Fr. Gabriel Gillen, O.P.

Fr. Gabriel Gillen, O.P.

Fr. Kevin Gabriel Gillen, O.P., was ordained to the priesthood in 2000, Fr. Gillen joined the Order of Preachers in 2005 after earning degrees from the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas, commonly known as the Angelicum, in Rome. Prior to answering the call to priesthood he worked several years as a stock broker on Wall Street. Fr. Gillen is currently assigned to Saint Joseph in Greenwich Village, New York City, where he serves to promote evangelization through media for the Province and hosts the weekly program “Word to Life” on The Catholic Channel, Sirius 159 and XM 117.

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Blessed Fra Angelico, O.P.

The Dawn of the Renaissance
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Posted by Fr. Gabriel Gillen, O.P. on May 22, 2009
The Italian artist Guido di Pietro da Mugello, better known as Fra Angelico, was considered blessed even before he was beatified because of the way he lived and painted. Rome is celebrating the 550th anniversary of the artist's death with an exhibition of his major works of art. The exhibition will be open until next July 5th at the Capitoline Museums in Rome. And once you’re in the city, you may visit his tomb in the Basilica of Santa Maria sopra Minerva. The exhibition shows a path in his artistic background from beginning to end. Fra Angelico was a Dominican friar who began his artistic career making the thumbnails of missals and religious books. Later on he painted these monumental altarpieces and triptychs, and years later he came to paint in the Vatican at the request of several popes. Gerardo De Simone, the curator, says, "He was called to work in the Vatican by Pope Eugene IV and then also worked for his successor Pope Nicholas V. Fra Angelico was one of the protagonists of the transition from Gothic to Renaissance art, a dual style that's evident in his works.  He uses both golden backgrounds typical of Byzantine art and Gothic art and at the same time his figures are fully three-dimensional and have a very perspective order that only Masaccio was able to do before him. Fra Angelico is known specially for his many depictions of the "The Annunciation", like this one less known that shows the genius of the artist to use color and to give a three-dimensional shape to the figures."
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