St Joseph's Church, Pont-Aven

St Joseph's Church (French: Église paroissiale Saint-Joseph) is a parish church located in Pont-Aven in Brittany, France.[1][2][3][4][5] There is an organized exposition of religious paintings and reproductions of paintings in the nearby Tremalo Chapel.[6][7][8] As the church is adjacent to rue Émile Bernard, some of Émile Bernard's paintings are showcased there.[6][8]

History

This church constructed in the place of the old church of Pont-Aven since the old church was deteriorating, becoming unsafe due to needed construction, and had become too small for the needs of worship.[9] In 1853, the church had 1,036 inhabitants, but could only house 250 inside for worship.[9] The old church had been around since the 17th century and had been authorized for construction by Marquise de Pont-Calleck.[9] Services were conducted by the parish of Nizon.[9] It had been given the status of a parish in 1805.[9]

The new church was announced to begin construction in 1874 by mayor Satre.[9] The church was built at Place de l’Eglise according to plans by diocesan architect Joseph Bigot, between 1874 and 1875, by contractor Louis Bergé and by Jean-Louis Le Naour for the bell tower. [7][9][10] The narrowness of the land acquired by the municipality for construction guided the building plan leading to the creation of a false transept.[4][7]

While the new church was being built, services were temporarily held in a carpentry workshop and an adjoining courtyard (the Brunou sawmill on the Xavier Grall promenade).[9] A fig tree housed one of the bells during this time.[9]

It was consecrated on April 30, 1878.[7][9]

In 1885, the new Stations of the Cross were erected.[7]

In 1888, the choir and the vault were painted.[7]

It used to have three bells named La Joséphine of 1807, La Joseph-Marie-Thaïs Élisabeth, and La Joseph Alain Marie of 1841.[7][9] In 1897, they were replaced by three bells named Christine Emmanuel of 308 kg, Mathilde Alain of 213 kg, and Anastasie-Baptiste of 151 kg.[7][9] These names were inspired by their respected godparents.[7][9]

The Medals of the Tanguy Abbots

The church holds the two War Crosses and a Legion of Honor that were dedicated posthumously to Joseph Tanguy and Francis Tanguy (referred to as the Tanguy Abbots), a priest and vicar from Pont-Aven that worked at the Church of Pont-Aven.[7][9][11][12] Though the two share a surname, they are not related.[11][12] During World War II, as the Nazis began to invade France in May and June of 1940, lots of refugees arrived to Pont-Aven and the two clergymen took them in.[7][11][12] The two clergymen actively defied the Nazis by helping people escape compulsory labor service and would preach against the Nazi invaders in Sunday sermons.[11][12] They sheltered two American airmen who were downed during an air battle over Bannalec and had landed in Logan at Le Trévoux on December 31st, 1943.[11][12] When the Nazis learned of this, both clergymen were arrested by the Gestapo on January 3rd, 1944 and taken to the Saint-Charles prison in Quimper where they were questioned about their participation in the French Resistance network.[7][9][11] They were held there until April of 1944 and then transferred to Auschwitz.[11] Ending up in the Buchenwald concentration camp, Joseph Tanguy died of mistreatment, illness, and exhaustion in May 1944.[11] Francis Tanguy was then moved to KZ Flossenbürg in June where he would stay until dying of starvation and exhaustion in September 1994.[11] The text below their names in the case that holds their two War Crosses and their Legion of Honor reads: "We fear nothing; we are ready for anything. The vicar and I have offered our lives for the salvation of France and your parishioners. April 1941."[11] A monument in their memory is located in the Pont-Aven cemetery and is known as the "Abbés Tanguy".[11] A stained glass window is also dedicated to them in the church.[9][11]

Description

Descriptive comment: Latin cross with three aisles.[4] Sacristy to the north at the fifth bay.[4] South porch in alignment with the third bay.[4] Western gate in arch inscribed in a front building topped by an open bell tower chamber, cushioned by a hexagonal steeple.[4] Structural work in the rubble coated, except the western elevation and window bays and quoins, stone.[4] Two lateral chapels, one to the north, and one to the south, at the seventh bay, forming a false transept.[4] The nave has seven bays covered with paneling painted blue tie-in.[4] Arched vaults directly into the chamfered square pillars.[4] The floor is covered with slabs of granite.[4]

The design is said to be "modern neo-gothic".[4][7][9][13]

The church was restored in 2003 and 2004 and a new rooster was added at the top because the old one had been riddled with bullet holes and rifle impacts.[9][13] The restoration also included the roof, the stonework of the facade and the bell tower, and the interior paintings.[9]

Art

Paintings

There are three paintings in the church by Émile Bernard, a French Post-Impressionist painter and writer.[7]

The paintings are:[6][7]

  • Crucifixion, 1896
  • Mise au tombeau, vers 1900
  • Portement de croix, 1905

There is another crucifixion piece that is a work from André Even, a local 20th century painter, that is dedicated, "To my native parish".[7][9]

Another painting is from Father Alain Bouler, another native artist.[7]

Stained glass windows

The stained glass windows were created by Job Guével and depict many scenes of Saints and Jesus Christ.[1][7][9]

Some scenes depicted include:[1][7][9]

There is also a stained glass window that pays homage to the Abbots Tanguy (Joseph and Francis Tanguy), a priest and vicar from Pont-Aven who were deported and died in concentration camps during World War II.[1][7][9][12]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Vitraux Eglise Saint Joseph - Pont Aven, France - Stained Glass Windows on Waymarking.com". www.waymarking.com. Retrieved 2026-03-14.
  2. ^ "#HASHTAG#- Places of remembrance related to #HASHTAG# - WW2 WWII". en.kilroytrip.fr. Retrieved 2026-03-14.
  3. ^ "Pont-Aven". Pont-Aven. Retrieved 2026-03-14.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u "Église paroissiale Saint-Joseph, place de l'Eglise (Pont-Aven) - POP". pop.culture.gouv.fr. Retrieved 2026-03-14.
  5. ^ Couffon, René, Le Bars, Alfred. Diocèse de Quimper et de Léon. Nouveau répertoire des églises et chapelles. Quimper: Association Diocésaine, 1988, p.320 Rannou, Nolwenn. L'exercice de l'architecture et de la restauration en France au XIXe siècle: la carrière de Joseph
  6. ^ a b c "Paintings from Pont-Aven: 1860 to Gauguin". The Eclectic Light Company. 2024-01-06. Retrieved 2026-03-14.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v pedmarX (2022-11-25). "Curiosities of Pont Aven part I". Bretagne, Food and Wine, France. France. Retrieved 2026-03-14.
  8. ^ a b "Paintings from Pont-Aven: 1860 to Gauguin". The Eclectic Light Company. 2024-01-06. Retrieved 2026-03-14.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "Pont-Aven". Doyenné de Quimperlé (in French). Retrieved 2026-03-14.
  10. ^ Bigot (1807–1894), architecte finistérien, volume III/IV: catalogue. Thèse. Université Rennes 2 - Haute-Bretagne, UFR Arts-Lettres-Communication, 2007, p.115.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "The deportation of the Tanguy Abbots of Pont-Aven, France | LandmarkScout". www.landmarkscout.com. Retrieved 2026-03-14.
  12. ^ a b c d e f le Meur, Leon (1948). L'Abbé Joseph Tanguy, Recleur de Pont-Aven [Father Joseph Tanguy, Refugee of Pont-Aven] (PDF) (in French). Nihil obstat A. Moênner, Vic. Gen.; Imprimatur André, Évèque de Quimper et de Léon 1948-04-06. France: L'Imprimerie de l'Anjou.
  13. ^ a b "Pont-Aven / Église Saint-Joseph - Présentation et avis des voyageurs". www.seevisit.fr. Retrieved 2026-03-14.

47°51′22″N 3°44′55″W / 47.8561°N 3.7486°W / 47.8561; -3.7486