Saint Vincent Ferrer Saint Raymond of Penafort Stained Glass Window by Charles Connick

The church website provides substantial panel-by-panel detail on the windows in the church. This beautiful window caught my eye, the Raymond of Penafort window. At the top center is Saint Raymond of Penafort. From the church website: “St. Raymond of Penafort (1175-1275) holds his traditional symbols – a key and book. The key represents St. Raymond’s priestly power to judge and absolve sin, which he exercised in a particular way as Pope Gregory IX’s confessor and Grand Penitentiary. The books represents St. Raymond’s own work, the Decretals, in which he collected and codified in one place the disparate canons and laws of the Church. The Decretals remains one of the most influential works of canon law in the history of the Church.”

The figure at the top right is St. Jean-Baptiste Marie Vianney, known popularly as the ‘Curé d’Ars’. He  stands wearing the dark purple stole of the confessional with a penitent at his feet. 

At the top left is Saint Peter Nolasco. “St. Peter Nolasco (1189-1256) was tutor to the Royal Court of Peter of Aragon. Because of his concern for Christians enslaved by the Moors, he devoted his life to the freeing the Christians and converting the Moors. St. Raymond of Penafort was also interested in this work of evangelization. St. Peter is portrayed here with the habit of the Mercedarians, the Order he founded. The badge of the Order can be seen on his chest. Around his neck are the broken chains of a ransomed Christian. A freed captive is kneeling at his feet.”

See the church website for much more detail.

Charles Connick (1875-1945) produced the spectacular stained glass windows in the church. Connick was a prominent artist best known for his work in stained glass in the Gothic Revival style. He was born in Crawford Country, Pennsylvania and developed an interest in drawing at an early age. He left high school when his father became disabled to become an illustrator on the staff of the Pittsburgh Press. At the age of 19, he learned the art of stained glass as an apprentice in the shop of Rudy Brothers in Pittsburgh, where he stayed through 1899. He worked for a number of stained glass companies in Pittsburgh and New York. He went to England and France to study ancient and modern stained glass, including those in the Chartres Cathedral. His first major work was First Baptist Church in Pittsburgh in 1912. 

Connick settled in Boston opening a stained glass studio in Back Bay in 1913; the Charles J. Connick Associates Studio continued to operate after his death until 1986. He produced many notable windows in such churches as Saint Patrick’s Cathedral, Saint John the Divine, the Princeton University Chapel, and Saint Vincent Ferrer. According to Wikipedia, the Charles J. Connick Associates Studio produced some 15,000 windows in more than 5,000 churches and public buildings.

According to Wikipedia,  “Connick preferred to use clear "antique" glass, similar to that of the Middle Ages and praised this type of glass as "colored radiance, with the lustre, intensity, and baffling vibrant quality of dancing lights." He employed a technique of "staggered" solder-joints in his leading and bars, which English stained-glass historian Peter Cormack says gives the windows their "syncopated or 'swinging' character." His style incorporated a strong interest in symbolism as well. Connick expressed the opinion that stained glass's first job was to serve the architectural effect and he believed that his greatest contribution to glasswork was "rescuing it from the abysmal depth of opalescent picture windows" of the sort popularized by Louis Comfort Tiffany and John La Farge. Although firmly committed to a regenerated handicraft tradition, Connick welcomed innovation and experimentation in design and technique among his co-workers at his studio.”

According to the Charles J. Connick Stained Glass Foundation website “Using pure, intense color and strong linear design, this guild of artists led the modern revitalization of medieval stained glass craftsmanship in the United States.  Their work reflected a strong interest in symbolism in design and color, and stressed the importance of the relationship between the window’s design and its surrounding architecture.  As if with one mind and one pair of hands, the craftsmen in the Connick Studio worked collectively on their windows like the 12th- and 13th- century artisans whose craft inspired them.”
The Charles J. Connick Stained Glass Foundation was formed after the studio closed in 1986. According to the foundation website “The mission of the Charles J. Connick Stained Glass Foundation, Ltd. is to promote the true understanding of the glorious medium of color and light and to preserve and perpetuate the Connick tradition of stained glass.”

Here is an interesting video from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on Connick. In December 2008, the foundation donated materials to MIT’s Rotch Library of Architecture and Planning to form the Charles J. Connick Stained Glass Foundation Collection.
Saint Vincent Ferrer Pipe Organ by Schantz Organ Company and Western Rose Window by Charles Connick

The pipe organs at the church were constructed by the Schantz Organ Company of Orrville, Ohio. In all, the two organs consist of 86 ranks of pipes. The gallery organ was installed in 2002 and has 68 ranks of pipes over five divisions. The New York Times  hailed it as another jewel in the crown of New York organs. NYCAGO for more detail on the organ.
Saint Vincent Ferrer Church, The Crucifixion by Lee Lawrie

Over the front entrance of Saint Vincent Ferrer church is a striking stone carving (a masterpiece according to a Fordham University website on Medieval Architecture) of the Crucifixion by Lee Lawrie (1877-1963). Architect Bertram Goodhue created an extremely new and unique design by placing the crucifixion statue outside the church, and there are few examples to this day. 

Lawrie was one of the foremost architectural sculptors and a key figure in the American art scene preceding World War II, according to Wikipedia.   He produced over 300 commissions in styles ranging from Modern Gothic, Beaux-Arts Classicism and finally into Moderne or Art Deco. He worked on details on the Nebraska State Capitol building in Lincoln, Nebraska and some of the architectural sculpture and, his most prominent work, the free-standing bronze Atlas (installed 1937) at New York City's Rockefeller Center. 

Lawrie collaborated with architects Ralph Adams Cram and Bertram Goodhue that brought him widespread acclaim as one of the greatest architectural sculptors in America. Lawrie continued to work with Goodhue after the breakup of the Cram, Goodhue firm in 1914. After Goodhue’s premature death in 1924, Lawrie continued to work with his successors. Lawrie's collaborations with Goodhue are arguably the most highly developed example of architectural sculpture in American architectural history according to Wikipedia.

After Goodhue's death, Lawrie went on to produce important and highly visible work under Raymond Hood at Rockefeller Center in New York City, which included the Atlas in collaboration with Rene Paul Chambellan. The statue is 45 feet tall with a 15-foot figure of Atlas supporting an armillary sphere. Above the entrance to 30 Rockeller Plaza is Lawrie’s Wisdom, an Art Deco piece and one of the most visible works in the complex. 

Other Lawrie works include:

•	Allegorical relief panels called Courage, Patriotism and Wisdom over the entry doors to United States Senate chamber
•	Nebraska State Capital Building
•	L.A. Public Library
•	Louisiana State Capital Building
•	Peace Memorial at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
•	Statue of George Washington, National Cathedral, Washington, D.C
•	Harkness Memorial Tower at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
•	National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception and the bronze doors of the John Adams Building at the Library of Congress Annex, both in Washington, D.C
•	Designed sculptures for the Brittany American Cemetery and Memorial in Brittany, France executed by Jean Juge of Paris and the French sculptor, Augustine Beggi.
Tympanium of Saint Vincent Ferrer
Saint Vincent Ferrer Church, The Crucifixion by Lee Lawrie

Over the front entrance of Saint Vincent Ferrer church is a striking stone carving (a masterpiece according to a Fordham University website on Medieval Architecture) of the Crucifixion by Lee Lawrie (1877-1963). Architect Bertram Goodhue created an extremely new and unique design by placing the crucifixion statue outside the church, and there are few examples to this day. 

Lawrie was one of the foremost architectural sculptors and a key figure in the American art scene preceding World War II, according to Wikipedia.   He produced over 300 commissions in styles ranging from Modern Gothic, Beaux-Arts Classicism and finally into Moderne or Art Deco. He worked on details on the Nebraska State Capitol building in Lincoln, Nebraska and some of the architectural sculpture and, his most prominent work, the free-standing bronze Atlas (installed 1937) at New York City's Rockefeller Center. 

Lawrie collaborated with architects Ralph Adams Cram and Bertram Goodhue that brought him widespread acclaim as one of the greatest architectural sculptors in America. Lawrie continued to work with Goodhue after the breakup of the Cram, Goodhue firm in 1914. After Goodhue’s premature death in 1924, Lawrie continued to work with his successors. Lawrie's collaborations with Goodhue are arguably the most highly developed example of architectural sculpture in American architectural history according to Wikipedia.

After Goodhue's death, Lawrie went on to produce important and highly visible work under Raymond Hood at Rockefeller Center in New York City, which included the Atlas in collaboration with Rene Paul Chambellan. The statue is 45 feet tall with a 15-foot figure of Atlas supporting an armillary sphere. Above the entrance to 30 Rockeller Plaza is Lawrie’s Wisdom, an Art Deco piece and one of the most visible works in the complex. 

Other Lawrie works include:

•	Allegorical relief panels called Courage, Patriotism and Wisdom over the entry doors to United States Senate chamber
•	Nebraska State Capital Building
•	L.A. Public Library
•	Louisiana State Capital Building
•	Peace Memorial at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
•	Statue of George Washington, National Cathedral, Washington, D.C
•	Harkness Memorial Tower at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
•	National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception and the bronze doors of the John Adams Building at the Library of Congress Annex, both in Washington, D.C
•	Designed sculptures for the Brittany American Cemetery and Memorial in Brittany, France executed by Jean Juge of Paris and the French sculptor, Augustine Beggi.
John Hansen,May1945,Builder John H ,Later named Saint Rita,
Glasgow Cathedral
See photo in original gallery.