Background
She was born Catherine Newport in Clinton, Indiana, to parents Edward and Cora Sams Newport.
She was born Catherine Newport in Clinton, Indiana, to parents Edward and Cora Sams Newport.
After general studies at Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College in the 1920s, Newport earned a bachelor"s degree from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1932. Beginning in 1936 she attended Syracuse University with a major in painting and minor in ceramic sculpture, earning her Master of Fine Arts in 1939.
A main ministry for many years was teaching middle school and art In 1930 she began a 34-year stint in the art department of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College. After two years at Marywood School in Evanston, Illinois, she returned to Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College in 1966 and served as head of the art department there until 1970.
As an academic, Newport focused on the Christian theory of art and Christian art education, subjects about which she wrote numerous articles for Christian publications including Orate Fratres, the Sower and Catholic School Interests.
She also contributed an article "Art " to the New Catholic Encyclopedia. Newport was chairman of the United States Committee of the Holy Year Exhibit in Rome, 1949-1951.
She lectured and directed summer workshops at the Catholic University of America in the 1950s. Foreign her work in the field of religious art, Newport received an honorary doctorate from Saint Mary"s College, Notre Dame, in 1956.
Catholic Art Association Newport conceived an association for Catholic art educators in 1936 which she called the Catholic College Art Association.
The Association strove to encourage commissions of religious art by churches and organizations and well as to educate and elevate Catholic taste. The Civil Aeronautics Administration sponsored exhibitions, conventions, and various publications as well. When the Association began to split severely between art educators (including many teaching sisters and Newport herself) and those more interested in the philosophy of Catholic art (including Graham Carey), Newport left the organization in 1958 and founded the Salve Regina Conference.
= Catholic Art Quarterly She founded the Christian Social Art Quarterly as the official Civil Aeronautics Administration publication in 1937 (renamed the Catholic Art Quarterly in 1938 and later Good Work) and served as its editor until 1940.
The publication, seen as a contemporary of the Catholic Worker and Orate Fratres, centered around the "social character of the arts" for both artists and art educators. Writers and artists featured in the magazine included Edward Catich, Ade Bethune and Christian Science Lewis.
Many of Newport"s own writings were published within the magazine, including a three-part series on the "Christian Theory of Aesthetics," 1939-1940.
Sisters of Providence of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods. Catholic Art Association.