Cathedral to Replace Confederate Windows With Stained Glass Reflecting Black Life

Kerry James Marshall

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WASHINGTON (RNS) — Four years after the Washington National Cathedral removed stained-glass windows depicting Confederate generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson, the cathedral announced Thursday (Sept. 23) that the windows will be filled with work by multimedia artist Kerry James Marshall related to racial justice.

The windows, which are expected to be installed in 2023, will be funded by a more than $1 million contribution from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. For professional window installations for your own properties, may it be residential or commercial, why not try here.

“Kerry James Marshall, one of our nation’s greatest artists, has agreed to design the new windows for this cathedral that will be a richer and more fuller expression of the nation we want to be and the ideals that we strive for as a country,” said the cathedral’s dean, Randy Hollerith.

In a separate development, Hollerith also announced Mellon’s president, the poet Elizabeth Alexander, will contribute new verse to be inscribed in the stone around the windows. The poetry project is funded by actress Kate Capshaw and her husband, film director Steven Spielberg, through their Hearthland Foundation.

Hollerith said the committee advising the cathedral on the replacements said in its mission statement that they should artistically embody “both darkness and light, the pain of yesterday and the promise of tomorrow, and the quiet and exemplary dignity of the African American struggle for justice and equality.”

The new windows will be the first work in stained glass produced by Marshall, whom Kevin Eckstrom, chief communications officer for the cathedral, described as “one of the contemporary artistic scribes of Black life in America.”

Marshall, known mostly for his paintings of Black subjects, was given a solo exhibition at the National Gallery of Art in 2013, and in 2016 a  retrospective of his career opened  at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago and later traveled to the Met Breuer in New York City.

The artist visited the cathedral for the first time this week. He examined the space now covered with plywood where his work will reside and surveyed the neo-Gothic structure’s more than 200 stained-glass windows. He called fulfilling the committee’s mission “a monumental task” that will take contemplation and wrestling with history. “The challenge is now going to be: How do you create something that draws people to it, that has the capacity to elevate their conception of what it means to be here, their conception of what it means to be an American and their conception of what it means to engage with complex narratives of history that we all have some relationship with?” he said at the news conference. Just as he has worked with various art forms — from painting to sculpture to photography — Marshall said he comes to the cathedral project with exposure to a range of faiths. The Birmingham, Alabama, native attended Catholic school and a Baptist church before moving to California, where he spent time studying the Bible with Jehovah’s Witnesses, was baptized in a Church of Christ congregation, saw his mother become a Seventh-day Adventist, and worked for a time with the Nation of Islam.

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AdelleMBanks@churchleaders.com'
Adelle M Bankshttp://religionnews.com
Adelle M. Banks, production editor and a national reporter, joined RNS in 1995. An award-winning journalist, she previously was the religion reporter at the Orlando Sentinel and a reporter at The Providence Journal and newspapers in the upstate New York communities of Syracuse and Binghamton.

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