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How Oscar nominee The Brutalist was inspired by a ‘forgotten’ Minnesota monastery

St John’s Abbey, in a remote corner of the US, is an architectural masterpiece few have heard of. But its story is fit for a Hollywood movie

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St John’s Abbey in Collegeville, in the US state of Minnesota, is modernist architect Marcel Breuer’s “greatest building”. It Inspired Brady Corbet to make The Brutalist, starring Adrien Brody. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

On a snowy prairie in the US state of Minnesota stands a monastery like no other. A concrete trapezoid banner encasing a bell tower looms over a giant, beehive-shaped front window composed of hundreds of gently shimmering hexagons.

For half a century, the existence of this modernist masterpiece has been mainly known to the Benedictine monks who worship there, and the hordes of architects who make pilgrimages to St John’s Abbey Church each summer.

But these days, it is finding new fame as the basis for The Brutalist, the epic drama about an immigrant architect haunted by the Holocaust that is a favourite to win best picture at the Oscars.
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The tale of the church’s genesis is as unlikely as the movie plot it inspired, spanning titans of architecture, ambitious monks, Vatican reform – and an almighty row over that beehive window.

St John’s Abbey is considered a modernist masterpiece. Photo: AFP
St John’s Abbey is considered a modernist masterpiece. Photo: AFP
St John’s beehive-shaped front window is made up of hundreds of hexagons of stained glass. Photo: AFP
St John’s beehive-shaped front window is made up of hundreds of hexagons of stained glass. Photo: AFP

Giving tours to guests, abbey member Alan Reed begins by asking his guests: “How could this have happened?”

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