Blixa wrote:Alter Idem wrote:Uh, maybe the flowers are fake because there is very little natural light in most temples.
This could be true, Alter Idem, but wouldn't account for why they wouldn't use fresh, cut flower arrangements. Those would need replacing daily and so be much more expensive than silk flowers, but if they're not cutting corners and worried about costs that wouldn't be a concern.
No matter how much things literally cost, there are different styles of "celestrial." LDS temple interior design seems to cling to a very pedestrian and middlebrow version of the sumptuous, tied to material and wordly notions rather than providing a more otherworldly experience of the etherial (for a counter example see my blog post about the Quaker meeting house designed by artist James Turrell and his installation at P.S. 1, "Meeting.").
I understand the symbolism of progression that the rooms are supposed to suggest or even literalize. I would think, however that in order to give a foretaste of exaltation, the passage from the earthly lower kingdoms to the celestial should enact a break with all that has come before, rather than being merely a more costly extension of it.
Of course, here I could be overlaying my own particular ideas of transcendence and not those of Mormon belief: perhaps the current temple interiors are closer to the Mormon idea of an afterlife, something that always struck me as itself too mired in terrestrial obsessions with management and organization.
Well, they might like nice things, but they aren't about to spend THAT MUCH money!!! I think whoever commented on allergies had a point. Also, I can tell from experience that fresh flowers drop leaves and petals and they would take a lot of work to keep nice and to care for. Very nice, expensive silk arrangments are just fine--especially since the workers are old and replacing fresh flowers every day would be hard on them and extremely cost prohibitive.
As for the interiors of temples, while I'd love to see the mainstream LDS have better taste, I just don't expect this to happen. People have to be educated in what is good taste. Most people, LDS or non-LDS have pretty mediocre expectations of what is nice. Just look at popular culture--you just can't have high expectations for the rank and file masses, it's an impossible dream.
I think before the temple films the patrons got more of a sense of moving from kingdom to kingdom. Now it is more subtle, but if you are alert, you can still feel the change.
As far as I'm concerned, LDS temple interiors are fine; they are clean, elegant, minimal(no knick knacks) and pleasant. I don't think they represent all LDS views of the afterlife--they are someone's particular taste and style. If you or I were the decorators, I'm sure they'd be different. However, they allow us to feel the spirit and do the work for the dead.