St. Aloysius is often shown with a lily in his hand, signifying purity. The patron saint of students, he is usually portrayed as a beardless youth in an unadorned cassock. “The conservation revealed a slightly older figure with a mature man’s beard, adorned with richly gilded necklaces and matching belt,” White says. SCU President Michael Engh, S.J., a scholar of religious history, and longtime campus historian Gerald McKevitt, S.J., quickly realized the portrait was of someone other than Aloysius.
In his free time, Fr. Engh began checking books of Spanish colonial-era religious art for a match. He found paintings of San Cayetano—or, in English, St. Cajetan—a likely fit. In the early 16th century, Cajetan, an Italian diplomat, became a Catholic priest and Church reformer, drawing on his personal family fortune to build hospitals and loan agencies serving the poor. Known as the patron saint of job seekers, Cajetan is often depicted with a jeweled necklace instead of a simple black cassock. After viewing a variety of images of St. Cajetan, Frs. Engh and McKevitt became convinced he was the subject of the portrait.
The painting is among the last of the Mission’s artifacts that stood in need of restoration. “The statues and paintings are part of the Catholic religious heritage of our campus—and the state of California,” Fr. Engh says. “Charlie’s care of our patrimony deserves accolades from all who come to the Mission, from Santa Clara students at Mass to fourth-graders who visit to study California history for their classes.”
As graduation draws near, students picking up their sheepskins might also want to express some gratitude to White and the restorers. And perhaps they’ll pay a visit to the patron saint of job seekers in all his newly brilliant colors.