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Sacred Art Makes Good TV
‘Catholic Canvas’ Brought to EWTN
BY EDWARD PENTIN ROME CORRESPONDENT
May 3-9, 2009 Issue |
Posted 4/24/09 at 7:08 AM
A visually breathtaking television series is
currently being shown on the Eternal Word Television Network that aims to bring
to life the Catholic meaning behind the priceless works of art on display in
the Vatican Museums.
Produced and directed by Catholic
documentary filmmaker Mary Shovlain, “Catholic Canvas” takes viewers on an
artistic journey through salvation history, starting with the Old Testament,
from creation to the fall of man, and moving on to man’s need for a redeemer
and the promise of Christ’s redemption.
The series includes works by
Michelangelo, Raphael, Perugino and, through Shovlain’s persistent efforts and
the generosity of the Vatican Museums, it shows the great masterpieces of
salvation history in the halls of the museums and in the Sistine Chapel as
they’ve never been seen before.
But Shovlain said the overall aim
was not simply to put these great artworks on television, but to help the
viewers in their faith by explaining the profound Christian message that lies
behind the masterpieces.
“We
didn’t just look at the artistic value, the history and the artists. We wanted
to tap into what the artist was trying to convey,” she said. “In the end, they
are catechetical tools.”
The series begins with a look at
depictions of angels in salvation history and then, in other programs, examines
the role of Mary, Christ’s ministry, passion and resurrection, St. Peter and
the saints, and the Apocalypse.
To
guide the viewer through the museum’s treasures is the well-respected art
historian Elizabeth Lev. For her, the series is a means of recapturing the true
meaning of these works in a society that tends to diminish them.
“This
modern age is a very visual society; we gravitate to television, magazines and
computer screens, relying increasingly more on images than words or sounds,”
explained Lev, who teaches Christian art and architecture at Duquesne
University’s Italian campus in Rome. “The tremendous heritage of Christian art,
both beautiful and meaningful, has the potential to appeal to that visual world
and draw them closer to the Christian message.”
But
for this reason, she believes artists such as Michelangelo and Caravaggio have
been “kidnapped” by secular forces. “Their appeal is so strong that many have
tried to use their work to promote agendas completely alien to their original
intention,” Lev explained. “The show reclaims them for the Christian message.
We want people to know the Church produced the fertile soil that brought forth
these artists and that we should be proud of these great painters and sculptors
because they proclaimed a message of faith.”
Shovlain
said many tour guides at the Vatican are “missing the boat” by omitting the
true meaning behind these works. “It’s not cool to talk about God creating man
and creation even, but there it is, painted on the ceiling of the Sistine
Chapel,” she said — and pointed out that Michelangelo’s masterpiece and
artists’ other great works have been a “silent witness” to the faith for
centuries. “The message hasn’t changed,” she said, “and we’re not going to
change the interpretation of it either to fit in with the times.”
EWTN
has been very pleased with the production. Its director of program acquisition
and coproduction, John Elson, said the program “contributes in an important way
to the network’s mission to provide orthodox and high-quality
catechetical programming in humble service to the universal Church and in
total fidelity to both the magisterium and the Holy Father for the salvation of
souls.”
The
series also contains commentary from Legionary Father Mark Haydu, international
coordinator of the patrons of the arts of the Vatican Museums, who shows the
many restoration projects that have been financed by the patrons. “Patronage
has always been a part of Church history; we need to inspire this again, and
this is one way to do it,” he said.
Father
Haydu said he was very excited to collaborate on the series and that it helped
to fulfill the mission of the Vatican Museums, which is also to communicate the
faith through art. But also, for him personally, a highlight of the program was
how it portrays the true essence of beauty.
“We’re in a world that’s hungry for
beauty; we’re so focused on it, but sometimes on superficial beauty,” he said.
“So to showcase profound beauty that has a second wave of spiritual meaning, an
opening to the transcendent, is a combination that the world is hungry for. The
Church is always called to communicate this more profound beauty which springs
from the truths of our faith. Beautiful art is the flowering of a personal
encounter with Beauty itself.”
The Sistine Chapel forms the
backbone of the series and was illuminated for the shooting (usually its lights
are switched off to preserve Michelangelo’s masterpieces). Camera crews were
even permitted to put up scaffolding to achieve the best close-up shots of the
chapel’s many frescoes.
For
the program makers, “Catholic Canvas” was as enlightening to make as it was to
watch. Just to be able to gain such unprecedented access was a great privilege.
“The people at the museums were with us every day, not just to make sure we
didn’t damage the works of art, but to make sure we knew what each artwork was
about,” said Shovlain, adding they were “incredible” to work with and highly
professional.
The
highlight for Lev was to be able to stand “in silent contemplation, alone,
before the greatest works of art in the world.” She said the experience helped
transform her relationship with the works “from a clinical understanding to an
intimate friendship.”
“I
saw parts of the museums I had never seen in 12 years of going there almost
daily, and I was able to feel like I was taking part in the rich history of
this place,” said Lev.
Finishing
touches to the final program are still being made; the entire series has taken
more than a year and a half to make. “It has taken me longer to make than it
took Michelangelo to paint the Sistine Chapel,” joked Shovlain.
But
Shovlain hopes this will be just the first in a series of programs on priceless
Catholic art housed in museums all over the world. “You have to travel the
world to see them,” she said, “so what we hope to do is use this format for
other museums, bringing out this Catholic art and broadcasting it all over the
world.”
Edward Pentin writes
from Rome.
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