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500 South Mason Road
Creve Coeur, Missouri 63141
www.stlouisabbey.org
Even St. Louisans who generally dislike modern architecture are apt to
make an exception for the Priory Chapel, as the church of the St. Louis
Abbey is still popularly known. From a distance, its tiers of parabolic
arches seem to be lifting off from its green ridge, and from inside, the
sense of soaring is even more pronounced. Three men share the major
credit for this: Gyo Obata, the architect; Pier Luigi Nervi, his
consultant; and the first prior, Father Columba Cary-Elwes, who insisted
on a real church rather than a small chapel. Cary-Elwes was able to
achieve this goal thanks to the generosity of an anonymous family of
donors. Obata, the design partner in the internationally known firm of
Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum (HOK) of
St. Louis, probably had less to do with obtaining the commission for the
chapel than his partners George Hellmuth and George Kassabaum, who were
both active Catholics; Kassabaum sent four sons to the Priory School.
Obata had come to St. Louis from California at the beginning of World
War II to escape internment by attending Washington University. He
played a major role in the design of Lambert Terminal, with its soaring
cross vaults. The triangular arches in his initial design for this
church were modified to parabolic form at the suggestion of the great
Italian engineer Pier Luigi Nervi, who had pioneered the thin-shell
concrete construction used here. The window walls are formed of an
insulated fiberglass polyester that limits the admission of light to an
alabaster-like translucency. Even before its completion in 1962, the
Priory Chapel brought HOK its first national acclaim.
Since 1966 the church has served a dual role as the parish church of St.
Anselm. At its founding in 1955, the Priory of St. Mary and St. Louis
was under the protection of its parent institution, Ampleforth Abbey,
near York, England. It became independent in 1973 and was raised to the
status of abbey in 1989. The English monks, who follow the ancient rule
of St. Benedict, came to St. Louis at the request of a committee of
interested parents to establish a school that would qualify boys for the
best possible higher education, on the model of Portsmouth Priory in
Rhode Island (which coincidentally also has an outstanding modern
church).
Althought somewhat remodeled, the interior of the abbey retains many
original features. The twenty identical arches define settings for the
altars needed by the monastic community. Each altar has a crucifix
designed by a different artist. Stained-glass artist Emil Frei and
sculptor William Schickel consulted on works of art, and Frei produced
the screen of laminated glass that defines the monks’ choir, where they
spend part of each day. Schickel designed much of the liturgical
furniture, including the processional cross, the lectern, and the font.
The tabernacle for the blessed sacrament is the work of Hillis Arnold, a
pupil of Carl Milles. The inspiration of Nervi’s artistry is seen in the
interior view into the lantern or bell tower, where the arch folds
converge in a flowerlike pattern.
The Chamber Chorus has enjoyed a long history with this building, giving
a concert here back in 1965 and on many subsequent occasions. The last
performance here on October 9, 2005 inaugurated its Golden Jubilee
season.
Notes by
Esley Hamilton and
Philip
Barnes
Photo by Roger Hill
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