Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Christ on the Flat Screen: The Renovation of the Crystal Cathedral, Orange, California

Today, the Catholic Diocese of Orange, California, celebrates the dedication of its new cathedral. Built by televangelist Robert Schuler and opened in 1980, it was orginally called the Crystal Cathedral; after massive renovations aimed at transforming it into a Catholic church, it has now been renamed “Christ Cathedral.” Our readers may find this article about the project interesting; it was originally published in October of 2014.

Some time ago, as part of the media buzz surrounding the purchase of the Crystal Cathedral, the Catholic Diocese of Orange opened the floor to online suggestions as to what the new church should be named. I offered that it should be titled the Cathedral of the Transfiguration; after all, the feast of the Transfiguration is traditionally the patronal festival for churches dedicated to Our Lord, and its suggestions of illumination, splendor, and above all, a glimpse of Heaven afforded through physical change, seemed perfectly suited to the project, even not without a bit of reverent wit. The name chosen, of course, was the blunter Christ Cathedral, direct but falling rather oddly on the ear--the Anglophile in me senses it is missing a Church in between Christ and Cathedral--and lacking the elusive specificity of the incandescent mystery of Mount Tabor.

One name conjures up Moses and Elijah, and a foolish, sprawling Peter, the painter Raphael, the siege of Belgrade and Calixtus III; an entire stained glass window filled with little colored scenes, all purple and scarlet, ranged round an explosive and nuclear bloom of gold and white. The visual image presented by Christ Cathedral, by comparison, seems rather transparent, and oddly incomplete: not particularly specific, and universal only in its vagueness. I couldn't help returning to this contrast when I began to review the designs for the renovated church by Johnson Fain and Ross Clementi Hale Studios released at the end of last month. One longs for a bit of color, or even a speck of good Christian dirt in the glacial interior.


As I commented in an article written for The Living Church some years ago (which, I understand, the renovation committee read with great interest), the project of Catholicizing the Crystal Cathedral is a daunting and perhaps even quixotic one. For the amount of money going into the project, one could have probably built a cathedral in a more traditional style, without much difficulty. The structure, with its all-glass walls, combines both a postmodern skepticism about man’s ability to describe the Divine, barring vague appeals to colorless light and nature, with TV-studio televangelist glitz and a lingering bit of Calvinist iconophobia. Rocky ground, indeed. While adding the life and vigor of a true Cathedral to this space would have been difficult, it would not have been impossible; indeed, while the building would never be a Chartres or a Beauvais, it could have easily been a brighter, more luminous Coventry, its enormous glass walls shielded by translucent banners and curtains, the entire interior focusing on an immense mosaic (modern in style, but traditional in content) of Christ in majesty--or better yet, a stained-glass window. Room could have been found in the various vestibules and balconies for those dark chapeled crannies where prayer comes so easily, and which might have, in time, become the seats of confraternities and Catholic guilds. Perhaps even the strange lack of boundaries between outside and inside that so characterize the space could have been an asset, transforming the interior into a sort of liturgical Field of the Cloth of Gold. All this could have been accomplished without even necessarily going much against the grain of the modern interior.

However, the result is more of the same, in the end. The design lacks the aggressive ugliness of the churches of the ’60s and ’70s, but this is replaced with the chill, uninviting perfection of an Apple Store. It is curious today that, despite living in an almost aggressively visual age--and one which has taken interconnectivity to new levels via hypertext--that our church buildings seem so afraid of imagery, and instead settle for a crisp lowest common denominator. The chaos of the Internet, with its mixed-bag garden of Earthly Delights, would suggest that only an interior of Baroque physicality or Gothic majesty could counterweight such enticements. Instead, we have only a surpassing coldness in spaces such as the baptistery, with its cruciform immersion font, or the low-ceilinged Eucharistic Chapel. There are a few interesting moments here--the suggestion of a mosaic dome in the baptistery, the translucent stone walls in both spaces--but on balance, the effect is institutional and rather impersonal. The curious tabernacle, in particular, is utterly divorced from any liturgical context--no altar, possibly no steps, and set in the midst of diagonal pews. The effect is a bit like a gallery installation. It is almost as if we question whether matter, the physical, can convey even the most rudimentary spiritual ideas. Christ, the God made man, who used even mud and spittle to work miracles, challenges us to think otherwise.


The principal space of the interior is also not without its idiosyncrasies. The interior is airy and open, but it is also not a little agoraphobic: is there a ‘there’ there, as was famously said of Oakland? Seen from the galleries, the effect is even more disorienting, and the altar and congregation seem sunken in a sort of arena. The one bit of warmth and color, the wood grain of the enormous organ case, has been painted out, lest it distract the faithful from the altar--though the logical solution to that would have been to emphasize the altar with a more elaborate canopy or even a proper altarpiece. And where are the icons? One sees a cross hung over the altar, some timid monochrome reliefs in the nave (if one may call it that), and a decontextualized copy of a Byzantine mosaic of Christ in the narthex, cropped and mounted on the wall in such a way one cannot help think of a flat screen TV; but, like the tabernacle, they seem almost like artifacts rather than objects of devotion. The altar itself, for a church that is more-or-less in the round, is elevated, of a distinguished size, and, while lacking the baldachin that would really set it apart, the large standard candlestands and hanging tester do give it a sense of presence largely lacking in most modern sanctuary layouts. The actual details and form are, once again, a bit too sharp-edged modern for my taste, but the basic layout is, all things considered, fairly sound. However, the altar has been placed on a curious catwalk-like bema that apparently runs the entire length of the interior, with the congregation seated antiphonally on either side, and the large elevated ambo balancing it at the other end. The ambo is itself rather fine in terms of height and proportion, if not location, and I was pleased to see what appears to be an Easter Candle stand to one side of it, as one sees at San Clemente in Rome.

Nonetheless, this is all admittedly a rather outré adaptation of the traditional monastic layout, which, for one thing, never envisioned the Mass lessons being read from anything other than their traditional position. Furthermore, antiphonal seating works best for the Office, and not very well at all for Mass. It is, I suppose, a great improvement on the faddish placement of the ambo behind the altar, as seen at the renovated Milwaukee Cathedral, and perhaps will put to rest in at least one cathedral the contemporary preoccupation with the celebrant being able to make eye contact with everyone all the time. It may be a bit more distracting for the laity looking at each other across the thrust of the sanctuary, and one wonders what complicated and lengthy treks altar boys, deacons and other ministers may need to make during a solemn liturgy if they need to go recover something from the sacristy.

One looks at all the renderings with a certain weariness. As has been pointed out by a number of commentators, quite justly, the design could have been far more objectionable. But surely we can do better than this. Modern man, on those few occasions when he is still confronted by the Divine, seems now perpetually stunned and speechless. Rather than joining him in mute incomprehension, let us give him the words, and the Word-Made-Flesh.

Saturday, May 05, 2018

A New Prayerbook for the Emperor Karl League of Prayer

The Emperor Karl League of Prayer USA and Canada is pleased to announce the newly published official Gebetsliga Prayer Book. Edited by USA and Canadian Delegates Fr. Boniface Hicks, OSB, and Suzanne Pearson, this prayer book contains devotional resources related to Blessed Karl of Austria, including: a history of The Emperor Karl League of Prayer; a novena; devotional prayers; a short biography; important dates and quotes from his life; and liturgical texts for the celebration of Holy Mass and The Liturgy of the Hours on his October 21 Memorial.

The book was designed and typeset by Mr. Jordan Hainsey, who serves as webmaster and designer for the USA and Canadian League. Constructed to last a lifetime of prayerful use, it features a rich, felted-cotton cover, foil-embossed with the Gebestliga coat of arms.

Six illustrations were commissioned from our own Matthew Alderman, whose work as a liturgical illustrator and designer has been featured in several publications, including Sacred Architecture, First Things, Antiphon, and The Living Church. In 2010, he completed 15 full-page illustrations for Liturgy Training Publications’ landmark altar edition of the Revised Roman Missal, and in 2011, he produced over 50 illustrations for HarperCollins UK’s Sunday and Weekday Missals.



The Gebetsliga Prayer Book illustrations are executed in black and red ink and compliment the text, serving as a catalyst for meditation and prayer. It is perfect companion for all members of The League of Prayer or those just learning about Blessed Karl for the first time. Printed and bound in the U.S.A., the prayer book carries the Imprimatur of Bishop Roger J. Foys, D.D., of the Diocese of Covington, and an accompanying Nihil Obstat.

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Finishing the St Paul Center at UW Madison

Just as a quick follow up to last week’s post about the rebuilding of the St Paul Catholic Student Center at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, Matthew Alderman has shared with us some pictures of the steeple being raised last Thursday. (We may be able to update the post later with a video or two as well.)





Wednesday, November 15, 2017

A Beautiful Church Rebuilding in Madison, Wisconsin

From Matthew Alderman come these very nice photos of the Catholic Student Center at the Univ. of Madison, Wisconsin. Matthew himself designed the exterior at the aesthetic level (i.e. surface, not structure), the chapel architecture, the altarpiece surround, altar, and ambo; the interior decoration and color scheme were developed from his initial concept. Some specific elements of the final design, like the stencil work in the apse are also his; the renderings given below, which we reproduce with his permission via his studio’s Facebook page, give a good sense of his contributions. (The Architect of Record is RDG Planning and Design, and the church interior decoration is by EverGreene Architectural Arts.)

The former structure, now happily reduced to landfill, looked like this, hair clipper on the outside, cylon basestar on the inside. Made in 1968 to replace an earlier chapel from 1909, it proved as well as anything the adage that nothing ages as rapidly as modernity.

The new facility which has replaced it, and was just dedicated this past Sunday, looks like this. The mosaic on the façade by Dony McManus copies the central circle of one of the most famous mosaics in Rome, in the apse of Santa Maria Maggiore.
Views of the new chapel.


Beautiful stencilling work in the sanctuary; the peacock, symbol of immortality, and the book and sword, the symbols of St Paul the Apostle, to whom the center is dedicated.

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

A Miscellany of Architectural and Church Furnishing Details in Barcelona

A few selected images from my visit in 2014 that may be of interest.

St. Francis Borja holding a skull on the exterior of a church near Las Ramblas


Altars in Santa Maria del Pi


Church plate in the sacristy museum at Santa Maria del Pi


Further views of the interior of Santa Maria del Pi


Thursday, January 21, 2016

Josep Obiols, An “Other Modern” Artist from Catalonia

From time to time, the New Liturgical Movement will cover the work of artists and architects from recent history, whose work, while “modern,” nonetheless took a different and more traditional path than that of the “modernism” of Le Corbusier or Picasso, a path which we call“the Other Modern.”
My Cuban grandfather, José Morell, was never quite sure where his family had come from. Blue-grey eyes and a rather unconventionally un-Spanish last name made him suppose they might have been Basque, or French, or Catalan. A bit of genealogical research and the fact he shares a last name with a very small town near Valencia—where my family, on vacation in 2014, found an open coffee shop and some very friendly if ultimately somewhat perplexed locals—suggests the Morells were probably Catalan at one time. So, when we took a day trip on that same vacation up to the Marian mother shrine of the Catalan people, the mysterious monastery of Montserrat, I took more than a usual interest. As I write, a small black and gold image of La Moreneta—the Black Madonna—watches me from one of my shelves.
Montserrat is worth an article in itself—it is an eerie, moving, otherworldly sort of place, suspended below the great toothed mountain that gives the shrine its name, its slopes spiked with great rocky promontories that appear always on the verge of looking like something else, but never quite do. The Benedictine monastery there has been embellished numerous times over the centuries, the present church having been begun in 1559 and consecrated in 1592, though much of the interior decoration and its apse is in the high-flown nineteenth-century chivalric style of the Catalan Renaixença, and the exterior contrafacciata looks mid-twentieth century—its inscription, “Cataluña será cristiana o no será” is, somewhat pointedly, in alien Spanish.

Much of the excellent painted paleo-Christian style decoration that marks the long rising ambulatory up to the shrine statue dates from this era, and is the work of Josep Obiols i Palau (1894-1967). One of the more distinguished of Catalonia’s twentieth-century painters, after time in Italy he made a name for himself as a muralist, and his work at Montserrat is only part of a larger oevre that includes everything from large-scale work in Montjuïc’s Palacio Nacional to rather sketchy, abstract bookplate designs. An excellent monograph is available on him (Josep Obiols: Pintor de Montserrat by Alexandre Cirici Pellicer et al.), though it is unfortunately only available in Catalan and Spanish.

Most of his work at Montserrat consists of frescoes in an interestingly loose, almost El Greco-esque take on early Christian and Byzantine art, without eschewing a touch of something modern, or at least unique, that nonetheless does not shade into the angular sterility of modernism. Catalonia is full of such apparent and quite triumphant artistic contradictions—indeed, had Picasso bothered to study the Romanesque murals in the Catalan National Museum with more diligence than fervor, we might have gotten quite a few more Pantocrators and a lot less Demoiselles d'Avignon.

Obiols’ frescoes can be seen in the shrine ambulatory, the monks’ refectory (1945), the new sacristy (1944-1945) and abbot’s sala (1951). In addition to his work near the shrine of the Madonna, which also includes some stunning mosaics around the statue itself (1947) and relief work on adjacent doors (1953), he executed a series of stunning marquetry images of local saints and holy figures—including several uncanonized but significant abbots of Montserrat shown with the old square halo, an interesting choice—for the cabinet doors of the new sacristy (1945), as well as for the abbatial throne (1957); it is unclear to me if this is the current abbatial throne in the choir, a former throne there, or a throne elsewhere in the complex; in any case, the insertion of that more “modernistic” element into the lush décor of the main church is a bit jarring.

His is a fascinating style as it owes very little to many of the “Other Moderns” we have discussed before, which often have a far clearer link to Art Nouveau or even Art Deco. There is also a small touch of Art Deco here (mostly in the marquetry), but there is also much that is uncategorizable or perhaps reminiscent of mainstream continental painting of the period, albeit quite successfully blended into the numinous, symbol-rich, yet strangely straightforward art of the early Christians. The fact that an unabashedly traditional artist was working with great, almost medieval-level Church commissions so late into the last century (and not only that, but in 1945, when the rest of the continent was otherwise occupied) only adds to the unique and peculiarly Spanish and Catalan story behind his work. But, considering he sprang from a city whose most daring and avant-garde architect ended life as a reclusive saint living in the crypt where he would some day be buried, it is no surprise that another Catalonian could close that gap so successfully.

Friday, September 11, 2015

Matthew Alderman on the Camino de Santiago

One of our long-standing contributors and sacred architecture specialist, Matthew Alderman, is currently on the Camino de Santiago with his parents, and is happy to share some photos of the journey with us. They are doing about 100 kilometers on foot, and Matthew is taking a lot of pictures along the way - this post represents just a tiny selection of the many beautiful places they have visited thus far.

A chapel in Barbelo, one of the many stopping places.
On this arrow spray-painted on a wall to help people find their way, an Italian pilgrim has written the last line of  Dante’s Divine Comedy, “the love that moves the sun and the other stars.”
Another of the many little chapels which the pilgrims pass.


Thursday, October 09, 2014

Christ on the Flat Screen: The Renovation of the Crystal Cathedral, Orange, California

Some time ago, as part of the media buzz surrounding the purchase of the Crystal Cathedral, the Catholic Diocese of Orange opened the floor to online suggestions as to what the new church should be named. I offered that it should be titled the Cathedral of the Transfiguration; after all, the feast of the Transfiguration is traditionally the patronal festival for churches dedicated to Our Lord, and its suggestions of illumination, splendor, and above all, a glimpse of Heaven afforded through physical change, seemed perfectly suited to the project, even not without a bit of reverent wit. The name chosen, of course, was the blunter Christ Cathedral, direct but falling rather oddly on the ear--the Anglophile in me senses it is missing a Church in between Christ and Cathedral--and lacking the elusive specificity of the incandescent mystery of Mount Tabor.

One name conjures up Moses and Elijah, and a foolish, sprawling Peter, the painter Raphael, the siege of Belgrade and Calixtus III; an entire stained glass window filled with little colored scenes, all purple and scarlet, ranged round an explosive and nuclear bloom of gold and white. The visual image presented by Christ Cathedral, by comparison, seems rather transparent, and oddly incomplete: not particularly specific, and universal only in its vagueness. I couldn't help returning to this contrast when I began to review the designs for the renovated church by Johnson Fain and Ross Clementi Hale Studios released at the end of last month. One longs for a bit of color, or even a speck of good Christian dirt in the glacial interior.


As I commented in an article written for The Living Church some years ago (which, I understand, the renovation committee read with great interest), the project of Catholicizing the Crystal Cathedral is a daunting and perhaps even quixotic one. For the amount of money going into the project, one could have probably built a cathedral in a more traditional style, without much difficulty. The structure, with its all-glass walls, combines both a postmodern skepticism about man’s ability to describe the Divine, barring vague appeals to colorless light and nature, with TV-studio televangelist glitz and a lingering bit of Calvinist iconophobia. Rocky ground, indeed. While adding the life and vigor of a true Cathedral to this space would have been difficult, it would not have been impossible; indeed, while the building would never be a Chartres or a Beauvais, it could have easily been a brighter, more luminous Coventry, its enormous glass walls shielded by translucent banners and curtains, the entire interior focusing on an immense mosaic (modern in style, but traditional in content) of Christ in majesty--or better yet, a stained-glass window. Room could have been found in the various vestibules and balconies for those dark chapeled crannies where prayer comes so easily, and which might have, in time, become the seats of confraternities and Catholic guilds. Perhaps even the strange lack of boundaries between outside and inside that so characterize the space could have been an asset, transforming the interior into a sort of liturgical Field of the Cloth of Gold. All this could have been accomplished without even necessarily going much against the grain of the modern interior.

However, the result is more of the same, in the end. The design lacks the aggressive ugliness of the churches of the ’60s and ’70s, but this is replaced with the chill, uninviting perfection of an Apple Store. It is curious today that, despite living in an almost aggressively visual age--and one which has taken interconnectivity to new levels via hypertext--that our church buildings seem so afraid of imagery, and instead settle for a crisp lowest common denominator. The chaos of the Internet, with its mixed-bag garden of Earthly Delights, would suggest that only an interior of Baroque physicality or Gothic majesty could counterweight such enticements. Instead, we have only a surpassing coldness in spaces such as the baptistery, with its cruciform immersion font, or the low-ceilinged Eucharistic Chapel. There are a few interesting moments here--the suggestion of a mosaic dome in the baptistery, the translucent stone walls in both spaces--but on balance, the effect is institutional and rather impersonal. The curious tabernacle, in particular, is utterly divorced from any liturgical context--no altar, possibly no steps, and set in the midst of diagonal pews. The effect is a bit like a gallery installation. It is almost as if we question whether matter, the physical, can convey even the most rudimentary spiritual ideas. Christ, the God made man, who used even mud and spittle to work miracles, challenges us to think otherwise.



The principal space of the interior is also not without its idiosyncrasies. The interior is airy and open, but it is also not a little agoraphobic: is there a ‘there’ there, as was famously said of Oakland? Seen from the galleries, the effect is even more disorienting, and the altar and congregation seem sunken in a sort of arena. The one bit of warmth and color, the wood grain of the enormous organ case, has been painted out, lest it distract the faithful from the altar--though the logical solution to that would have been to emphasize the altar with a more elaborate canopy or even a proper altarpiece. And where are the icons? One sees a cross hung over the altar, some timid monochrome reliefs in the nave (if one may call it that), and a decontextualized copy of a Byzantine mosaic of Christ in the narthex, cropped and mounted on the wall in such a way one cannot help think of a flat screen TV; but, like the tabernacle, they seem almost like artifacts rather than objects of devotion. The altar itself, for a church that is more-or-less in the round, is elevated, of a distinguished size, and, while lacking the baldachin that would really set it apart, the large standard candlestands and hanging tester do give it a sense of presence largely lacking in most modern sanctuary layouts. The actual details and form are, once again, a bit too sharp-edged modern for my taste, but the basic layout is, all things considered, fairly sound. However, the altar has been placed on a curious catwalk-like bema that apparently runs the entire length of the interior, with the congregation seated antiphonally on either side, and the large elevated ambo balancing it at the other end. The ambo is itself rather fine in terms of height and proportion, if not location, and I was pleased to see what appears to be an Easter Candle stand to one side of it, as one sees at San Clemente in Rome.

Nonetheless, this is all admittedly a rather outré adaptation of the traditional monastic layout, which, for one thing, never envisioned the Mass lessons being read from anything other than their traditional position. Furthermore, antiphonal seating works best for the Office, and not very well at all for Mass. It is, I suppose, a great improvement on the faddish placement of the ambo behind the altar, as seen at the renovated Milwaukee Cathedral, and perhaps will put to rest in at least one cathedral the contemporary preoccupation with the celebrant being able to make eye contact with everyone all the time. It may be a bit more distracting for the laity looking at each other across the thrust of the sanctuary, and one wonders what complicated and lengthy treks altar boys, deacons and other ministers may need to make during a solemn liturgy if they need to go recover something from the sacristy.

One looks at all the renderings with a certain weariness. As has been pointed out by a number of commentators, quite justly, the design could have been far more objectionable. But surely we can do better than this. Modern man, on those few occasions when he is still confronted by the Divine, seems now perpetually stunned and speechless. Rather than joining him in mute incomprehension, let us give him the words, and the Word-Made-Flesh.

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Il Timone salutes Matthew Alderman

Journalist Marco Respinti, a Senior Fellow of the Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal, has written a warm article on our architecture contributor Matthew Alderman, appearing June 19 on the web site of the Italian journal of apologetics and culture Il Timone. Here it is, in my translation: 

Who says that beautiful sacred art is all in the past? 
Here is the talent of Matthew Alderman

Matthew Alderman is a sacred artist designing and working today, in our world, with a profound and beautiful taste that really seems to belong to another age. That is how he effectively shows the importance of the via pulchritudinis, the "way of beauty" that approaches God, knowing Him and loving Him, by means of the road that the reflection of His splendor, full of meaning, traces among the things of the world and in history, impelling man the artist to imitation.

With Alderman we then come to understand another important thing: that the category of the beautiful and the good -- that is, of the beautiful, full of meaning, that rises to God, is not just a peculiarity of a specific artistic or architectonic style, nor of a unique time in history, inevitably in the past. Artistic beauty is possible, as Alderman shows, hic et nunc, even today, by means of styles that unite -- with grace and taste, proportion and intelligence -- both tradition and innovation, both the individual talent and the history of art in its sumptuous complexity. That is, it is possible to be traditional while living in the modern age, and not just by slavishly reproducing antique styles. Beauty, like truth, is indeed a tradition: it passes through the age unchanging, to change the age itself by remaining always the same, even when it assumes new expressive forms whose legitimacy is given precisely by that unbreakable "umbilical cord" connecting it with what is permanent, and therefore -- in its essential and basic theological meaning -- not negotiable. 
Matthew Alderman, an American, a graduate of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, is an illustrator specializing in sacred art, ecclesiastical architecture, and liturgical furnishings. He writes for various Catholic publications, specialist and non-, such as Sacred Architecture, First Things, Antiphon: A Journal of Liturgical Renewal, and The Living Church, the periodical of the similarly named Catholic-friendly Anglican organization. 
His graphic and artistic works are included in collections everywhere, from California to Singapore, from Spain to Australia. 
In 2010 Alderman created 15 full-page illustrations for the important revised edition of the Roman Missal published by Liturgy Training Publications of Chicago. In 2011 he completed another 50 illustrations for the Sunday and daily hand-missals published in the United Kingdom by HarperCollins. And in 2013 he collaborated with the major American Catholic publisher FAITH Catholic (which issues 29 diocesan publications), celebrating its tenth year of activity by means of images and illustrations, often in the form of a triptych of "how it used to be". 
Besides sacred images, Alderman produces heraldic coats of arms, blazons, seals, and standards for schools, dioceses, ecclesiastical and private persons, and sometimes also sets his hand to "secular" artistic subjects. In this capacity, in 2013 he designed the new coat of arms of the Josephinum in Columbus, Ohio, the only Pontifical College not based in Rome. 
A few examples of the beauty and profundity of Alderman's art can be admired at this link, but all the sections in which the American artist's web site is articulated are full of images, studies, and realized works of great power and fascination.

Two Eucharistic Pieces from My Drafting Board

As it is, in the traditional calendar and some parts of the world, Corpus Christi, I thought I would share two recent commissions on a Eucharistic theme. The first was commissioned on behalf of a religious confraternity in a small Belgian town in the province of Limburg named Hasselt, and illustrates St. Juliana of Liège's vision of the barred or stained moon which ultimately led her to petition Pope Urban IV to establish the feast of Corpus Christi. I studied a variety of different depictions and accounts of her vision, which occurred several times, and which, it was eventually revealed to her, represented the stain or mark on the Church's calendar due to the lack of a feast-day for the Holy Eucharist. I finally settled on a simple depiction showing the saint alone in prayer, asking God what this vision might mean.

She is shown wearing her robes as a canoness and accompanied by a crozier ornamented with a flaming Augustinian heart, representing her devotion to the core principles of her order. The crozier may be something of a historical embroidery in view she served as prioress rather than abbess, but she is occasionally shown in art carrying one and wearing a pectoral cross, so it seemed a justifiable artistic choice, also allowing the opportunity to introduce a vertical element into the composition. She is described in various places as either an Augustinian or a Norbertine, but is shown wearing a black or black and white habit, rather than the usual white one associated with Premonstratensians (or the surplice sometimes ascribed to canonesses); the white habit seemed anachronistic, and the black and white one too easily confused with the Cistercian habit (she sought refuge in several Cistercian houses at the end of her life) and so I opted for black for both compositional and symbolic reasons, primarily as it seems to be the most common way of depicting her. I had originally planned to show her accompanied by an angel, as one sees in several prints of her visions, but as accounts of her vision mention no angels, and several depict her alone, it seemed to me an unnecessary addition. The border depicts grape vines and wheat, and is inspired by some of the art in the old Belgian Bulletin Paroissial Liturgique, appropriately enough, with a small Host at the top, and in the four corners, clockwise, the papal arms, the arms of Urban IV, the arms of Liège, and the arms of Hasselt. You can find more on the image at my Tumblr site.

Earlier this year, I completed another work on a similar theme, an album cover for a single released by the Catholic musical group Theandric on Holy Thursday. Paul Tiseo, the band's lead, writes music on Catholic themes in a variety of popular styles intended for extra-liturgical use. I have done several album covers for him, and he specifically requested a Eucharistic image for the piece. The white and gold color scheme he asked for put me in mind of the wonderful neo-Baroque illustrations of Martin Travers, which I drew on in part for the general aesthetic of this piece, centering on a monstrance and incorporating in the brocade background the nard and star from Pope Francis's arms, which are repeated on the foot of the monstrance. If you may recall, a few years ago I also did a rendering of Benedict XVI's arms for Mr. Tiseo. As you can see, he continues to be a discerning client!

Tuesday, December 03, 2013

Msgr. Wadsworth at Mount Calvary, Friday, December 6

Mount Calvary Catholic Church, Baltimore's Ordinariate parish, continues its new monthly First Friday Series on Friday, Dec. 6. Adoration and Confessions will begin at 5:30 pm, followed by Devotions and Benediction in the Anglican Use at 6:30 pm. The First Friday supper and lecture will follow immediately after Benediction at 7:00 pm. Msgr Wadsworth will be giving a talk on Vatican II and the sacred liturgy, entitled “Sacrosanctum Concilium: What We Have Done, and What We Have Failed To Do.” Msgr. Wadsworth is Moderator of The Community of St. Philip Neri, a community-in-formation for the Oratory at the Church of St. Thomas the Apostle in Washington, D.C., and is the Executive Director of the International Commission on English in the Liturgy (ICEL). Mount Calvary, long known for its Anglo-Catholic traditions and liturgy, entered the Catholic Church in January, 2012 as the first parish of the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter. For more information, see our website at www.mountcalvary.com

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