Outlook Haus des Meeres
Magnificent view to the north and south from the rooftop of the Haus des Meeres in the 6th district.
Magnificent view to the north and south from the rooftop of the Haus des Meeres in the 6th district.
The Don Bosco Church (parish church Neuerdberg) in the 3rd district planned by Robert Kramreiter, was opened after 4 years of construction in 1958 on the site of an elementary school destroyed in WWII and forms with its well-proportioned form with powerful west work a beautiful example of post-war modernism (Mid-century modern) in Vienna.
The (presumably) first exposed concrete wall in Austria, equipped with concrete dimension work by Rudolf Szyszkowitz and the central portal with enamel mosaic by Otto Beckmann form the prelude to the clearly arranged basilical section of the interior, richly equipped with glass windows. At the start we are greeted by a statue of the 1934 canonized Ital. Priest and founder of the order Giovanni Melchiore Bosco, who was committed to disadvantaged children and young people throughout his life.
Besides the light-diffusing wall with stained glass windows by Georg Meistermann, the Stations of the Cross designed by Hermann Bauch, the choir windows by Margret Bilger and the „Symbols of Love in the Form of a Cross“ by Kurt Absolon are particularly impressive.
The Antwerp Passion Altar from about 1460 in the museum of the Votivkirche is considered the most important surviving carving with original coloring from the second half of the 15th century and was owned by the sculptor Hans Gasser, among others, until it was purchased by Emperor Franz Josef I for the Ambras collection in 1858 and donated to the church about 20 years later.
The sculptures are Gothic carvings in front of landscaped reliefs. Despite the unique state of preservation, a comprehensive restoration and addition of four figures, which were apparently stolen, took place in the 1960s.
In addition to the effectively painted and decorated costumes, the canopies and the gilded rocks signaling the sun’s reflection also show an effort to authentically convey the extensive pictorial work with Passion depictions of the Carrying of the Cross, Crucifixion, Deposition from the Cross and Lamentation of Christ.