New St. Patrick's Cathedral Mural Honors Immigrants, First Responders, and New York Saints

| 09/18/2025

By: Steven Schwankert

Cardinal Timothy Dolan’s vision comes to life in artist Adam Cvijanovic’s monumental work

Cardinal Timothy Dolan (center) poses with two New York Police Department officers in front of the first responders panel of St. Patrick’s Cathedral’s new mural, “What’s So Funny About Peace, Love, and Understanding,” unveiled at a press event on Thursday, September 18, 2025.
Cardinal Timothy Dolan (center) poses with two New York Police Department officers in front of the first responders panel of St. Patrick’s Cathedral’s new mural, “What’s So Funny About Peace, Love, and Understanding,” unveiled at a press event on Thursday, September 18, 2025. Photo by Steven Schwankert/The Good Newsroom.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan and Brooklyn artist Adam Cvijanovic revealed a new, 25-foot-high mural that covers the entrance walls to St. Patrick’s Cathedral on Thursday morning, a celebration of New York’s sacred and secular history. 

The largest permanent artwork commissioned in America’s Parish Church’s 146-year history, the painting depicts the apparition at Knock in Ireland, along with New York saints, Servants of God, immigrants, and first responders. 

At a press event Thursday morning, Cardinal Timothy Dolan discussed how his initial vision for a representation of the Knock apparition evolved. 

“This became not only an ode to Jesus and Mary and Joseph and St. John and the faith of the Irish people who were so instrumental in this archdiocese, it also became an ode to those who followed them and found in this city, this country, and yes, in this Holy Mother Church, an embrace of welcome,” Cardinal Dolan said. 

“I thought when I started making this painting, that the important thing to do was to make it about people and portraits,” Cvijanovic said of his work, which is titled, “What’s So Funny About Peace, Love, and Understanding.” “So, everybody in this painting is an actual person. They’re all portraits. Even the angels. And that seemed to me to be a really, really important thing to do, to talk about the people of the city, all of them, and to have it in some place that people could go in New York and feel themselves recognized  in the context of respect and hope.” 

A vision of hope 

Father Enrique Salvo, himself an immigrant from Nicaragua, said that the story told on the panels was particularly meaningful for him. “If you would have told me that I was going to be the rector of St. Patrick’s Cathedral, when I came to this country, I would have never believed it. But with God, all things are possible, and hopefully it’s an inspiration for everyone that walks in, that we’re not only welcome, but we’re also invited to make a difference and to let God shine through us,” he said. 

Cardinal Dolan noted that he originally wanted the mural as part of the last major renovation of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in 2012, but the cathedral’s trustees advised that he wait. He thanked them for their wise advice. “I’m kind of glad now, because it matured — it was like a crock pot,” Cardinal Dolan said.  

Cardinal Dolan said that major benefactors covered the cost of the mural, and expressed his gratitude that no further funds needed to be raised to complete the project.  

“My wife and I support a lot of causes that are more direct, such as education, feeding the hungry, healthcare, social services, and things like that,” said Kevin Conway, who with his wife Dee, were major benefactors of the mural. “But this struck me as a project that we could honor a good friend, His Eminence [Cardinal Dolan], but more importantly, you could make an impact and tell a story to the millions of people who come through these doors, and tell an important story.”  

Stories hidden within the panels 

Each panel tells a different part of the New York story, along with the Apparition at Knock, an 1879 vision of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Saint Joseph, Saint John the Evangelist, angels, and the Lamb of God, witnessed by more than a dozen townspeople in County Mayo, Ireland, the same year St. Patrick’s Cathedral was consecrated.  

One panel depicts early immigrants to New York and features a likeness of a young girl – for whom an image of Cardinal Dolan’s late mother, Shirley, served as the model. “I am thrilled that she is here among those,” he said, pointing out that his mother herself was not an immigrant.  

Another panel features New Yorkers of consequence to the Church, including Archbishop John Hughes, the first archbishop of New York; Saint Kateri Tekakwitha, the first Native American and Indigenous saint of the Church; former New York Governor Al Smith; Servant of God Dorothy Day; and Venerable Pierre Toussaint. Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton, the first American-born saint, sits among present-day New Yorkers on another panel. 

The mural will be dedicated officially at St. Patrick’s Cathedral’s 10:15 a.m. Mass on Sunday, September 21, where Cardinal Dolan will be joined by Father Richard Gibbons, rector of the Knock Shrine in Ireland.

La visión del cardenal Timothy Dolan cobra vida en la monumental obra del artista Adam Cvijanovic.

By:

Steven Schwankert

| 09/18/2025

Cardinal Timothy Dolan's vision comes to life in artist Adam Cvijanovic's monumental work.

By:

Steven Schwankert

| 09/18/2025

02:53
Cardinal Timothy Dolan has unveiled a mural by Brooklyn artist Adam Cvijanovic, the largest artwork ever commissioned for Saint Patrick’s Cathedral.

By:

Mary Shovlain

| 09/18/2025

Cardinal Timothy Dolan (center right) celebrates Mass for the 125th anniversary of St. Philip Neri in the Bronx, joined by Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Espaillat (right) and Father Daniel O'Reilly (left) current pastor of St. Philip Neri.
Cardinal Timothy Dolan (center right) celebrates Mass for the 125th anniversary of St. Philip Neri in the Bronx, joined by Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Espaillat (right) and Father Daniel O'Reilly (left) current pastor of St. Philip Neri. Photo: Steven Schwankert/The Good Newsroom
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