Vatican: Artists to honor Pope's 60th ordination anniversary with 60 works


The Vatican will celebrate Pope Benedict’s 60th anniversary of priestly ordination with a month-long exhibition featuring 60 artists from around the world.
Details of the month long exhibition entitled ‘The Splendor of Truth, the Beauty of Love’ were unveiled in Rome today…The event will begin on July 4, when the artists and their work will be presented to the Pope himself. A wide range of art forms will be represented, including painting, sculpture, architecture, photography and music from globally renowned composers such as Ennio Morricone, Arvo Part and James McMillan.
“I was overjoyed and proud to have been invited to participate in this marvelous festival,” McMillan commented. The Scottish composer wrote much of the music to accompany Pope Benedict’s visit to the U.K. last year….“The response from the artists invited has been overwhelmingly positive,” said Richard Rouse of the Pontifical Council for Culture.
“They’re all encouraged, they take this as a good opportunity to reopen a dialogue of works rather than just words. And that’s something that the artists continue to say to us – finally it’s not just words it’s also pictures, it’s also music.”
The event is in some way a spin off from the first meeting Pope Benedict had with artists in the Sistine Chapel, back in 2009. At the time, he promised that they would meet again.
“Pope Benedict, as everybody knows, is a man who’s interested in truth, he’s interested in dialogue, in charity. And we thought that having already had that meeting with artists in 2009 of reaching out again in this dialogue,” Rouse explained.
Amongst the 60 contributions, the Pope will receive a musical arrangement of the Our Father, written by the Estonian composer Arvo Part. It will be sung by a boy treble with Part himself at the piano.
The man behind the music to films like the Mission and the Untouchables, Italian composer Ennio Morricone, has donated a new score which, when viewed as a musical manuscript, depicts a cross.
And the Italian sculptor behind a controversial contemporary statue of Pope John Paul II recently unveiled in Rome, Oliviero Rainaldi, will also produce a new work for the occasion.
The event will run until September 4. Those artworks being displayed will be exhibited at the atrium of the Paul VI Audience Hall in the Vatican. Opening hours are Monday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Pope Benedict was ordained to the priesthood, along with his brother Georg, in the Bavarian town of Freising on June 29, 1951. Read the full report here.

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