
From the outside, the Transfiguration Church in Chisinau looks like any other Orthodox church in the region. What makes it special, though, is the monumental and stylistically daring interior mural—a vivid, cinematic depiction of the Last Judgment. Painted in 2006 by Nicolae Melencuș and measuring 23 by 16 feet (7 by 5 meters), the work received approval from Orthodox authorities despite its strikingly modern approach to biblical themes.
While heaven is portrayed in calm, traditional tones, the hell portion is far more dramatic—skeletal figures burn in fire, reptilian beasts lurk in the shadows, and a demonic figure even hunches over a laptop (perhaps browsing the underworld’s more sinful sites). This unusually bold style, with its sharp contrasts and intense imagery, evokes 1980s heavy metal album covers or horror films—reminiscent of pop culture more than liturgy.
The church itself has a layered past. It was built between 1898 and 1902 through a donation from Constantin Alexandrov, the local governor general. During the Soviet period, it was repurposed as a planetarium, serving as a center for astronomical observation. Only after Moldova’s independence in the 1990s was the building returned to the Orthodox Church.
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