It's time for me to get serious about working on my sabbatical. I'm now in Buffalo, NY, and I'm comfortably in my new Stained Glass Studio called Illuminations in Light in our newly renovated Villa Maria Convent.
This past summer, in July, I had the synchronous opportunity to meet the engineer/glass artist, who is charged with installing my skylight when it is designed, built, and complete within the next 1 1/2-2 years. His name is Art Fiminella. As it turns out, he is on the board of the Stained Glass Association of America. I am also now a member of this fine and growing organization. He is excited about the project and looks forward to collaborating with me on the method and installation of the glass.
I had planned on getting started on this work sooner and with this journal, however, many things came up in the meantime including drawings for publication; our Felician revisions to our Constitution, which is international in scope (how could I turn this opportunity down?). While visiting in Coraopolis, PA, I had the chance to meet about this work, and then was also commissioned to design a stained glass window for our new Provincial House in Sawicki, PA. I had a chance to meet with the architect, a marvelous and talented woman named Laura Nettleton, who has her own architectural business called Thoughtful Balance. She also did the work on the newly renovated Coraopolis Provincial House.
The central portion of the Iviswold skylight (The castle) is a St. Francis that I have previously worked out in drawing, painting, and glass fusion and painting (Peter McGrain calls this Vitri-Fusai, but that term is copywrighted). That image can be seen below:
The Core offers students a vision of wholeheartedness rather than wholeness, alone - one that is rooted in an ethic of self-giving and self-sacrifice. The program calls upon learners to hallow and sanctify both their work lives and vocational choices in ways which are well described in the great Catholic and Franciscan traditions of the liberal arts and sciences, but are often absent from current discourses of careerism.
The total outside border of this skylight will be on the subject of the Canticle of the Creatures (The Canticle of the Sun) by St. Francis of Assisi in the 12th century Italy. In between areas will reflect the four core values of Felician College, Franciscan values of
1) Culture and Diversity
2) Applied Ethical Reasoning
3) Journeys to Selfhood
4) The Franciscan Vision: Self, Service, and Society
This "Core" is reflected in the current Felician College catalog and states thusly:
The Core offers students a vision of wholeheartedness rather than wholeness, alone - one that is rooted in an ethic of self-giving and self-sacrifice. The program calls upon learners to hallow and sanctify both their work lives and vocational choices in ways which are well described in the great Catholic and Franciscan traditions of the liberal arts and sciences, but are often absent from current discourses of careerism.
These core values will be visually represented in the images that will appear in the glass skylight.
1) Culture and Diversity
2) Applied Ethical Reasoning
3) Journeys to Selfhood
4) The Franciscan Vision: Self, Service, and Society
This "Core" is reflected in the current Felician College catalog and states thusly:
The Core offers students a vision of wholeheartedness rather than wholeness, alone - one that is rooted in an ethic of self-giving and self-sacrifice. The program calls upon learners to hallow and sanctify both their work lives and vocational choices in ways which are well described in the great Catholic and Franciscan traditions of the liberal arts and sciences, but are often absent from current discourses of careerism.
These core values will be visually represented in the images that will appear in the glass skylight.
No comments:
Post a Comment