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The church of Assy: A scandal for believers and a folly for the artists?

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Église Notre-Dame-de-Toute-Grâce du Plateau d'Assy (Haute-Savoie).

Anne Victoire Morard - published on 08/20/22
Nestled at the foot of Mont Blanc lies a small treasure trove of sacred art whose little-known history overturns the codes of religious art.

The Plateau d'Assy, in Haute-Savoie (in the French Alps), is first of all the scene of a human story. No less than 2,500 hospital beds appeared there after the end of the First World War on what had been nothing but mountain pastures. The reason? The altitude, the fresh air, and the sun—the only means then existing to fight against the wave of tuberculosis ravaging the population. Chaplains were present at the bedsides: among them, Fr. Jean Devémy, who originally wanted only a "simple and honest" church to welcome the tuberculosis patients, their families, and the caregivers.

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