Despite being listed an co-author by several web sites, including Amazon.com (below) Fr. Francisco Schulte’s name does not appear in the book that he worked on with Fr. Jerome Tupa.
Editorial Reviews @ Amazon.com
Jerome Tupa (Author), Francisco Shulte (Author)
When Father Jerome Tupa embarked on his Italian pilgrimage in the summer of 1999, he did so as a painter and a monk. With the heart of a priest and the hand of an artist, he experienced the essence of one of the world’s most spiritual regions. Beginning in Milan and ending in Rome, Father Tupa retraced the steps of the pilgrims, drawing and painting the sacred imagery he encountered along the way. The outcome was a stunning collection of works in oil, watercolor, pen, ink, and pencil, many of which are included here in The Road to Rome. Although the pilgrimage is steeped in religious tradition and history, the art of Father Tupa is boldly original and undeniably modern. Painted in colors that explode with intensity, the architecture depicted by Father Tupa bends and reaches across the canvas with life and vitality. From the sunflowers of Urbania to the domes of Padua, Father Tupa paints Italy as you may have felt but have never seen before. How startling and ever more interesting does this journey become when you consider how limited spiritual art has been during the past century. Rothko’s chapel and Matisse’s chapel are highlights, with little company until now. Tupa’s opulent oil paintings and lyrical watercolors and sketches are accompanied by Francisco Schulte’s deeply informed text exploring the history and significance of each stop along the pilgrimage. A personal context is added through the inclusion of entries from Father Tupa’s own travel journal. Whether he is sharing the story of how he met the pope or describing the experience of painting Rome’s ancient Forum, he becomes a superb guide allowing readers to relive the pilgrimage as if they too were traveling through the Italian landscape. Every chapter is gracefully introduced with a prayer, written by the artist in praise of each location along The Road to Rome. Join Father Tupa and take a profound journey of the spirit as witnessed through the eyes of a very wise man and gifted artist. Sponsored by Marshall Field’s, an exhibition of Father Tupa’s Road to Rome paintings and watercolors will open at the John Paul II Cultural Center in Washington, D.C. in October 2002.
About the Author
Father Jerome Tupa, O.S.B. is a Benedictine monk and an ordained priest. He took his vows as a monk in 1963 and now teaches at St. John’s University in Collegeville, Minnesota. Tupa’s works have been displayed in Minnesota, California, Texas, Arizona, Colorado, Paris, and Rome. His last book, An Uncommon Mission: Father Jerome Tupa Paints the California Missions (Welcome 2000), accompanied an exhibition of his work that traveled throughout California. Mark Krisco received both his B.A. and M.A. from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He has been the curator for numerous exhibits for the Institute, including “Marc Chagall: Recent Acquisitions.” Bart Bartholomew is a Pulitzer Prize-nominated photographer who has had his images published in The New York Times, Time Magazine, Newsweek, U.S. News & World Report, and U.S.A. Today, among others. Father Francisco Schulte, O.S.B., S.T.D. studied theology at St. John’s University and went on to St. John’s Divinity School before being ordained into the priesthood in 1979. He has an M.A. in theology and a doctorate in sacred theology and a doctorate in sacred theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.
http://www.amazon.com/Road-Rome-Modern-Pilgrimage/dp/094180769X