As part of a planned renovation of the Manti Utah Temple in the coming months and years, The Church of Jesus Christ is planning to preserve murals painted by artist Minerva Teichert.
There’s just one catch: It won’t be easy to separate the canvases from the temple’s walls.
Teichert’s artworks are “valued not only for their beauty, but also as a treasured remembrance of the faith, talent and dedication of the artist,” according to a church statement issued Wednesday.
Teichert painted the murals on canvas in 1947, and workers adhered them to the plaster walls in the temple’s world room. The church now hopes to separate the canvas or portions of the canvas from the plaster and preserve the murals for future restoration.
Her murals depict God’s hand in the sweep of human history from the tower of babel to what Latter-day Saints believe is the establishment of Zion in the American west, according to a BYU Studies article by Doris Dant.
The murals cover nearly 4,000 square feet and wrap around doors and under windows and around doors. Teichert did the bulk of the work in one month, according to Dant.
Teichert was a Latter-day Saint whose work is treasured by many in the church.
The church hopes to display Teichert’s recovered Manti Temple murals publicly after they are removed and preserved.
“We are seeking the advice of international experts in the field of art preservation during this process,” the statement said.
The church announced the removal of the murals as few weeks ago as part of an announcement to change from having a live presentation of the endowment in various rooms to single-room film presentations in multiple languages. This has caused some concern and sadness among those familiar with the pioneer-era temple.
The Salt Lake Temple is undergoing similar changes as part of its renovation.
The First Presidency addressed the challenge of preserving these historic but aging murals in the Salt Lake temple with the following statement:
“The addition of new instruction rooms, a new method of presentation, seismic strengthening, and changes to meet accessibility requirements meant that the murals in the temple would need to be moved and/or repainted. It was impossible to know whether the murals could be preserved during such a move. They were originally painted directly on lath and plaster walls, which had been repaired and repainted many times because of water damage and other deterioration. Further, the change to a film presentation meant that the rooms would be reconfigured. For all these reasons, the murals were carefully photographed and documented before removal, and some of the original portions are being preserved in the Church’s archives.”
from Deseret News https://ift.tt/2P6Sg2T
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