Article 6WQXC Even if you’re not a person of faith, there are reasons to see Antoni Gaudí as a saint | Rowan Moore

Even if you’re not a person of faith, there are reasons to see Antoni Gaudí as a saint | Rowan Moore

by
Rowan Moore
from US news | The Guardian on (#6WQXC)

The Catholic church has taken the first steps to canonise the architect of Barcelona's extraordinary Sagrada Familia

I don't understand the processes by which people become saints, but the case for the canonisation of the great Catalan architect Antoni Gaudi, now progressing with the blessing of the pope, seems strong. He was devout - he tried to go without food for 40 days in emulation of Jesus Christ, until a bishop friend talked him out of likely death. The unprecedented phantasmagoria that he designed in stone, iron and ceramic could be called miracles. He even suffered a form of martyrdom, being hit by a tram while apparently deep in thought about his most famous work, the church of Sagrada Familia. It's not quite the same as a burning at the stake or a fusillade of arrows or the other grisly ends of ancient saints, but has its own significance. Gaudi's mission was to find spiritual meaning in a world transformed by industry and machines, of which the fatal tram might be considered a representative.

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