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News & Events>News
Archive>Sister Wendy Beckett, Renowned Art Commentator and
Catholic Nun, to Receive Award from Saint John’s University FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Sister Wendy Beckett, Renowned Art Commentator and Catholic Nun, to Receive Award from Saint John’s University COLLEGEVILLE, Minn. – Saint John’s University will present the 13th annual Colman J. Barry Award for Distinguished Contributions to Religion and Society to internationally renowned art commentator, Sister Wendy Beckett, to honor her service to society as art historian, author and television host. The award will take place at a private reception on Monday, Jan. 30, at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum to coincide with the opening of the international exhibition tour of The Saint John’s Bible at the museum. The exhibit is on display from Feb. 2 to May 1. Sister Wendy first entered the public arena in 1991, appearing on BBC television in a documentary on the National Gallery, London. Popular acclaim brought her back to television as the commentator for “Sister Wendy’s Odyssey,” six short films about art treasures around Great Britain, and “Sister Wendy’s Grand Tour,” a series on European art. In 1997, “Sister Wendy’s Story of Painting” expanded her enthusiastic following to include American audiences. Her most recent series, “Sister Wendy’s American Collection,” (2001), takes viewers on a tour of six American museums. She has also written extensively for art magazines and is the author of more than 15 books, including “Contemporary Women Artists and Art and the Sacred.” Although her television series made Sister Wendy a celebrity, she never sought the limelight. Born in South Africa in 1930, she felt a vocation for religious life as a child and joined the Sisters of Notre Dame at 16. She graduated from Oxford with highest honors in 1953. She subsequently lived and taught in South Africa and served for a time as a Reverend Mother. She returned to England in 1970 to live a fully contemplative life in a hermitage on the grounds of the Carmelite monastery at Quidenham, Norfolk. Since that time, she has left the hermitage only when necessary to make her television shows. She continues to live there, spending the majority of each day in prayer, silence and solitude. The Colman Barry Award for Distinguished Contributions to Religion and Society recognizes the contributions that the Rev. Barry, a Benedictine monk of Saint John’s Abbey and former president of SJU, made during his life of scholarship and teaching. The author of several books, the Rev. Barry began his teaching career at Saint John’s in 1952. He died in 1994. The Colman Barry Award for Distinguished Contributions to Religion and Society is given annually to those who believe and demonstrate that service to others, in its expansion of human understanding and extension of social justice, comprises the best in human achievement. The College of Saint Benedict for women and Saint John's University for men are partners in liberal arts education, providing students the opportunity to benefit from the distinctions of not one, but two nationally recognized Catholic, undergraduate colleges. Together, the colleges challenge students to live balanced lives of learning, work, leadership and service in a changing world. The Hill Museum & Manuscript Library and its Gift Shop are open weekdays from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and during the summer, between Memorial Day and Labor Day, weekends from 12:00 noon to 4:00 p.m. Presentations on The Saint John’s Bible are offered to the general public Monday through Friday at 1:30 p.m. For more information, visit www.hmml.org or call 320-363-3514. Groups are asked to call in advance. In the Benedictine tradition of reverence for human thought and creativity, the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library (HMML) preserves manuscripts, printed books and art at Saint John's University; undertakes photographic preservation projects throughout the world; and makes these resources available to students, researchers and visitors both onsite and through advanced technology. HMML is the home of the world’s largest collection of manuscript images and of The Saint John’s Bible, a handwritten, illuminated Bible for the modern era. HMML is located on the Saint John’s University campus, 70 miles northwest of Minneapolis on I-94 and can be found at www.hmml.org or through the Saint John’s University Web site at www.csbsju.edu. -END- |
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