St. Ambrose Hosts Special
Art Exhibit by Renowned Fr. Catich
Mar. 18, 2004
St.
Ambrose University is hosting a special six-month-long
exhibit of paintings and drawings titled “The Art of the
Improviser” by the late Rev. Edward Catich, renowned
scholar, artist and teacher.
The
art exhibit will run from March 20 - Sept. 17 in the newly
remodeled art gallery in the Galvin Fine Arts Center on the
northwest corner of the St. Ambrose campus. Gallery hours
will be 1-5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday until May 8, and
1-5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday thereafter.
“The
current exhibit features Catich as a dynamic improviser and
highlights his ability to combine spontaneity and risk in
the process of building a composition,” said Leslie Bell,
art professor and curator of the exhibit. “Whether in
watercolor, ink, scratchboard or pencil, figuration or
abstraction, each piece displays an intelligent, gamelike
arrangement of forms which mirror movements in art in
America and Europe at the time of their creation. My
intention is to feature Father Catich as an adventurous
modernist."
Considered
during his lifetime (1906-1979)
to be one of the world’s finest calligraphers, Father
Edward Catich was an international authority on stone
incising, typography, stained glass fabrication and was
known as the foremost authority on the Roman alphabet, its
origin, nature and history. He was also the finest executor
of that alphabet in reed, brush, stylus and stone.
For
more information about the Catich Gallery exhibits, call
563/333-6444.
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