Scala Foundation
Moral Education: High Expectations, Identity & Purpose (Full Conversation w/ Profs. Mooney & Damon)
updated
The full concert program can be seen here: drive.google.com/file/d/1D5Lx19lrIQ7pf7lX1QBYfpwTIXyN1xp7/view?usp=sharing
This event was organized by the Catholic Sacred Music Project and proudly co-sponsored by the Scala Foundation, Benedict XVI Institute, Magnificat Institute, and the Aquinas Institute of Princeton University. We are grateful to the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel for hosting this event.
All of the music performed can be seen on the YouTube Channel of the Catholic Sacred Music Project.
youtube.com/@UCh51a3DDlwQHxq7BU7UVFQQ
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The full concert program can be seen here: drive.google.com/file/d/1D5Lx19lrIQ7pf7lX1QBYfpwTIXyN1xp7/view?usp=sharing
This event was organized by the Catholic Sacred Music Project and proudly co-sponsored by the Scala Foundation, Benedict XVI Institute, Magnificat Institute, and the Aquinas Institute of Princeton University. We are grateful to the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel for hosting this event.
All of the music performed can be seen on the YouTube Channel of the Catholic Sacred Music Project.
youtube.com/@UCh51a3DDlwQHxq7BU7UVFQQ
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The full concert program can be seen here: drive.google.com/file/d/1D5Lx19lrIQ7pf7lX1QBYfpwTIXyN1xp7/view?usp=sharing
This event was organized by the Catholic Sacred Music Project and proudly co-sponsored by the Scala Foundation, Benedict XVI Institute, Magnificat Institute, and the Aquinas Institute of Princeton University. We are grateful to the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel for hosting this event.
All of the music performed can be seen on the YouTube Channel of the Catholic Sacred Music Project.
youtube.com/@UCh51a3DDlwQHxq7BU7UVFQQ
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The full concert program can be seen here: drive.google.com/file/d/1D5Lx19lrIQ7pf7lX1QBYfpwTIXyN1xp7/view?usp=sharing
This event was organized by the Catholic Sacred Music Project and proudly co-sponsored by the Scala Foundation, Benedict XVI Institute, Magnificat Institute, and the Aquinas Institute of Princeton University. We are grateful to the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel for hosting this event.
All of the music performed can be seen on the YouTube Channel of the Catholic Sacred Music Project.
youtube.com/@UCh51a3DDlwQHxq7BU7UVFQQ
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The full conversation from which this conversation was clipped can be seen here:
youtu.be/WkShmheLK3U
MacMillan spent two weeks in Princeton in June 2024 as part of a program hosted by the Catholic Sacred Music Project to provide master-apprentice training to young composers, conductors, and choristers. Scala co-sponsored the summer program. Two other conversations with MacMillan can be seen here:
youtu.be/Gexj7JEVeS8
and here: youtu.be/l3dD8MT7eo8
Music from the event can be seen on this playlist:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRZHnw30gpFcVenqvTUoK-HIvMw535_II
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The full conversation from which this conversation was clipped can be seen here:
youtu.be/WkShmheLK3U
MacMillan spent two weeks in Princeton in June 2024 as part of a program hosted by the Catholic Sacred Music Project to provide master-apprentice training to young composers, conductors, and choristers. Scala co-sponsored the summer program. Two other conversations with MacMillan can be seen here:
youtu.be/Gexj7JEVeS8
and here: youtu.be/l3dD8MT7eo8
Music from the event can be seen on this playlist:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRZHnw30gpFcVenqvTUoK-HIvMw535_II
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The full conversation from which this conversation was clipped can be seen here:
youtu.be/WkShmheLK3U
MacMillan spent two weeks in Princeton in June 2024 as part of a program hosted by the Catholic Sacred Music Project to provide master-apprentice training to young composers, conductors, and choristers. Scala co-sponsored the summer program. Two other conversations with MacMillan can be seen here:
youtu.be/Gexj7JEVeS8
and here: youtu.be/l3dD8MT7eo8
Music from the event can be seen on this playlist:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRZHnw30gpFcVenqvTUoK-HIvMw535_II
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The full conversation from which this conversation was clipped can be seen here:
youtu.be/WkShmheLK3U
MacMillan spent two weeks in Princeton in June 2024 as part of a program hosted by the Catholic Sacred Music Project to provide master-apprentice training to young composers, conductors, and choristers. Scala co-sponsored the summer program. Two other conversations with MacMillan can be seen here:
youtu.be/Gexj7JEVeS8
and here: youtu.be/l3dD8MT7eo8
Music from the event can be seen on this playlist:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRZHnw30gpFcVenqvTUoK-HIvMw535_II
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The full conversation can be seen here:
youtu.be/Gexj7JEVeS8
MacMillan spent two weeks in Princeton in June 2024 as part of a program hosted by the Catholic Sacred Music Project to provide master-apprentice training to young composers, conductors, and choristers. Scala co-sponsored the summer program. Two other conversations with MacMillan can be seen here:
youtu.be/l3dD8MT7eo8?feature=shared
and here: youtu.be/kX1F5bzYZZw
Music from the event can be seen on this playlist:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRZHnw30gpFcVenqvTUoK-HIvMw535_II
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The full conversation can be seen here:
youtu.be/Gexj7JEVeS8
MacMillan spent two weeks in Princeton in June 2024 as part of a program hosted by the Catholic Sacred Music Project to provide master-apprentice training to young composers, conductors, and choristers. Scala co-sponsored the summer program. Two other conversations with MacMillan can be seen here:
youtu.be/l3dD8MT7eo8?feature=shared
and here: youtu.be/kX1F5bzYZZw
Music from the event can be seen on this playlist:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRZHnw30gpFcVenqvTUoK-HIvMw535_II
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
“Lovers of music are transformed by music,” he stated. Similarly, in contemplative prayer, “you have to be open to the possibility of being changed through what happens in that silence.”
In Christian prayer, silent contemplation is a sacrifice of the self to encounter God. Similarly, with music, MacMillan described that “for complex music to speak to you, you need to open yourself to an objective authority. There’s no point in listening to a Beethoven symphony if you're going to do something else. That music is not going to reach you. Just like complex narratives in history have an authority that cannot be hurried, you must obey the structures and the timescale of these pieces of music. The listener cannot come into the presence of music in a state of defiance and resistance. You have to come in a state of openness, respect, and love.”
As with music, in contemplative prayer, “you have to sacrifice something of yourself; you have to give something of your ego. You can’t enter into the presence of God in a state of defiance and resistance. You must be open to the possibility of being changed through what happens in that silence.”
The full conversation can be seen here:
youtu.be/Gexj7JEVeS8
MacMillan spent two weeks in Princeton in June 2024 as part of a program hosted by the Catholic Sacred Music Project to provide master-apprentice training to young composers, conductors, and choristers. Scala co-sponsored the summer program. Two other conversations with MacMillan can be seen here:
youtu.be/l3dD8MT7eo8?feature=shared
and here: youtu.be/kX1F5bzYZZw
Music from the event can be seen on this playlist:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRZHnw30gpFcVenqvTUoK-HIvMw535_II
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
Topics Discussed in this video include:
• Music as a spiritual journey:
- Opens a window to the divine
- Has a strong connection to faith and worship
• Importance of tradition in music:
- Gregorian chant as the DNA of Western sacred music
- Tradition as a flowing river from past to present to future
• Challenges of modern and contemporary music:
- Modernism's attempt to break with tradition
- Difficulties in accessibility for wider audiences
• Composer's creative process:
- Balancing traditional training with personal style
- Importance of silence and subconscious in composition
• Beauty in music and other art forms:
- Early exposure to beauty as inspiration for creativity
- Connection between music, faith, and other forms of beauty
• Role of sacred music in culture:
- Influence of Jewish and early Christian chant on Western music
- Importance of text in liturgical music
• Formation of composers:
- Value of traditional training in counterpoint, harmony, etc.
- Learning from past masters without mere imitation
• Impact of historical events on music and faith:
- Effects of communism on religious knowledge and practice
- Potential for renewal after periods of desolation
• Optimism for the future of music and faith:
- Signs of renewed interest in beauty and tradition
- Potential for art to play a role in spiritual and cultural renewal
MacMillan spent two weeks in Princeton in June 2024 as part of a program hosted by the Catholic Sacred Music Project to provide master-apprentice training to young composers, conductors, and choristers. Scala co-sponsored the summer program. Two other conversations with MacMillan can be seen here:
youtu.be/Gexj7JEVeS8
and here: youtu.be/l3dD8MT7eo8
Music from the event can be seen on this playlist:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRZHnw30gpFcVenqvTUoK-HIvMw535_II
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
Some topics discussed in this video include:
• Music is a spiritual journey, even for non-religious. “Music opens a window to the divine” “There's a kind of umbilical link between music and the spiritual”
• The social dimension of music: how a shared love of music like the Cumnock tryst builds community unity. Something about music resists being purely instrumental; it points to the divine and takes us out of ourselves.
• Music, including classical music, is not elitist. The desire for music is universal.
• MacMillan’s story growing up poor, falling in love with music at age 8, performing music at home, school, and church.
• Artists bring back to the church the love of beauty.
• The connection between folk music and classical music.
• Silence and music: “Silence is not absence, but presence. It is the silence of accompaniment of Christ accompanying us on the Via Dolorosa suffering with us, as one of us, rather than as nihil, nothing. And the notion of silence as presence as the mystical or metaphysical substance has many musical analogies.”
• Music is not fundamentally instrumental or material, yet it has a profoundly transforming impact on us.
MacMillan spent two weeks in Princeton in June 2024 as part of a program hosted by the Catholic Sacred Music Project to provide master-apprentice training to young composers, conductors, and choristers. Scala co-sponsored the summer program. Two other conversations with MacMillan can be seen here:
youtu.be/l3dD8MT7eo8?feature=shared
and here: youtu.be/kX1F5bzYZZw
Music from the event can be seen on this playlist:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRZHnw30gpFcVenqvTUoK-HIvMw535_II
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues, and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy, and education. Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, workshops for artists, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The event was held at the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel on June 15, 2024, beginning with a discussion with Sir James MacMillan, Dr. Margarita Mooney Clayton, and Peter Carter on how noble and accessible sacred music can once again shape all popular culture. The discussion was followed by a choral concert of music by all living composers: eight choral works based on the texts of the Antiphons of Corpus Christi as well as music by renowned composers James MacMillan and Paul Jernberg.
This event was organized by the Catholic Sacred Music Project and proudly co-sponsored by the Scala Foundation, Benedict XVI Institute, Magnificat Institute, and the Aquinas Institute of Princeton University. We are grateful to the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel for hosting this event.
The program for the event can be seen here: drive.google.com/file/d/1Mu1IuoEnZTgFhF3r3ofK9qaR2tnBQRFB/view
All of the music performed can be seen on the YouTube Channel of the Catholic Sacred Music Project. youtube.com/@UCh51a3DDlwQHxq7BU7UVFQQ
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues, and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy, and education. Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews) and hosts public events like conferences, webinars, concerts and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The event was held at the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel on June 15, 2024, beginning with a discussion with Sir James MacMillan, Dr. Margarita Mooney Clayton, and Peter Carter on how noble and accessible sacred music can once again shape all popular culture. The discussion was followed by a choral concert of music by all living composers: eight choral works based on the texts of the Antiphons of Corpus Christi as well as music by renowned composers James MacMillan and Paul Jernberg.
This event was organized by the Catholic Sacred Music Project and proudly co-sponsored by the Scala Foundation, Benedict XVI Institute, Magnificat Institute, and the Aquinas Institute of Princeton University. We are grateful to the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel for hosting this event.
The program for the event can be seen here: drive.google.com/file/d/1Mu1IuoEnZTgFhF3r3ofK9qaR2tnBQRFB/view
All of the music performed can be seen on the YouTube Channel of the Catholic Sacred Music Project. youtube.com/@UCh51a3DDlwQHxq7BU7UVFQQ
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues, and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy, and education. Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews) and hosts public events like conferences, webinars, concerts and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
All of the music performed can be seen on the YouTube Channel of the Catholic Sacred Music Project. youtube.com/@UCh51a3DDlwQHxq7BU7UVFQQ
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues, and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy, and education. Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews) and hosts public events like conferences, webinars, concerts and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The event was held at the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel on June 15, 2024, beginning with a discussion with Sir James MacMillan, Dr. Margarita Mooney Clayton, and Peter Carter on how noble and accessible sacred music can once again shape all popular culture. The discussion was followed by a choral concert of music by all living composers: eight choral works based on the texts of the Antiphons of Corpus Christi as well as music by renowned composers James MacMillan and Paul Jernberg.
This event was organized by the Catholic Sacred Music Project and proudly co-sponsored by the Scala Foundation, Benedict XVI Institute, Magnificat Institute, and the Aquinas Institute of Princeton University. We are grateful to the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel for hosting this event.
The program for the event can be seen here: drive.google.com/file/d/1Mu1IuoEnZTgFhF3r3ofK9qaR2tnBQRFB/view
All of the music performed can be seen on the YouTube Channel of the Catholic Sacred Music Project. youtube.com/@UCh51a3DDlwQHxq7BU7UVFQQ
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues, and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy, and education. Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews) and hosts public events like conferences, webinars, concerts and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The event was held at the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel on June 15 beginning with a discussion with Sir James MacMillan, Dr. Margarita Mooney Clayton, and Peter Carter on how noble and accessible sacred music can once again shape all popular culture. The discussion was followed by a choral concert of music by all living composers: eight new choral works based on the texts of the Antiphons of Corpus Christi as well as music by renowned composers James MacMillan and Paul Jernberg.
This event was organized by the Catholic Sacred Music Project and proudly co-sponsored by the Scala Foundation, Benedict XVI Institute, Magnificat Institute, and the Aquinas Institute of Princeton University. We are grateful to the Princeton Theological Seminary Chapel for hosting this event.
The program for the event can be seen here: drive.google.com/file/d/1Mu1IuoEnZTgFhF3r3ofK9qaR2tnBQRFB/view
All of the music performed can be seen on the YouTube Channel of the Catholic Sacred Music Project. youtube.com/@UCh51a3DDlwQHxq7BU7UVFQQ
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues, and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy, and education. Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews) and hosts public events like conferences, webinars, concerts and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
1) James Griffin, Durandis Institute, on the history of the Use of Sarum
2) David Clayton, Pontifex University & Scala Foundation on sacred art
3) Gabriel Crouch, Princeton University and Gallicantus, on sacred music
A digital copy of the service program booklet may be seen here:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ypsI...
David Clayton of Pontifex University and Scala Foundation personally commissioned new art for this occasion from artists Ioana Belcea and Ander Scharbach.
You may read David Clayton's remarks on Scala's blog:
scalafoundation.org/2024/03/sarum-use-vespers-and-liturgical-art-heaven-on-earth
Margarita Mooney Clayton of Scala Foundation & Princeton Theological Seminary wrote about the event here:
scalafoundation.org/2024/03/liturgy-and-culture-are-key-to-the-next-great-awakening
Video credit: Kearns Media Consulting LLC
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, author of numerous books and popular articles, and inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues, and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy, and education. Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews) and hosts public events like conferences, webinars, liturgical celebrations, and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
The event was made possible by partnering with the Durandus Institute, The Catholic Sacred Music Project, and the Aquinas Institute at Princeton, among other organizations. Music was assisted by the UK men's early music choir Gallicantus.
David Clayton of Pontifex University and Scala Foundation personally commissioned new art for this occasion from artists Ioana Belcea and Ander Scharbach.
A digital copy of the service program booklet may be seen here:
drive.google.com/file/d/1ypsI7WqZQK8iarYuzBEYDotAILVDK0KE/edit
You may read more about this event on Scala's blog:
scalafoundation.org/2024/03/sarum-use-vespers-and-liturgical-art-heaven-on-earth
scalafoundation.org/2024/03/liturgy-and-culture-are-key-to-the-next-great-awakening
Video credit: Kearns Media Consulting LLC
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues, and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy, and education. Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews) and hosts public events like conferences, webinars, and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
Moving from top to bottom, Aidan and David describe how God's creation can be shown as a manifestation of his glory and divine governance.
If you like this icon and want to see it finished, let us know--Aidan is seeking patrons to help him finish this commission and hang this icon at Point Loma!
And check out other videos with Aidan on this playlist and Scala's 2023 conference playlist.
comment.org/the-marian-gift-of-dependence
Questions addressed include:
1) What can we learn from early Christian art and festival commemorations of Mary that help us understand the power and wisdom of motherhood?
2) Why did God choose to become dependent on a woman in the Incarnation?
3) What can you do to live a Biblical, Christological, and ecclesiological Marian devotion?
4) Why is Mary's trust in God such a challenge to feminism and liberalism, which emphasize autonomy?
Learn More about The Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of art, liturgy and education Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
More Resources Can be Found on Scala’s Social Media and Websites
Scala Foundation: scalafoundation.org
David Clayton's blog and books: thewayofbeauty.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton's YouTube Channel:
youtube.com/channel/UCvvCBWH0LMe2i1-VLMaNEVQ
How to Support Scala
Find out how to donate to Scala here: scalafoundation.org/donate
The Fellowship of the Annunciation is a group of recurring donors to Scala that helps us in all our activities, notably by supporting apprenticeships for liturgical artists:
givebutter.com/fellowshipoftheannunciation
Learn More about the Chichester Workshop & Jim’s Art here:
chichesterworkshop.org
instagram.com/dunstanicons
Learn More about Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of artists (culture creators), liberal arts education and religion (liturgy, personal prayer, theology). Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
Learn More about the Chichester Workshop & Jim’s Art here:
chichesterworkshop.org
instagram.com/dunstanicons
Learn More about Scala Foundation
Scala was founded in 2016 by Margarita Mooney Clayton, a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, who is the author of numerous books and popular articles, and an inspiring public speaker on topics such as education, culture, virtues and faith. Her husband, David Clayton, is an Artist-in-Residence for Scala and the Provost of Pontifex University, where he founded the Master of Sacred Arts Program. He is an internationally renowned iconographer and writer for various online publications about topics like the mathematics of beauty, liturgical art, and cultural renewal.
The Scala Foundation’s vision is to restore meaning and purpose to American culture by focusing on the intersection of artists (culture creators), liberal arts education and religion (liturgy, personal prayer, theology). Scala engages in deep work with students at Princeton and Oxford to bring together artists, students, teachers, and scholars. Scala also produces publications (books, blogs, articles, interviews), and hosts public events like conferences, webinars and campus lectures open to the public.
What are some challenges in presenting the eyes of a saint?
What colors are chosen and why?
How does the design on the cover of Scripture signify the place where the saint is from?
You can listen to more videos with Aidan Hart on this playlist, and on Scala's playlist from our 2023 conference "Art, the Sacred, and the Common Good."
How did he go from the design to the embroidery? Which materials were used for the fabric and the stitching?
This video is one of 2 videos where Aidan Hart shares about his his work from King Charles's Coronation.
Scala has numerous other videos with Aidan Hart which can be see on this playlist and our 2023 conference playlist.
What does the tree symbolize? What are the inscriptions and words at the bottom? Why was it important to select these symbols for this particular event?
For more videos of Aidan Hart, see this entire playlist, and the playlist from Scala's 2023 Conference on Art, the Sacred and the Common Good.
- Introduction of David Clayton as an artist, author, and professor who is working on a new book about transforming American culture through beauty.
- Discussion of the definition of culture as an emergent pattern of human behavior and activity that reflects a society's core priorities and practices. Art and music play a fundamental role.
- Explanation of how principles of mathematical harmony and proportion are central to creating beautiful art and architecture. Examples given of buildings in Annapolis.
- Insight into how studying icons helped a seminary student better understand and connect to sacred spaces he visited in Israel.
- Perspective that beauty attracts us and can lead us to contemplation of God. It has an invitational and confrontational nature
- Conversation about evaluating standards of beauty over time through tradition, rather than arbitrary elites.
- Information about David's upcoming book on art for the sacred feasts of the Roman Rite, providing images and explanation to help guide contemporary artists.
- Discussion of the process of making sacred art and David's vision for reviving American culture through reconnecting with tradition.
Please leave us your comments on this video!
Be sure to watch all the videos from Scala's 2023 conference "Art, The Sacred, and the Common Good," as well as two videos recorded in studio with Jonathan Pageau and Aidan Hart:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRZHnw30gpFeBFtZE-wsj5or0BdQtIMjh
David Clayton writes on beauty, art and culture on his blog The Way of Beauty, Scala's blog and the New Liturgical Movement:
thewayofbeauty.org/blog
scalafoundation.org/blog
newliturgicalmovement.org
Margarita Mooney Clayton is the author of The Wounds of Beauty: Seven Dialogues on Art and Education.
scalafoundation.org/woundsofbeautybook
Margarita Mooney Clayton and Eric Metaxas discuss these important questions from Margarita's latest book, "The Wounds of Beauty"
Pageau will further explore the symbolic meanings of Scripture at his keynote address at Scala’s April 21-22, 2023, conference in Princeton, NJ.
At Scala's conference "Art, the Sacred, and the Common Good" on April 30, 2022.
At Scala's conference "Art, the Sacred, and the Common Good" on April 30, 2022.
Moderator: Tim O’Malley, University of Notre Dame
Elizabeth Corey, Baylor University
Jonathan Pidluzny, American Council of Trustees and Alumni
Eric Cook, Society for Classical Learning
At Scala's conference "Art, the Sacred, and the Common Good" on April 30, 2022
Moderator: George Harne, University of St. Thomas in Houston
David Clayton, Pontifex University
Paul Jernberg, Magnificat Institute of Sacred Music