Catholic Art Quarterly Explained

Based:Newport, Rhode Island
Frequency:Quarterly
Category:Catholic social art magazine
Company:Catholic Art Association
Firstdate:Winter 1937
Country:USA
Language:English
Finaldate:1970
Oclc:5756161

The Catholic Art Quarterly (originally the Christian Social Art Quarterly and later Good Work) was the official bulletin of the Catholic Art Association (CAA). Beginning in 1937 under the guidance of founding editor Sister Esther Newport, the magazine was published quarterly for thirty-two years.

Description

The publication centered on the "social character of the arts" for both artists and art educators was seen as a contemporary of magazines like The Catholic Worker and Orate Fratres.[1]

Writers and artists featured in the magazine included C.S. Lewis, Ade Bethune, Thomas Merton, Edward Catich, Sister Esther Newport and Graham Carey.

History

At the first general meeting in October 1937 of the Catholic Art Association (then called the Catholic College Art Association), association membership decided to publish a quarterly magazine. Newport was appointed editor and the issue was to be published from the campus of the Sisters of Providence of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana.

The CAA received church approval from Cardinal Joseph Ritter, archbishop of Indianapolis, and the first issue of the Christian Social Art Quarterly was released in December 1939.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Book: McCarraher , Eugene . Christian critics: religion and the impasse in modern American social thought . Cornell University . 2000 . 83 . registration . christian social art quarterly. . 0-8014-3473-4.
  2. Book: Murphy , Maureen T. . The Search for Right Reason in an Unreasonable World: A History of the Catholic Art Association, 1937-1970 . Notre Dame . 1975.