New York readers may be interested in this exhibit at the Museum of Biblical Art near Columbus and Broadway.
“The Passion of Christ”: none of the show’s works is attributed to a known artist, adding to the sense of a culture animated by genuine religious feeling.In 1051 a Greek Orthodox monk named Anthony retreated to a cave overlooking the Dnieper River in Kiev. Disciples came, buildings were constructed, and, by the 17th and 18th centuries, the Monastery of the Caves embraced a flourishing metropolitan sprawl of 3 Ukrainian cities, 7 towns, 120 villages and more than half a million peasants.
Today, in addition to a multi-tiered, gold-domed bell tower soaring more than 300 feet, its most remarkable feature is a system of subterranean caves, including living quarters and chapels, and a labyrinth extending more than 650 yards into the Berestov Mount.
Read the rest of the article on the New York Times website.
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