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Catholic News Herald

Serving Christ and Connecting Catholics in Western North Carolina

‘I realized there were going to be a lot of challenges involved’

051091 Paul Nixon w corpusLocal artist Paul Nixon carved a San Damiano corpus for a church in Monroe, La.GREENSBORO — Looking at Paul Nixon’s life now, one would never know that he spent 30 years as an auto mechanic before he discovered he had a God-given talent to create beautiful works of art.

Nixon, a parishioner of Our Lady of Grace Church, grew up in Ireland and came to the U.S. in 1985. He worked for three decades getting his hands dirty working with automobiles. While he found that work satisfying, especially since it helped him meet his wife, Francesca, he has adapted joyfully to what the Lord is calling him to do now.

Nixon stumbled upon his artistic talents 18 years ago when Francesca asked him to carve a walking stick out of walnut for his wife’s dear aunt, Mary. Using an old lathe Mary’s husband Raley had given him, along with a knife to carve the wood, Nixon unknowingly began the first step in what has been a fulfilling journey of creating works of art in wood, bronze, stained glass and on canvas – among the many media with which he works.

Two of Nixon’s sculptures are now on display in a museum in Ireland. He has created bronze sculptures which honor firefighters and war veterans, on display in public spaces across the U.S. He has also been commissioned to carve croziers over the years for both Catholic and Protestant bishops in dioceses around the country.

Nixon was recently commissioned by an Anglican church in Monroe, La., to carve a San Damiano corpus for their sanctuary. This was the first time he had ever been asked to create a large carved corpus.

“I started by purchasing a block of bass wood (linden wood as it’s termed in Europe),” Nixon explained. “This is a wood that was used by woodcarvers sculpting statues for the great cathedrals and churches during Renaissance Europe.”

Over the course of a year, Nixon painstakingly carved the three-foot corpus out of bass wood with a halo of olive wood that had been shipped from Bethlehem.

“They were very specific about what they wanted,” he said. “I had never done a wood carving this tall of a human figure before. I realized there were going to be a lot of challenges involved. They gave me a year to work on this.”

He used a projector to project the image he drew onto the wood, moving the projector back and forth to draw the image on the wood before he began the actual carving.

“I started to think of my father (a cabinet maker who partnered with his brother to run a construction business). On all my school holidays he took me to work with him (at a job site). He had me go help the plumbers and other tradesmen that worked there. I did that for several years. I never realized I was taking in all of this knowledge,” Nixon said.

That knowledge really sank in, he said, once he began creating works of art – and it definitely helped during the creation of this corpus.

“I was really thrilled when I finally got the corpus shipped off,” Nixon said. “They wanted it for the beginning of Lent. The next day after the church received it, I got an email from the priest.

“He said, ‘Paul, when I opened the box and I saw what you did, my heart trembled. I took it over to the sponsors and they said it was perfect for what they wanted.’

“I felt I really had to do it. I wanted to do it to say that I have done it. I think I would have done it for nothing just to do it, to have something very spiritual in public viewing,” he said. It was “a lovely conclusion to an awful lot of work.”

— SueAnn Howell, Senior reporter

More online

At www.paulnixonart.com: Learn more about Greensboro resident Paul Nixon’s journey from mechanic to artist and view more of his work
051019 Paul Nixon corpus 2 The finished corpus features a halo carved from olive wood from Bethlehem. (Photos provided by Paul Nixon)

Sharing God’s gifts

041219 Fr Kauth new bookCHARLOTTE — A doctorate in Sacred Theology does make you a bit of an expert when it comes to the Catholic faith. But it takes a gift for teaching to make the faith come alive in the pages of a book.

In his new book, “The Sacraments: Discovering the Treasures of Divine Life,” Father Matthew Kauth takes the seven sacraments of the Church and illuminates the scriptural foundation and the spiritual realities of each and how they are necessary to living a happy and holy life.

Father Kauth was ordained to the priesthood for the Diocese of Charlotte in 2000. Over the years he felt the Lord calling him to develop his love for preaching and teaching, and in 2012 he became a definitively promised Dominican.

He is now the rector of St. Joseph College Seminary in Charlotte and also serves as a professor at Belmont Abbey College, where his seminarians work towards their undergraduate degrees in philosophy.

“I have always enjoyed teaching,” Father Kauth says. “Certainly the charism of the Dominican order is to pass on that which you have contemplated; to hand on that which you have contemplated. I love that, because that is what you do when you teach. You are speaking to people about your own life with the Lord, both in study and in prayer.”

Father Kauth notes that writing books is another way to share what God has allowed him to glean from his studies and experiences, and to share all that he has learned with others.

“I am charged to do that as a Dominican – to be able to reach the faithful, even though I am not as much of a public person anymore (as the rector of the college seminary),” he explains.

Conor Gallagher, president of TAN Books, approached Father Kauth and asked him to write a book on the sacraments in the same style in which he preaches. Gallagher wanted it to be for the people in the pews, not intellectuals necessarily. He wanted a book that can enkindle one’s love of the sacraments.

Father Kauth originally declined the offer due to his hectic schedule. But divine providence would intervene for both men.

Father Kauth was looking for ways to fund the college seminarians’ Capstone course, which is a 10-day trip to Italy to see some of the treasures of the Church and to bring their philosophical and classical language studies to a pinnacle, so he agreed to write the book to help bridge the gap to fund that program for the students.

“I took the spring break (from his teaching duties at Belmont Abbey) and wrote for about seven days,” Father Kauth says. “I read some books before I wrote it, but for the most part I just sat there and wrote it.”

After completion of the book, Gallagher asked Father Kauth to film a video series on “The Sacraments” as well.

“I flew to Milwaukee and filmed a series of videos on ‘The Sacraments.’ We shot every one of those videos over the course of two days,” he recalls.

Father Kauth says he is open to creating more materials to help instruct the faithful in the future.

“I think the faithful of the diocese are very fortunate that we have so many wonderful priests,” he says. “I think that the faithful do get a lot of solid teaching (here).”

Father Kauth adds that he believes “a lot of us (priests) would be open to doing more things like this if the faithful were to say they want more of this on specific topics.”

— SueAnn Howell, Senior Reporter

Order a copy
At www.tanbooks.com: Order a copy of “The Sacraments: Discovering the Treasures of Divine Life”