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Tue, 10 Jun 2025 13:14:04 -0700
zerosugar from private IP, post #18896759

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Marko Ivan Rupnik

Have any of you ever heard of this artist/priest from Slovenia? I came across his work in like 2016 when I went to San Giovanni Rotondo/Padre Pio sanctuary.
There were these huge mosaics. I did not know who the artist was at the time and just found out via the new. I did not know what to make of the art when I saw
it. On one hand, the mosaics seemed more modern than other artwork in the area. On the other hand, the art had an eastern flair, like almost reminiscent of
orthodox icons. 

Anyway, his work has now been removed from the Vatican website and covered in Lourdes. There was an ongoing investigation against him that had been going on for
some time. He was accused of sexually and spiritually abusing these nuns and in 2019 had been excommunicated because he absolved a woman in confession of having
engaged in sexual activity with him. I guess as a priest, you are not supposed to absolve the sins of somebody you had premarital sex with. Only another priest
can do that. I get that what he did with these women was wrong and I strongly believe he should have left the priesthood and just lived as an artist, but I
don't know how I feel about churches covering his art. I get that it can trigger some of the nuns who were his victims, but most people will not even know who
the artist was, just as I did not know. I have no clue how they will cover it up at Padre Pio sanctuary as nearly the entire chapel was his art. They would have
to tear it completely down and find another artist. Here is a picture I took of his work. Not really my favorite style, but I can see the popularity. So many
people are hating on his artwork now saying the eyes looked like dead eyes. 


#News 


Tue, 10 Jun 2025 13:16:43 -0700
zerosugar from private IP
Reply #16616180

more photos I took of his work

https://imgur.com/a/Qolksha 


Tue, 10 Jun 2025 13:45:43 -0700
marlon from private IP
Reply #19103186

damn looks old never would of thought it was new art


Wed, 11 Jun 2025 12:20:33 -0700
zerosugar from private IP
Reply #11717949

The more I learn, the more I feel they shouldn’t have covered his artwork. He did break his vows as a priest and is accused of some pretty crazy stuff, but
the “trads” most of whom are Protestant converts to Catholicism and anything but traditional will hate on him and even hate on his artwork, but I find
something about his work oddly calming and lots of craftsmanship went into it. I bet these “trads” have done tons of bad stuff themselves. The “trads”
are extremely hateful so I am just skeptical of when they dislike somebody. 

These reports are crazy and IMHO they will make the art more popular. 

https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20240221-porn-for-spiritual-growth-nuns-detail-abuse-by-renowed-priest



Porn for 'spiritual growth': nuns detail abuse by renowed priest
Vatican City (AFP) – Two former nuns said Wednesday that a world-renowned artist priest made them take part in threesomes and watch porn so they would "grow
spiritually".

Slovenian mosaic artist Marko Rupnik, 69, is accused of sexually and psychologically abusing at least 20 women for nearly 30 years at a religious community in
Slovenia.

He took me to pornographic theatres to help me 'grow spiritually'," Gloria Branciani, who was a member of the community until 1994, told journalists at a press
conference in Rome.

"He said that I would not grow spiritually if I did not meet his sexual needs," she said, describing how he sexualised religious concepts.

"We had another nun have sex with us because he said it was like the Trinity," Branciani said, referring to the central Christian doctrine of three persons
within one God.

Rupnik was briefly excommunicated in 2020 for absolving someone of having sexual relations with him, but was reinstated after he formally repented.

He was finally expelled from the Jesuit order -- of which Pope Francis is a member -- last June.

In October, Francis waived the statute of limitations on the offences, opening the way for potential disciplinary proceedings.

Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of the abuse tracking site Bishop Accountability, which documents abuse within the Catholic Church, described Rupnik as a
"powerful cleric who was protected at the highest levels of the Church and the Vatican."

The press conference comes five years after an unprecedented summit at the Vatican on sexual abuse in the Church, at the end of which Francis promised a "zero
tolerance" approached.

"The Rupnik case shows that little has changed," said Barrett Doyle, who called for an independent investigation and the publication of its findings.






Wed, 11 Jun 2025 12:27:12 -0700
zerosugar from private IP
Reply #11494377

https://www.sistersofthelittleway.com/p/the-case-of-marko-rupnik-an-artists

Dipping my fingers into the holy water font, I immediately notice large, wide-eyed figures swirling around me in bright luminescence. I freeze, trying to
stabilize myself. Eerily reminiscent of childhood bouts with hypoglycemia, my surroundings are distorted as if I were in a circus. The features of the people
around me seem exaggerated and the ground unstable beneath my feet. As I cross myself, my thoughts race, “This is a Rupnik chapel. I didn’t realize this
would be a Rupnik chapel. I wasn’t prepared for this.”

As I walk into the chapel, my heart pounds in my ears. I motion to Sr. Theresa Aletheia in distress. She looks at me with knowing sadness and discreetly ushers
me into the nearest pew. My adrenaline subsides as I begin to pray. For the first time since my experience with an abusive spiritual director, I feel unsafe at
Mass. I had come with joy to visit a friend and to worship God. Instead, I was caught off guard, struggling to conceal how deeply I had reacted.

Surrounded by the effect of Rupnik’s creations, my vulnerability had no place to rest in a space completely dominated by the imagination of a sexual predator.
Art intended to elevate my soul for worship had instead enveloped my senses with reminders of how clerical abuse can diabolically twist beauty.

Masterful but not Beautiful

The floor-to-ceiling mosaic chapel I walked into that day was designed by Fr. Marko Ivan Rupnik. A former Jesuit, the priest now faces multiple accusations of
sexual abuse from female religious, many of whom were involved in the creation of his artwork. After great public pressure to address the accusations of abuse,
an independent tribunal at the Vatican has been set up to determine Rupnik’s fate.

Celebrated for many years, Rupnik and his team of artists at Centro Aletti sought to create contemporary liturgical art by blending Eastern and Western
tradition. As an artist, I can understand why many were drawn to Rupnik’s work. His designs maintain an interesting consistency and coherence as well as a
boldness in color and asymmetry that creates a sense of movement. Drawing the viewer into a cosmos of sacred symbols, his installations encompass entire
environments. Scooping the viewer into a world of intentionality, his work reorients tradition in a way that feels authoritative and purposeful.

Centro Aletti, the community that assists in producing and installing Rupnik’s work, describes their artistic style by focusing on the themes of light,
movement, and brightness. Their “new organic language” is free, they argue, from anything “gloomy, dark, oppressive, or depressing—it’s an explosion
of light.” This aspect of his art always unsettled me; the abundance, brightness, and proliferation of his designs struck me as impersonal, more a product of
capitalism’s influence on the Church than something sacred or precious. Overshadowed by revelations of abuse, the emphasis on explosive, bright light in
Rupnik’s mosaics becomes not just uncomfortable but ironic. His artistic choices, unfortunately, make sense in terms of research on people who sexually abuse
others, which often highlights the stage of “grooming” victims and communities by maintaining an image that comes across to others much like Rupnik’s
icons—exceedingly “bright.”

St. John Paul II calls artists “prophets” and “ambassadors of beauty,” tasked with bearing witness to Christ’s presence in the world. Artists are
especially entrusted with safeguarding vulnerability, a sacred entry point for God’s healing presence. The Incarnation—God becoming a vulnerable baby—is
the ultimate expression of this truth. Throughout history, artists have depicted this primal vulnerability from the Nativity to the Crucifixion. Charismatic,
talented, and influential, Rupnik used his artistic skill, fame, and intuition, particularly the vulnerability at the heart of his creative process, to exploit
his victims rather than glorify God. Perverting his sacred task as an artist, Rupnik used his authority as a priest and his mastery as an artist to exploit the
very vulnerability he was called to protect and hold sacred.

Sacred Art or Artifacts of Abuse?

Because Rupnik was a master in his field, some have argued for the preservation of his art. This line of argument often compares him to artists like Raphael or
Caravaggio, who were far from model Christians. However, while Raphael and Caravaggio’s sins were separate from their art, Rupnik’s abuse and perverted
mysticism was integral to his creative process. His victims’ testimonies reveal that his art cannot be disentangled from his crimes. Rather, it was intrinsic
to it.

As predators in church contexts commonly do, Rupnik targeted devout, dedicated women. The co-founder of a women’s religious community, Rupnik is estimated by
one of his victims to have abused almost half of its members. Based on the victims’ testimonies, much of the abuse involved his artistic process. One victim
shared in an interview,

Once he asked me to pose for one of his paintings because he had to draw Jesus’ collarbone and he [said he] was not looking for ‘worldly’ girls, who only
expressed sexuality in his view, but someone like me who was seeking. … It was not difficult to accept and unbutton a few buttons on my blouse. For me, who
was naive and inexperienced, it only meant helping a friend. On that occasion he kissed me lightly on the mouth, telling me that this was how he kissed the
altar where he celebrated the Eucharist.

Another former sister described being sexually abused on scaffolding while installing mosaics in a sanctuary. As one sister put it, “His sexual obsession was
not extemporaneous but deeply connected to his conception of art and his theological thought.” These testimonies decode and illuminate a disturbing pattern:
Rupnik’s artistic process was intertwined with his abuse, making his creations artifacts of abuse rather than sacred art.

In the history of iconography, upon which Rupnik’s work is based, the process is as important as the end result. An icon is written not produced. Iconography
is considered more of a prayer than an artistic expression where the artist's hand is thought to be guided by the inspiration of God. Writing an icon is a
sacred experience of effacement for the artist as he or she is caught up in the creative action of the Holy Spirit. Rather than reveal the Father through his
art, however, Rupnik chose by his actions to ambiguate, distort and disfigure the face of God. Through the perversion of his artistic process, Rupnik violated
not only consecrated women and himself, he committed sacrilege— the violation or injurious treatment of a sacred person or object. This sacrilege, inherent in
the process of the creation of his art, is why Rupnik’s art cannot be considered sacred art.

Conclusion: A Call to Memory and Renewal

For Christians, memory is central to our faith. Our liturgical spaces hold the memory of our salvation, sanctified by Christ’s words: “Do this in
remembrance of me.” Sacred art is meant to help us remember what Christ did for us. Rupnik’s art, on the other hand, serves as a reminder of abuse and
betrayal. An artifact of abuse, his art tells a story of exploitation and institutional failure. To acknowledge the harm done, honor victims, and reclaim these
spaces for true worship, we should commit to remove his works from sacred spaces—not as an act of erasure but as a step toward healing and renewal.

Among the first of Rupnik’s victims to publicly share her story, Gloria Branciani has argued that “using a work … borne from an inspiration of abuse
cannot remain in a place where people go to pray.” She suggests that Rupnik’s mosaics need to at least be put in a different context. I agree and suggest
that Rupnik’s works should be considered contemporary art, rather than sacred art. At Lourdes, for example, the decision to no longer illuminate Rupnik’s
mosaics reflects a sacred intuition—what was presented as light actually veiled darkness. Allowing his works to remain in a state of shadow acknowledges the
abuse and institutional failure they represent. These actions initiate a restorative process of healing within the Body of Christ and his Church.

As we enter this Jubilee of Hope, however, I propose that we go beyond recontextualizing Rupnik’s art. If we truly care about being an evangelical witness in
this modern world, then how we address complex circumstances of abuse matters. We should respond to this situation in a way that Rupnik did not—by respecting
the vulnerability of others—and by making great sacrifices that recognize and honor this vulnerability. In this spirit, I would suggest that any institution
that must make decisions around Rupnik mosaics should commit to dismantling them. Artists could use the tiles to create new mosaic installations dedicated to
survivors. These mosaics could be housed in a chapel dedicated to survivors of abuse. Communicating from the authoritative voice of the Church, a chapel
dedicated to victims would say, “We see you, we are sorry that we failed to protect you, bearers of God’s beauty in your vulnerability. And we are
listening. You are the Church.”

What better way to celebrate this Jubilee year of Hope than by enlisting artists in this restorative work?


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