A new publication by Hatje Cantz focuses on Finnish photographer Ola Kolehmainen, capturing space and
light in places of worship.
Not exact matches
now hes
in the kingdom on his throne how much more powerfull now and us being his servants and conduits we have all the power
of heavenat our disposal by his will.and we are to walk
in the darkest
places but we have a brighter
light and when we go to the dakests we leave that
light the darkest
place bescomes the brightest
place becuause the power used there stays if accepted and kept.we leave a
lighted path for others to receave and gets the all deserving glory praise and thankfullness and
worship and love he wants.we are always should have the servent humblness.to learn to lead we serve when we lead we still serve and people will do the same when they see how well its system works.bless you and follow his path and make ways for him and others.
The architects responsible for the conversion — London - based Heatherwick Studio, authors
of a design studio for the Chinese fashion brand Tangy, a Buddhist temple
in Kagoshima, Japan, and multiple Google campuses — have transformed the simultaneously cavernous and claustrophobic silo spaces into a
light - filled L - shaped structure that has the look
of a futuristic
place of worship.
Together with the paintings, scaled and
lit in response to the original function
of the chapel as a
place of worship, the installation invokes the Christian metanarrative within The Master and Margarita.