Rosa Parks enshrined in stone at National Cathedral
WASHINGTON (RNS) Six feet above the vaulted entranceway to Washington
National Cathedral, the rough contours of Rosa Parks' face are taking
shape.
Using a motorized hammer and chiseling tools that date back
centuries, stone carver Sean Callahan is patiently working on a new bust
of the civil rights heroine.
"I have to be aware of the significance of it," he said. "It puts
pressure on me to get it right. I have to pay respect to her in that
sense."
Across the Human Rights "porch" in the cathedral's narthex, Parks
will soon be joined by another famous woman, Mother Teresa.
Callahan, a 45-year-old Catholic, was not alive when Parks made
history by staying seated on a segregated bus and helping spark the
civil rights movement; but he remembers hearing about the Nobel Peace
Prize-winning nun when he was growing up.
Starting with Parks, Callahan is using a pointing machine, whose
brass arms adjust as he measures a plaster model that acts as an exact
guide for the carving, which is chiseled from a block of stone in the
narthex.
"It's kind of like a three-dimensional connecting the dots," said
the carver, dressed in jeans and a Washington Nationals baseball cap for
the sometimes dusty work.
He carefully places the machine within 1/16th of an inch of the
model before shifting the device to his stone canvas nearby.
"If you mismeasure this, then everything's off," he explains.
The delicate details of Parks' face will slowly surface from what at
first looks like a mass of dots and parallel chiseled lines. The dots
indicate how far down he must chisel each part of the stone to develop
the contours of the finished bust.
Eventually, he will have to leave the machine behind and do the
final work by eye, which he says is the toughest part.
"Portraits are particularly difficult because everyone recognizes
them," he said. "If you're doing something like a hand or a gargoyle,
it's not as critical. But it's an indefinable thing to make the face
come alive. It's hard to explain, but that's just something that takes
patience and practice to get the hang of."
Callahan, who worked as an apprentice under stone carvers at the
cathedral in the 1980s, has done restoration work on the White House
exterior and gargoyles in private gardens. He was rehired by the
cathedral six years ago.
As he stands amid temporary scaffolding, a carving of first lady
Eleanor Roosevelt peeks over his shoulder.
Others already enshrined in the "human rights" portal include slain
Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero and Bishop John Walker, the first
black Episcopal bishop of Washington.
"The people selected to appear in the iconography of the Human
Rights Porch were chosen because of their extraordinary actions and
contributions to the cause of human rights, social justice and the
welfare of their fellow human beings," said the Very Rev. Samuel T.
Lloyd III, dean of the cathedral.
Callahan's work began a week before the country marked the birthday
of the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., with whom Parks worked closely.
The sculptures of Parks and Mother Teresa, based on clay models by North
Carolina sculptor Chas Fagan, are due to be completed by Easter.
"That quiet strength is, I think, the common denominator," Fagan
said of the two women he sculpted. "Rosa Parks definitely showed it with
her actions and through her own life, and the same with Mother Teresa."
Fagan, 45, based the hat Parks wears in his sculpture on the one she
was wearing in the iconic photo of her on the bus in 1955. He said the
flat hat of thick woven fabric was just like one his grandmother wore.
The placement of Parks in that photo, looking off to the right,
determined her location on the left side of the portal. "Mother Teresa
is a very recognizable image from all angles so I figured she would be
OK with being on the right side," said Fagan.
Without the aid of color, Fagan sculpted lines into Mother Teresa's
habit to demonstrate the bands of blue in the white headscarf she wore.
Fagan, who crafted the sculpture of President Ronald Reagan that
stands in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda, worked with cathedral craftsmen to
complete the model so the faces of the women fit artistically within the
cathedral's architecture. While he could "fix my mistakes" as he
sculpted, he said there's "no wiggle room" when Callahan gets to the
carving stage.
With these figures, the landmark cathedral that was officially
finished in 1990 is educating worshippers just like the cathedrals of
old, Fagan said.
"Now that the structural stuff is complete, there's a chance to do
what all the other cathedrals did in their own time," he said. "Just
fill all the niches and teach through the art."