Advertisement
SPONSORED CONTENT
Cosmobeauté Malaysia and beautyexpo will expand into East Malaysia with the launch of the Cosmobeauté Malaysia Borneo Festival 2026 at the Sabah International Convention Centre (SICC) from May 25 to 26.
Advertisement
Advertisement
The facade of Saint John's Abbey in Collegeville, Minnesota.
Amazingly, several responded, and Breuer – a Hungarian Jew who had trained at Germany’s influential Bauhaus school, and invented the sleek, tubular-steel chairs that furnish trendy offices to this day – was appointed to oversee the giant church in a far northern corner of the United States. The design he came up with was “something nobody had ever seen before,” said Victoria Young, a professor of architecture at the University of St Thomas in Minnesota, who wrote a book on Breuer’s “extraordinary” creation. Chinese American architect I.M. Pei – a former student of Breuer – once wrote that Saint John’s Abbey Church would be considered one of the greatest examples of 20th century architecture if it were located in New York, not Minnesota. Brady Corbet, director of “The Brutalist,” cites a book written by Hilary Thimmesh, a junior member of Dworschak’s committee, as a key source for his movie. Corbet told AFP he has visited Saint John’s, and stumbled upon Thimmesh’s memoir while doing extensive reading for the film. Several parallels are clear: a Jewish architect designing a colossal Christian edifice on a remote US hilltop, in a controversial modernist style. A major source of dramatic tension in the film occurs when the client – a millionaire tycoon in the movie, rather than an abbot – brings in his own designer, undermining the original architect. In real life, Breuer struck up a friendship with Dworschak, but they fell out when the monks brought in their own stained-glass window designer, spurning the work of Breuer’s close friend and former teacher Joseph Albers. In a bitter letter, Breuer calls the move a “sudden blow” and states it would be “better to do nothing” than go ahead with the monks’ preference.
A view of the hexagonal stained-glass windows inside Saint John's Abbey in Collegeville.
The new design must be “terminated immediately,” says another letter – to no avail. The power struggle in “The Brutalist” culminates in a horrific act of sexual violence in an Italian marble quarry. Thankfully, the real-life client and architect quickly made up. Some inevitable Hollywood hyperbole aside, an Oscar-nominated film bringing attention to their monastery’s hidden treasure is a source of pride for those connected to Saint John’s. Architect Robert McCarter wrote a book on Breuer “because I felt Breuer had been forgotten, even by the profession, to some degree,” he told AFP. “There are many people who think that Saint John’s is, by far, his greatest building. That includes me,” he said. “It’s still a place that enough people don’t know about,” agreed Young. For the monks of Saint John’s today, the film could offer a more practical lifeline. The church is badly in need of repairs, with some concrete starting to crumble, and steel beginning to rust. Their order has shrunk, from being the world’s largest male Benedictine monastery with 340 monks, to below 100. It is far too few for such a cavernous space. “If we could raise enough money,” the monks could at least heat the church in winter and cool it in summer, said Reed. And the attention the film is getting? “The monks certainly are quite impressed,” he said.





