| ALBANY -- The artist's routine
begins with a prayer.
Then Altin Stoja sets to work, mixing pigment and gloss varnish in a
plastic cup. He shades an image of the Virgin Mary's birth on a
half-blank, 8-foot-wide canvas.
The scene unfolding off his brush exists in a Greek monastery. Stoja
copies a calendar picture to recreate it at Albany's St. Sophia Greek
Orthodox Church.
The Albania-born artist is deep into a three-year project. His
assignment is to paint eight giant murals for the domed nave, modern
reproductions of ancient Byzantine iconography mounted on the walls of a
church built in 1969.
"It's like technology -- the technology of 1,000 years ago," Stoja
said.
Stoja, 34, is here on a special visa to paint in a style unfamiliar
to many American artists, said the Rev. Pat Legato. His work is remaking
the worship space of the area's biggest Greek Orthodox Church, a
400-family congregation on Whitehall Road.
Now is a special time of year for Christians.
The Western branch of the faith observes Palm Sunday this weekend
followed by Holy Week which culminates next Sunday on Easter. For
members of St. Sophia and other Orthodox Christians, who rely on the
Gregorian calendar, Easter falls this year on April 27.
Stoja speaks softly and goes by his baptismal name, Efthimi. He
listens to church music as he paints. He works in a makeshift studio
filled with art books and pencil sketches.
His paintings outline the story of Christ's life in bright colors
that both decorate the church and educate its members, especially the
children, Legato said.
"When he put the baptism up, I said it looked like Jesus was going to
jump off the wall," Legato said. He added, "It's part of our worship. We
call them the windows to heaven."
Stoja, who is of Greek descent, couldn't worship growing up in
Albania. The Communist government declared the country atheist. It
closed mosques and churches. It persecuted believers.
As a budding high school art student in Tirana, the capital, he
studied classic Byzantine icons. In 1993, after the government abandoned
its anti-religion policy, Stoja was baptized. The reopening of Albania's
borders allowed his family to emigrate to Greece in 1994.
How did he wind up in Albany?
The story dates to a reception in Stuyvesant Plaza, where Legato
learned of Stoja through the artist's cousin, the party's caterer.
Legato was in the market for icons. He'd spoken with Greek artists
who wanted nearly $1 million for the project.
But Legato liked Stoja's work. Now Stoja, who trained with Greek
iconographers outside the town of Marathon, is on salary at the church.
Now, because of Stoja's work, Albany Aqua Ducks tours stop by the
Whitehall Road church.
His most recent work went up last month. The painting depicts the
recently deceased Virgin Mary, her body surrounded by robed apostles.
Mounting the finished canvasses on the rough, rounded walls of the
incense-thick sanctuary is one of the trickiest parts. He glues the
paintings with silicone.
With another year left, he has three more murals to go. He hopes to
stay in America and find work at other churches.
Legato thinks the artist should also undertake another project:
marriage.
"Put that in there," the priest said. "Needs wife."
(Source: Times Union 3/15/2008) |