Dome Lines

Side chapel dome, Church of St. Ignatius Loyola, Rome, Italy
Join Becky from The Life of B for October Sqares #15. There are only two rules. The image must be square and must relate to the October theme: lines&squares.
Side chapel dome, Church of St. Ignatius Loyola, Rome, Italy
Join Becky from The Life of B for October Sqares #15. There are only two rules. The image must be square and must relate to the October theme: lines&squares.
Chapel of John the Baptist, Church of St. Roch, Lisbon, Portugal
Lisbon’s Church of St. Roch is awash with gold. The Chapel of St John the Baptist, ordered by King Juan V in 1540, was constructed in Rome, blessed by the pope, then disassembled and shipped to Lisbon on three ships. It was said to be the most expensive chapel ever built at the time. The scene of John the Baptist above the altar is a micro mosaic, not a painting. The overt use of gold was a celebration of the glories of Portugal’s expansion around the world and the riches the colonies brought to the kingdom.
Join Nancy’s A Photo A Week: Gold
As some of you may know from old posts, I am non religious but I love old churches and religious art and objects. Three churches have stood out for me in the last two days and all are quite different.
Catholicism played a big role in both the development and the expansion of Portuguese culture. It has only been since the 1970s, and the end of a long term dictatorship, that church and state were finally separated.
I’ll start with my favorite so far.
Unremarkable on the outside, the mid-16th century Church of St. Roch is an explosion of gold on the inside. While the simple floorplan follows the Jesuit auditorium-church plan, the interior decoration is flamboyant Baroque.
The single nave has a flat wooden ceiling with false domes painted on it. Eight side chapels line the nave.
The Chapel of St John the Baptist, ordered by King Juan V in 1540, was constructed in Rome, blessed by the pope, then disassembled and shipped to Lisbon on three ships. It was said to be the most expensive chapel ever built at the time.
The three large paintings are actually micromosaic copies of paintings. The altar frony is lapis lazuli. Most of the altar decorations are gold or gilt silver or bronze.
Many of the valuable or fragile altar good and vestments made for use in the chapel are now housed in the museum adjoining the church.
The other seven side chapels are also splendid, and gold leaf predominates.
Chapel of Our Lady of Piety.
Chapel of Our Lady of the Doctrine
Gold, diamond and amethyst item in museum.