91³Ô¹Ï

Barbara Jatta explores art as an instrument of hope at Forum’s closing event

Author: Carrie Gates

Woman in green top and white pants listens to woman in rust pleated pantsuit speaking and gesturing on a stage. Audience looks on.
Heather Hyde Minor, the R.L. Canala Professor of Art History, with Barbara Jatta, director of the Vatican Museums, at the 91³Ô¹Ï Forum event, “Art and the Museum as Instruments of Hope.†(Photo by Matt Cashore/University of 91³Ô¹Ï)

As part of the , Barbara Jatta, director of the Vatican Museums, spoke on campus Tuesday (April 21) for a conversation titled “Art and the Museum as Instruments of Hope.â€

The event, which also served as the final keynote event of the 2025-26 91³Ô¹Ï Forum on “Cultivating Hope,†explored the intersections of the arts, faith, history, and education.

University President , welcomed Jatta and noted 91³Ô¹Ï’s 150-year history with the Vatican Museums.

“That connection began when 91³Ô¹Ï founder Father Edward Sorin invited Vatican artist Luigi Gregori to campus to serve as artist-in-residence and also director of our art department,†Father Dowd said. “And that single invitation really has shaped 91³Ô¹Ï’s visual identity.â€

Jatta sat down for a conversation with , the R.L. Canala Professor of Art History at 91³Ô¹Ï and former academic director of 91³Ô¹Ï Rome. Noting that it was the first anniversary of the death of Pope Francis, Hyde Minor and Jatta discussed the challenges and range of emotions over the last year for Jatta and her colleagues with his passing and the election of Pope Leo XIV, which included preparing the Sistine Chapel within the museums for the papal conclave.

Jatta also discussed touring the Raclin Murphy Museum of Art and stated that it is important for a university to have a wide range of collections—as the Raclin Murphy does—to build bridges across cultures.

“From Renaissance times and even before, I can say art was a vehicle to represent the invisible, to represent spiritual values,†Jatta said, “but also to testify to legacy and knowledge and to be part of the values of different cultures and bring them together, and to testify to the truth in Christianity and in the Catholic Church.â€

Following the conversation, Jatta took questions from the audience, encouraging students to continue to pursue the arts and humanities.

“What I can tell you, the students, is to never forget the humanistic side of your life,†she said. “Because that will help you to know your history — to know who preceded you, to know the heritage of where you come from or where your ancestors came from or where your country came from. It is so important in order to be a better person.â€