The exterior stained glass window serves as the public face of the Regis Jesuit High School campus—conceived as both beacon and welcome. It draws on the 4th-century IHS monogram, an abbreviation for the name of Jesus in Greek, later embraced by St. Ignatius of Loyola in 1541 as the IHS Emblem of the Society of Jesus. The design is further shaped by the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins, whose reverence for a world of subtle, radiant design finds visual echo here. Dynamic, sweeping forms invite the viewer toward the Jesuit vision of finding God in all things. Formed in mouth-blown transparent glass, the composition opens gradually toward greater clarity at its edges, allowing the work to dissolve into and harmonize with the view of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains to the west.






