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Summary
In this episode of Beauty Through Faith, Benjamin Harding is joined by Joe McHugh—artist, educator, and longtime advocate for craftsmanship and beauty—to explore the role of art in shaping both the human person and the life of faith.
Joe reflects on his early formation as an artist, his years teaching in public schools, and the ways beauty became a lifelong pursuit rooted in both discipline and worship. Together, they discuss the relationship between skill and expression, the loss of craftsmanship in modern art education, and the cultural shift away from beauty toward abstraction, utility, and self-expression.
This conversation also explores the deep human need for beauty, the tension artists face in academic and cultural spaces, and the ways technology and convenience can distance us from embodied, meaningful artistic experience. Joe offers a compelling vision for recovering beauty—not as luxury, but as something essential to human flourishing and spiritual life.
This episode is especially for artists, musicians, educators, and anyone seeking a deeper understanding of how beauty, craft, and faith intersect in a modern world.
Links & Resources
Website:
Joe’s Website
Fly Fishing & Classes: St. Pete’s Fly Shop (Fort Collins, CO)
Featured Artists (mentioned):
* Matthew McHugh — University of Northern Colorado
* Jonathan McHugh — Painter & Professor
References
* Johann Sebastian Bach — Cello Suites
* Gustav Mahler — Symphony No. 2 (“Resurrection”)
* Bill Frisell — Jazz Guitar Performances
* Claude Monet — Impressionist Landscapes
Key Takeaways
* Beauty is not subjective chaos—it is grounded in order, craft, and form
* Artistic skill and discipline are essential, not optional, to meaningful expression
* Modern art culture often prioritizes concept over craftsmanship, to its detriment
* People are deeply hungry for beauty, even if they cannot always articulate it
* Encounters with beauty—through nature, music, or art—can be deeply healing
* Art is not merely self-expression, but a form of participation in something greater
* Technology and convenience risk distancing us from real, embodied artistic experience
* The church has an opportunity—and responsibility—to recover a vision of beauty
* Teaching art is not just technical formation, but personal and human formation
* Faithful artists are called to pursue excellence with humility, integrity, and purpose
By Kalos ArtsSummary
In this episode of Beauty Through Faith, Benjamin Harding is joined by Joe McHugh—artist, educator, and longtime advocate for craftsmanship and beauty—to explore the role of art in shaping both the human person and the life of faith.
Joe reflects on his early formation as an artist, his years teaching in public schools, and the ways beauty became a lifelong pursuit rooted in both discipline and worship. Together, they discuss the relationship between skill and expression, the loss of craftsmanship in modern art education, and the cultural shift away from beauty toward abstraction, utility, and self-expression.
This conversation also explores the deep human need for beauty, the tension artists face in academic and cultural spaces, and the ways technology and convenience can distance us from embodied, meaningful artistic experience. Joe offers a compelling vision for recovering beauty—not as luxury, but as something essential to human flourishing and spiritual life.
This episode is especially for artists, musicians, educators, and anyone seeking a deeper understanding of how beauty, craft, and faith intersect in a modern world.
Links & Resources
Website:
Joe’s Website
Fly Fishing & Classes: St. Pete’s Fly Shop (Fort Collins, CO)
Featured Artists (mentioned):
* Matthew McHugh — University of Northern Colorado
* Jonathan McHugh — Painter & Professor
References
* Johann Sebastian Bach — Cello Suites
* Gustav Mahler — Symphony No. 2 (“Resurrection”)
* Bill Frisell — Jazz Guitar Performances
* Claude Monet — Impressionist Landscapes
Key Takeaways
* Beauty is not subjective chaos—it is grounded in order, craft, and form
* Artistic skill and discipline are essential, not optional, to meaningful expression
* Modern art culture often prioritizes concept over craftsmanship, to its detriment
* People are deeply hungry for beauty, even if they cannot always articulate it
* Encounters with beauty—through nature, music, or art—can be deeply healing
* Art is not merely self-expression, but a form of participation in something greater
* Technology and convenience risk distancing us from real, embodied artistic experience
* The church has an opportunity—and responsibility—to recover a vision of beauty
* Teaching art is not just technical formation, but personal and human formation
* Faithful artists are called to pursue excellence with humility, integrity, and purpose