Large adobe church with two-tiered towers
Architecture,  History,  Monochrome Madness,  New Mexico,  Squares,  Travel galleries

Gallery: seeing mission churches in black and white

Mission music

Paul Simon, Under African Skies

The missions provided a base from which to pacify resistance and introduce European ways, not just of worship but also agriculture and lifestyle. They also brought European diseases to which the native people had little or no acquired immunity.

At the heart of each mission was its church:

Of earth, stones, and timber, but mostly earth, hulking pylonlike in silhouette, heavy, inert, functional, seemingly immutable but ever crumbling—praised, damned, and belatedly praised again—the Spanish mission churches of New Mexico issued from a union of European ideals and an outlandish environment.

https://npshistory.com/publications/kessell/nm-missions/introduction.htm

While their origins may lie in conquest and subjugation, the mission churches in New Mexico are undeniably beautiful. The adobe structures were modelled on European notions of what a church should look like, adapted to local materials. Edges were softened, decorations minimalised. It’s impossible to carve adobe as you can stone, but in the place of ornate carvings was a more simple, organic beauty.  

The typical church included an artio, a walled yard in front of the church that sometimes served as a cemetery. One or two corner towers flanked the front walls of most, usually topped by a wooden cross and a bell. The large wooden door at the centre of the front wall led into a large, windowless interior space, usually without benches or seats. Worshippers stood or knelt on the earthen floor.

For this week’s Monochrome Madness our host Dawn has asked us to share images of Places of Worship. A great choice of theme but how was I to be selective among the hundreds of such photos I must have taken over the years, and all over the world?! I decided to focus on a single destination and have chosen New Mexico because the Spanish missionary churches there are so beautifully simple. Their adobe structures and clean lines seemed perfect to meet another challenge at the same time, Becky’s Geometry Squares. After all, why take on one challenge if you can take on two at once?! By the way, if you’d prefer to see some images of these churches in colour, have a look at my 2021 post, Following the High Road to Taos.

My feature photo, not squared, is of the church in Socorro

Large adobe church with three white crosses
Detail of a corner on an adobe building
Detail of a corner on an adobe building
Curved and angular adobe walls
Adobe church with crenelated roof and small wooden cross
Adobe church with two small towers
Adobe tower with wooden cross
Simple adobe church with squat tower
White cross
Stone and adobe bell tower
Looking up at a solid adobe church with two towers

I visited New Mexico in 2011

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