Our Ambrosian Rite expert Nicola de’ Grandi recently visited the Musée de Cluny in Paris, so called because it is housed in a building that was once the Parisian residence of the abbot of Cluny. This museum has an extremely important collection of medieval art, and probably is best known as the home of a famous set of six tapestries called The Lady and the Unicorn; there are, of course, a huge number of very beautiful liturgical objects in the collection as well. The museum recently hosted an exhibition titled “The Middle Ages of the 19th Century - Creations and Fakes in the Fine Arts”, a display of medieval works next to modern ones inspired by them, and some forgeries as well. I previously posted some pictures of this exhibition taken by another friend, but Nicola managed to photograph pretty much the entire thing, so this will extend over several posts.
We begin with a 19th-century reproduction of the one of the most famous objects in the Louvre’s medieval collection. The nucleus of the original is a vase made in the 2nd century of a kind of stone called porphyry, from the Greek word for “purple.” This material was high prized by the ancient Romans, partly because purple was the color of royalty, partly because it is very rare, found in only one place in Egypt; it is also extremely hard and heavy, making it difficult and expensive to work with and transport. The vessel had been at the abbey of St Denis outside Paris for many years, lying disused in a chest, when it was discovered by the abbot Suger (1080 ca. - 1151), better known to the world as the inventor of Gothic architecture. The abbot had the vessel mounted with metal pieces, made partly of silver and gold, in the form of an eagle, so it could be used as a vessel for the washing of hands during solemn Mass.Thursday, February 12, 2026
Medieval Art and Liturgical Objects at the Musée de Cluny in Paris (Part 1)
Gregory DiPippoPosted Thursday, February 12, 2026
Labels: liturgical furnishings, Medieval Art, Nicola de' Grandi, Paris
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
The Hours of Charles of Angoulême (Part 2): The Passion Cycle and Calendar
Gregory DiPippoThis is the second set of images from a particularly high quality book of Hours made for Charles, count of the French city of Angoulême (1459-96), and father of King Francis I (r. 1515-47). (Bibliothèque nationale de France, Lat. 1173); the first part was published on Monday. Just under half of the volume, folios 59-115, is taken up with a very long series of prayers and meditations on the Passion, in both Latin and French, interspersed with twelve images that show episodes from the washing of the disciples’ feet at the Last Supper to the supper at Emmaus. These were originally created as engravings by a German printmaker named Israhel van Meckenem, which were then colored in by the main artist, Robinet Testard (fl. 1470 - 1519). Below them I include the twelve pages of the calendar.
As is typical of the late Gothic period, Meckenem’s images are quite complicated, with a lot of figures in a fairly limited amount of space, and very often more than one episode squeezed into the background. Here we see Christ washing St Peter’s feet in the foreground, with the Last Supper inside the building on the right, and in the upper left, the agony in the garden, with the crowd of soldiers entering the garden through the gate. (If you click the image to enlarge it, you can see that the figure of St John in front of the Lord at the table is very imperfectly drawn as the result of trying to compress too many figures into too small a space.)The kiss of Judas and the arrest of Christ, with St Peter attacking the high priest’s servant at the lower left.Christ appears before Pilate, who is dressed more or less as a typical urban magistrate of the period; at the lower left, a soldier is seen grabbing St Peter’s collar, as the serving girl looks on, and at the upper left, we see the soldiers mocking the Lord.
A Visit to the Rectory of Vancouver Cathedral
Peter KwasniewskiThe small chapel itself is well appointed for the offering of the traditional Mass, a regular occurrence there:
Hanging on the wall, a portrait of Christ, with the inscription “I desire mercy.”
Posted Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Labels: Historical Vestments, Missale Romanum, Peter Kwasniewski, Pius IX, Pius XI, Relics, St Pius X, Vancouver, Vestments
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
An American Diocese Institutes Lenten Stational Churches
Gregory DiPippoMy thanks to Kathy Pluth, whose excellent work on hymns I have often cited, for bringing this item to my attention. The Diocese of Bridgeport, Connecticut, which comprises the southwest corner of the state, has instituted a daily Lenten pilgrimage, following the very ancient modeled of the Roman station churches. In this video, His Excellency Frank Caggiano, who has led the diocese since July of 2013, announces that the stations will be held every evening at a different church on the weekdays and Saturdays, starting on Ash Wednesday at the cathedral of St Augustine.
Learn Wall Painting in the Gothic Style of Matthew Paris and the School of St Albans
David ClaytonHere is a recommendation for painters: if you want to get commissions, you need more than the ability to supply individual paintings in your chosen style. You need to be able to paint walls. My recommendation for style in contemporary churches is a new manifestation of the School of St Albans. Read more about why here.
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| Virgin and Child, by Matthew Paris, English, 13th century. The artist has included himself venerating the Mother of God and adoring Christ |
| Fresco by Martin Earle, English, 21st century |
Artists can now learn how to do this by taking the Writing the Light wall painting program and icon drawing program under Master iconographer George Kordis. This is a two-year, part-time hybrid program (a combination of online and in-person workshops) – see a recent post about it here. The program focuses on the Greek style of iconography, but students who want to make the School of St Albans style their own should supplement it with personal study of past works by artists such as Matthew Paris. The key is to imitate that style until it becomes your natural artistic expression. This process of copying with understanding is how, for example, artists of the High Renaissance such as Michelangelo and Raphael made the ancient Greek ideal their own. They systematically copied Greek and Roman statues as part of their training, as well as drawing and painting from life. So artists who wish to make the Gothic style their own should learn the skills of their craft – Writing the Light will teach them this – as they study both from life and works of past Masters in the Gothic style. It will need students with ability and drive initially, but it is most certainly possible.
Patrons, another challenge for you: consider sponsoring a talented artist from your church to develop these skills through Writing the Light. You can read more at WritingtheLight.com.
What is the School of St Albans?
The School of St Albans is the style of English illumination in the late Romanesque and early Gothic period, particularly the work of the 13th-century monk Matthew Paris, based at St Albans Abbey in Hertfordshire, England. The style can be seen in manuscripts like the Westminster Psalter and in wall paintings that still survive in English churches.
This is a style that relies on the description of form with line, and is restrained in its use of tonal and color variation. These limitations help eliminate the sentimentality of naturalism, which is the blight of so many modern artists.
True to the Gothic spirit, by which classical sources were integrated into cultural expressions. Paris drew and painted not only sacred art for books like psalters and illustrations of the lives of saints, but also figures such as Plato and Socrates. He was also influenced by the renewed interest in the philosophy of Aristotle, and thus a keen observer of nature who drew many studies of plants and animals.
Why the School of St Albans?
When in discussing the reestablishment of beautiful sacred art in the Roman Catholic Church, part of what we have to think about is choosing a style from the past and using it as a starting point from which it is believed a characteristic style for today will emerge. Some look at the Baroque, some at iconography. My thought is that we look at this period. The suggestion for the name of the art of this period – the School of St Albans – originally came from a student in a class of mine over 10 years ago now.
My experience as a teacher is that Roman Catholics do seem to take to this style naturally and make it their own, even in a single class. You can see the work my students did in a past week-long workshop several years ago in this blog post.
When we studied images from this period, the students engaged with them much more readily – they liked them more than Eastern icons and seemed to understand them more instinctively. As a result, some quickly developed a feel for what they could change without straying outside the tradition they were working in. In contrast, most who had not seen it before found the style of Eastern icons slightly alien. In iconography classes, they had no instinctive sense of what they could change while remaining within the tradition. This meant we had to copy rigorously to avoid introducing errors. It was a bit like learning words in a language by rote, without understanding their meaning. This is not always such a bad thing – copying with understanding is an essential part of learning art – but at some point the student must apply his understanding in new ways. This latter point seemed to be reached more quickly by these Roman Catholic students when working in the Gothic style than in the iconographic style.
Can This Style Work on a Large Scale?
The style will be most familiar to readers as seen in illuminated manuscripts by Matthew Paris; generally, these are miniatures. Some have questioned whether this style would work on a large scale. I have always thought that it could be adapted to work on the walls of modern churches.
Original medieval wall paintings have been uncovered at St Albans Cathedral. I made a trip there to see them in 2018. The paintings are pale, but as we can see, they are done on a large scale and follow this same basic style – form described by line, with simple coloration. The photographs include St Amphibalus (a convert of St Alban) baptizing converts – note full immersion! – and Euclid and Herman the Dalmatian (a medieval philosopher), above.
Whether or not you are convinced that it is right to use this style today, we can certainly conclude that the artists of the period considered it appropriate for floor-to-ceiling frescoes (this church has a high ceiling). I would encourage patrons and artists to look at these and think about how they could reproduce this style in our churches. I think that it allows for large areas to be covered relatively easily and appropriately.
Monday, February 09, 2026
New Novel About the Latin Mass Reviving A Rural Parish
Peter Kwasniewski“Ed, you remember that strange letter from those people calling themselves Saint—what was it? Ambrose? Aquinas?” Asking for the old Mass? I’m going to give them Forty Martyrs.”
“Don, you can’t do that—er, sorry.”
“Relax, Ed. Haven’t had so much fun in years. It’s perfect.”
“Fern bar,” Houghton commented brightly.
In its pages, we follow the assignment of Fr. Hopkins and Fr. Houghton to a hideously constructed, dying parish in the boondocks, where the bishop is counting on the Latin Mass community to fail and fall apart. But that’s not what the Lord has in mind, who uses a variety of weak, strong, and volatile instruments to accomplish His purpose, in spite of every obstruction. “The light shineth in the darkness, and the darkness comprehendeth it not.”
“It is no accident that Death Comes to Wyandotte calls to mind the great work of Willa Cather, because Elizabeth Altham’s splendid writing mirrors hers. Altham’s tragicomical account of two young priests navigating the debris of a post-conciliar church is a page-turner.” —Rev. John A. Perricone
“This is a true story—or should be—about two priests who must come to grip with the dying, both natural and unnatural, of persons. Much to the chagrin of the Church leaders, the salt-of-the-earth parishioners respond heartily to the old-fashioned manners of their new clergy, and support them in the greatest trauma of all.” —Duncan Stroik, Professor of Architecture, University of Notre Dame
“Wyandotte is about life well-lived by hardworking people in a midwestern rural parish run by two blessedly agreeable, hardworking priests.... The book delightfully fills that literary gap in your bookshelf reserved for ‘restoration of spirit.’” —Priscilla Smith McCaffrey, author of Christmas Blossoms
“Like Willa Cather, Elizabeth Altham channels the beauty of the Midwest into a quietly triumphant celebration of hope and faith.” —Maggie Gallagher, Executive Director, Benedict XVI Institute
Available in hardcover, paperback, or ebook, directly from the publisher, or from any Amazon site.
The Hours of Charles of Angoulême (Part 1)
Gregory DiPippoHere is another wonderful discovery from the endless treasure trove of the Bibliothèque nationale de France, a book of Hours made for one Charles, count of the French city of Angoulême (1459-96), and the father of King Francis I (r. 1515-47). (BnF Lat. 1173) The book contains a large number of full and half-page images of extremely high quality, most of which are attributed to an artist named Robinet Testard (fl. 1470 - 1519). It also includes several engravings reproduced from works by a German printmaker, Israhel van Meckenem, which were colored in by Testard; these include a series of 12 images of the Passion, which I will post separately.
By the later 15th century, Books of Hours almost always included a set of four Gospel readings, one from each evangelist: John 1, 1-14, from the day Mass of Christmas; Luke 1, 26-38, from the feast of the Annunciation; Matthew 2, 1-12 from Epiphany; and Mark 16, 14-20 from the Ascension. Very often, each is introduced by its own picture of the corresponding evangelist, but here, they are all represented in one image by their traditional symbols, which surround Our Lord. Between them are the original four doctors of the Latin Church, and in the corners, the major prophets.At the beginning of the Office of Our Lady is this image of the Annunciation. Note the arms of the kings of France on the reading desk, and on the altar, an image of Moses with the tablets of the Law.
The first page of the Office, with Our Lady dressed in blue and holding a prayer book, within the decorative initial.
and the latter by this image of the descent of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, set within a church; only eight of the twelve Apostles are included, so as to not make the space too crowded. (One of them is clearly identifiable as St James the Elder from his pilgrim hat.)
Matins of the Holy Spirit, with this beautiful image of the dove, and banderoles chained together with strings of beads, with several liturgical texts from Pentecost written on them.
Sunday, February 08, 2026
Sexagesima Sunday 2026
Gregory DiPippoSexagesima (sixtieth) means “six times ten”, and thus, by six are understood the works of mercy, and by ten, the Decalogue... and just as the Lord, after working for six days, blessed the seventh, so after perfecting the works of the Decalogue, we will come to eternal blessedness, and He will say to us, “Come, ye blessed.” (Matthew 25, 31-46, the Gospel of the first Monday of Lent.)
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| Icon of the Last Judgment, 1640-41, by Franghias Kavertzas. In the Byzantine Rite, today is known as both Meatfare Sunday, from the custom that it is the last day on which meat may be eaten before the fast of Great Lent begins, or the Sunday of the Last Judgment, from the Gospel read at the Divine Liturgy. (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons.) |
Arise, why dost Thou sleep, o Lord? Arise, and drive us not away forever; why dost Thou turn Thy face away, forgetting our tribulation? Our belly cleaveth to the earth; arise, O Lord, help us, and deliver us. Ps. 43 O God, our ears have heard, our fathers have declared to us. Glory be. As it was. Arise. (The Introit of Sexagesima Sunday.)
Saturday, February 07, 2026
The Feast of St Romuald
Gregory DiPippoBorn in the mid-10th century, an age in which religious life had in many places fallen into terrible decadence, Romuald became one of the great monastic reformers in an age of great reformers. The pattern of Benedictine monasticism which he created was formed by bringing together two different ways of life. The first of these was the traditional communal life, as practiced at the monastery of Sant’ Apollinare in Classe near Ravenna, in accord with the Cluniac reform. To this day, there stands right in the middle of the church’s nave the altar where St Romuald was praying, when Apollinaris, an early martyr buried therein, appeared to him in a vision, and confirmed his monastic vocation.
The second was the eremitical life, a tradition more focused on personal austerity, which he learned under a spiritual master named Marinus. Romuald’s biographer, St Peter Damian, describes Marinus as “a man of simple spirit... driven to the eremitical life only by the impulse of his good will,” while referring also to his “severity lacking in judgment.” The monastery founded by Romuald at Camaldoli near Arezzo would thus become the model for a rather loosely organized order, formerly divided into five separate congregations, in which the cenobitic and eremitical life were united.
In the year 1365, the Florentine painter Nardo di Cione executed an altarpiece for the chapel of St Romuald in the Camaldolese house in Florence, St Mary of the Angels. (He is better known today as the first painter of Dante’s Divine Comedy, including what was once an exceptionally vivid, though now much-ruined vision of Hell, in the Strozzi Chapel at Santa Maria Novella.) The central panel shows the Trinity, in the form known as the Mercy Seat, with St Romuald on the left, and St John the Evangelist on the right.
The Lamb of God, as described in the fifth and sixth chapters of the Apocalypse of St John, is represented at top, on the book with the seven seals.
Friday, February 06, 2026
“The Divine Services of the Orthodox Church with Commentary” - A New Liturgical Handbook for the Byzantine Rite
Gregory DiPippoI am very happy to share news of the publication of a new handbook for the Byzantine Rite, entitled “The Divine Services of the Orthodox Church with Commentary”, authored by three priests and scholars of liturgical theology, Fr Joshua Genig PhD, Fr Lucas Christensen PhD, and Fr Patrick O’Grady PhD. The book is a comprehensive yet accessible catechetical resource, designed to guide both clergy and laity more deeply into the rich theology, symbolism, and spiritual meaning embedded in the Orthodox liturgical cycle, an Eastern hand missal, as it were, with rich catechetical commentary.
Key features include:- Detailed explanations of each major service (Vespers, Matins, Divine Liturgy, Sacraments, and festal services)
- Patristic commentary integrated with practical pastoral insights
- Sections on how the liturgy forms the Christian life and combats modern secular distractions
- Beautiful liturgical texts, rubrics, and catechetical questions for group study or personal reflection
- Original translation of liturgical texts
The Per quem haec omnia
Michael P. FoleyIn order to honor the 800th anniversary year of the passing of St Francis of Assisi, we interrupted our explication of the Ordinary of the Mass with several weeks dedicated to Francis’ Canticle of the Sun. That being complete, we now return to the Mass. Since our last entry was on the Nobis quoque peccatoribus, we turn now to the prayer in the Canon that follows it:
Per quem haec omnia, Dómine, semper bona creas, sanctíficas, vivíficas, benedícis, et praestas nobis.
Through Whom, O Lord, You forever create, sanctify, enliven, bless, and give all these good things to us.
In the sixth age of the world, while the whole earth was at peace, Jesus Christ, Himself Eternal God and Son of the Eternal Father, wishing to consecrate the world by His most merciful coming, having been conceived of the Holy Spirit, and when nine months were passed after His conception, was born of the Virgin Mary at Bethlehem of Juda, made Man, our Lord Jesus Christ was born according to the flesh.
And so, “You create” by founding nature, “You sanctify” by consecrating matter, “You enliven by transubstantiating creation, and “You bless” by increasing grace. Indeed, what is said about these things is simply a demonstration of the pronoun… “these things”—obviously, bread, wine, and water, He always creates good things according to primordial canonical causes. “You sanctify” according to sacramental causes; “You enliven,” that it may pass into Flesh and Blood; and “You bless,” that it may preserve unity and charity. [4]






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