Spada, Church of St Peter
During the First World War, the church was almost completely destroyed. It was rebuilt according to a plan by the architects François Tréchot and Charles Langlois from Saint-Mihiel which was approved in 1924. The plan was immediately executed and the church was rebuilt on its original foundations.
The unusual thing about the decoration produced inside the building by Duilio Donzelli in 1938-1939 is that it remains incomplete: the artist began painting the beginning of the nave and quickly stopped, probably for financial reasons. A pencil sketch of a figure inside a medallion can be seen on the vault over the nave. The decoration that was planned for the nave was faux stone decoration with a frieze of fish like the one in the church of Kœur-la-Grande, except for the red chevrons. The blank areas on the triumphal arch mark the locations of the side altars, of which no trace remains and which are thought to have been dismantled during the second half of the twentieth century. Donzelli had intended that his decoration would serve as a backdrop for statues that were to appear inside mandorlas, surrounded by angels.
The choir is decorated with a scene that has no parallels in Donzelli’s work in the Meuse region: a Last Judgement. Christ sends his light to the chosen ones in adoration to his right, while the damned are struck by the bolts of lightning that come from Christ’s hand and burn in flames, in a traditional Christian view of the end of time. In the foreground are St Peter holding his key on the left, and St Paul with a sword on the right. On both sides, angels blowing trumpets complete the scene.
Like the church of Lamorville, the church has a chapel at the back which commemorates the war dead with a monument and a patriotic stained-glass window. The war theme is also reflected in the painted frieze on which crosses and Adrian helmets alternate, surrounded by crowns of laurel leaves.
Mandorla: geometrical figure resembling an almond; oval inside which holy figures are depicted in majesty.