New art within old walls: the painter Michael Triegel created central altarpieces for Naumburg Cathedral. But whether they are allowed to stay there is more than questionable.
The inauguration of the redesigned The altar of Mary in the cathedral attracted a lot of attention
The year is 1519, when the painter Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472-1553) was commissioned to create altarpieces for Naumburg Cathedral. But in 1541 they were smashed by radical Protestant iconoclasts: Because the supporters of the Reformation are convinced that such cult images distract believers from true piety. Numerous sacred works of art are thus lost in the Middle Ages, from Cranach's work in Naumburg Cathedral only the two side wings survive the furor.
But now, after almost 480 years, the cathedral, which has been Protestant since the Reformation, again has a complete altarpiece in its west choir, a three-winged so-called altar retable. It was supplemented by the painter Michael Triegel. It is great art in one of the outstanding churches in Germany from the 13th century world famous. The twelve sculptures by the donors attract numerous visitors. Above all, the figure of Uta is considered a masterpiece, has been used for centuries as a “the most beautiful woman of the Middle Ages” admired.
The church has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2018. The now complete three-wing altar retable is a joint work of two painters from different eras. The two preserved side wings from the 16th century frame the newly created Triegel elements. “Triegel meets Cranach” is the name of the project.
Naumburg Cathedral is a World Heritage Site
Triegel's picture shows an almost venerable and sacred scene in the style of Renaissance painting. Mary is depicted as a young woman holding out her newborn son to the viewer. At her feet, young women, almost girls, are playing music. In the background, ten people, six women and four men, hold a valuable cloth around Mary as if to protect her. And quite surprisingly there is also a rabbi and – with a Ferrari-red baseball cap – a man from the street who looks at the viewer almost kindly.
Triegel feels “connected to the cathedral”
He has felt a connection to the cathedral “since childhood,” says Michael Triegel. The 53-year-old, born in Erfurt in East Germany, is currently the most important painter of religious art in Germany. A portrait of the then Pope Benedict XVI, which he was commissioned to paint in 2010, made him internationally known. A few years later, the artist was baptized and became a member of the Catholic Church.
The painter Michael Triegel< /p>
Triegel has already created a number of religious works in the style of Renaissance painting. After two paintings for altars in smaller evangelical churches in Lower Saxony in 2004 and 2005, he designed large works for several Catholic churches in Franconia and most recently also church windows for a church in Saxony-Anhalt. Not only because of its size, but also because of its charisma, the Naumburg Altar looks like one of Triegel's main works.
A Roman homeless man
The face of the young Maria is based on the face of Triegel's daughter (as in earlier works, his wife could be guessed in the faces several times). Triegel's style, which masterfully approaches the greats of Renaissance painting, includes the personal – and also irritation.
In the center of the chancel of the church: the altarpieces
He says he saw the man with the baseball cap on the street in Rome – a homeless man. Triegel wanted to paint him, approached him, and they agreed on a fee for sitting as a model. Now a Roman beggar, drawn from life, represents the apostle Peter. And over Mary's shoulder, the evangelical theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906-1945), executed by the National Socialists in April 1945, looks the viewer in the eye.
The “United Domstifter”, which is a traditional state foundation and is independent of the Evangelical Church and owns the cathedral and the works of art, made a conscious decision to commission the central Marian motif. In the catalog for the altar, the Protestant regional bishop Friedrich Kramer praises this as an “important ecumenical impulse”. And the “Ecumenism Minister” of the Vatican, Cardinal Kurt Koch, expresses the hope that the “renewed Naumburg Marienaltar” will become “a symbol of renewed church unity”.
At the inauguration in a packed church, Kramer and his Catholic Magdeburg colleague, Bishop Gerhard Feige, unanimously sweared by the ecumenical charisma. And cathedral preacher Michael Bartsch also called the “ecumenical togetherness” a “sign of hope”. An altar stands as a sign of reconciliation, whose predecessor was smashed as an expression of hate and destruction.
The World Heritage Site
The world-famous stone carvings in the cathedral
If the altar is to remain permanently in the west choir of the cathedral… Because there is a dispute about the installation of the magnificent altarpiece. Representatives of monument protection and the International Council for Monument Protection (ICOMOS) had been warning for months. Her objection: The now complete altar retable disturbs the line of sight to the stone donor figures. This means that the deletion of the World Heritage title must be discussed. Then the cathedral would lose a predicate that attracts many thousands of visitors to Naumburg every year.
After the erection and inauguration of the altarpiece, the dispute escalated. The World Monuments Council ICOMOS and the state government of Saxony-Anhalt are pushing for the altarpiece to be quickly installed elsewhere in the cathedral. Until now, the “United Cathedral Donors” had counted on the altarpiece being able to stand in the central part of the west choir for three years and then a decision would be made to remain permanently at this point. Now they want to shorten this period to December 4, 2022.
The back of the altar too painted by Michael Triegel
The altarpiece is painted to fit its current location . You can also walk around the altar, Michael Triegel has immortalized the risen Christ on the back. The line of sight, according to many, is actually not disturbed. Does the motto still apply in winter: “Triegel meets Cranach” – and move on?