about the cathedral - I wrote
about St. John the Divine in my post 1 and post 2 in June 2014.
Every year there is a new art exhibition at the cathedral. Last year pair of monumental birds were
installed in the majestic nave. As these phoenixes hovered some 20 feet above,
their tiny, twinkling lights illuminated an array of unexpected materials:
feathers fashioned from shovels; crowns made of weathered hard hats; heads
created from jackhammers. You can read
about phoenixes in the cathedral in one of my posts.
The exhibit features artists
whose works are installed in the cathedral's seven chapels and 14 bays. It's
divided into seven themes: water, soil, seed, farm, market, meal and waste.
Otternes has more than forty public commissions in the
US including Life Underground , his celebrated installation in the New York
city subway station at 14th street and 8th Avenue( I wrote about it in one of my posts) and "The Real
World" in Nelson Rockefeller park near Battery Park
City ( you can see the pictures of his sculptures in the park here).
The Otternes exhibition consists of three picnic tables arranged in a
38-foot row filled with chaotic scenes: a broken human figure, a
dinner-plate-size penny divided like a pizza and a cracked globe suspended on a
pulley. The 1986 work has been variously interpreted as a civilization in
decline and a symbol of gluttony.
The sculptures by Tom
Otterness are installed not only in the
center on the tables but within the support columns of the
Cathedral.


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