Explore the Immaculate Conception Through Art in Video Series on Faith and Beauty

The first video of the series features Denis McNamara, executive director of the Center for Beauty & Culture and a professor at Benedictine College.

A detail from Francisco de Zurbarán’s painting “The Immaculate Conception” (1628–1630)
A detail from Francisco de Zurbarán’s painting “The Immaculate Conception” (1628–1630) (photo: Benedictine College / YouTube)

Benedictine College in Atchison, Kansas, is kicking off a new video series today on art and faith with a video celebrating today’s solemnity, the solemnity of the Immaculate Conception.

The video series, titled Sacred Image, is produced by the college’s Center for Beauty & Culture and explores the ways God communicates with us through great works of art.

The first video of the series features Denis McNamara, executive director of the Center for Beauty & Culture and a professor at Benedictine College. In the video, McNamara, who spent two decades at Mundelein Seminary, where he taught at the Liturgical Institute, explains how we can come to a greater understanding of the solemnity through an examination of Francisco de Zurbarán’s painting “The Immaculate Conception” (1628–1630).

Francisco de Zurbarán’s painting “The Immaculate Conception” (1628–1630). Public Domain

Francisco de Zurbarán’s painting “The Immaculate Conception” (1628–1630). Public Domain

The painting is featured in the new book Solemnities: Celebrating a Tapestry of Divine Beauty, published by Ascension and co-authored by McNamara and two other experts from the Liturgical Institute, Christopher Carstens and Alexis Kutarna.

The book delves into the theology, history, and cultural significance of each of the Catholic Church’s 17 solemnities through the lens of a great work of sacred art. The next video in the series, to be released Dec. 19, will focus on the solemnity of the Nativity of Our Lord through an exploration of the painting featured in the Solemnities book, “The Mystic Nativity,” by Sandro Botticelli (1500).

"Mystic Nativity" by Sandro Botticelli (1500). Public Domain

“Mystic Nativity” by Sandro Botticelli (1500). Public Domain

Watch the video on the the Immaculate Conception below and visit the Center for Beauty & Culture’s YouTube channel to subscribe for more: