Notre-Dame to Replace Historic Windows With Modern Interpretation by Secular Artist
The restoration of Notre-Dame Cathedral has taken a baffling turn, as French officials have opted to replace six intact stained glass windows with new artwork from a secular contemporary artist.
Although the original windows — crafted in the 19th century and untouched by the 2019 fire — survived, the government has nonetheless decided to remove them in favor of new Pentecost-themed designs set to be installed by the end of 2026, as The Daily Caller reports.
The public had expected the focus to remain on restoring what was lost during the catastrophic blaze that tore through the roof and upper walls of this cultural and religious monument in Paris. Instead, attention has shifted to an artistic overhaul of elements that didn’t require fixing in the first place.
Secular Artist Chosen for Religious Work
Claire Tabouret, a French artist known for works such as "little girl smothered in makeup," was selected to design the new windows. Her appointment has raised eyebrows not only due to the style of her previous work but also her own admission that she is not religious.
“I’m not religious,” Tabouret told CNN. “But it is a story about community and celebration.” A fair sentiment—though many might ask whether one of the world’s most iconic churches is the appropriate canvas for a spiritual interpretation by someone who does not share the faith.
Tabouret described the opportunity in glowing terms, telling The New York Times, “I never applied for any competitions before... if I’m going to try once in my life to apply for something, it should be this.” Evidently, being historic trumps being thematically on point.
Design Choices Prompt Mixed Reactions
The designs were crafted in collaboration with the Atelier Simon-Marq stained-glass studio and are now on display at the Grand Palais in Paris. They depict the Pentecost—the moment when the Holy Spirit came upon Jesus’ disciples—but critics say the visuals deliver more chaos than clarity.
The most precise figure in the imagery is a solitary woman, her hands raised in a posture that apparently evokes transcendence. The surrounding male figures appear oddly blurred, with facial features slipping off their proper places—an artistic choice that has left some observers puzzled, if not outright dismayed.
Most of the men in the windows are shaded in various tones of brown, while the lone woman’s face is depicted in greater detail. Whether intended as a commentary on diversity or simply a stylistic contrast, the piece has invited speculation rather than reverence.
Why Replace What Was Already Preserved?
It’s worth noting that these six stained glass windows were among the lucky survivors of the 2019 fire. Yet, instead of being celebrated for enduring the disaster, they’re now being quietly excised in the name of "new perspectives."
Churchgoers and history lovers alike might wonder why resilience is being discarded to make way for contemporary statements—including from artists who don’t even subscribe to the beliefs depicted in the artwork.
The French government hasn’t given much explanation for the swap beyond artistic modernization, sparking concerns about erasing legacy under the banner of progress. Isn’t the point of sacred architecture to preserve truths, not tweak them for the gallery circuit?
Heritage at a Crossroads
The move raises important questions about the role of spiritual sites in a modern world increasingly shaped by fashion, politics and cultural posturing. Should cathedrals be extensions of contemporary art galleries, or should they remain what they were built to be—places of reverence?
No one is saying contemporary artists don’t have talent. But parachuting in a secular painter to reinterpret sacred texts, with little input from the faith community, feels more like a gesture to elite tastes than a restoration of meaning.
Art may be subjective, but replacing symbols of religious endurance with experimental sketches is a subjective call that deserves serious scrutiny, especially when sacred landmarks are involved. After all, if even Notre-Dame’s undamaged windows can’t survive the tide of cultural reinvention, what can?




