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Sunday 31 January 2021

Artlyst - Lakwena Maciver: Review-Interview Hastings Contemporary

My latest piece for Artlyst is an interview with Lakwena about her work and her current exhibition at Hastings Contemporary:

'I would say most of my work is very much about wanting to speak. Words are an essential part of that. I don’t always know what I want to say, and praying, writing, listening to music, it’s when I do those things that I start to work out what I want to say, the ideas flow... I’ll pray about and meditate on an idea; then I’ll work out how to make it come to life, and throughout I’m praying that the work will bless people.'

My Visual Meditation for ArtWay on Lakwena's work - Rainbow Colours of Hope - can be read here

My other Artlyst pieces are:

Interviews:

Articles:
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Candi Staton - You Got The Love.

Living God's Future Now - February 2021

'Living God’s Future Now’ is the HeartEdge mini online festival of theology, ideas and practice.

We’ve developed this in response to the pandemic and our changing world. The church is changing too, and - as we improvise and experiment - we can learn and support each other.

This is 'Living God’s Future Now’ - talks, workshops and discussion - hosted by HeartEdge. Created to equip, encourage and energise churches - from leaders to volunteers and enquirers - at the heart and on the edge.

The focal event in ‘Living God’s Future Now’ is a monthly conversation where Sam Wells explores what it means to improvise on God’s kingdom with a leading theologian or practitioner.

The online programme includes:
  • Regular weekly workshops: Biblical Studies (Mondays - fortnightly), Sermon Preparation (Tuesdays) and Community of Practitioners (Wednesdays)
  • One-off workshops on topics relevant to lockdown such as ‘Growing online communities’ and ‘Grief, Loss & Remembering’
  • Monthly HeartEdge dialogue featuring Sam Wells in conversation with a noted theologian or practitioner

February

Regular – Weekly

Lent Books: Discussion and Readings - Monday, February 1, 2021 at 6 PM UTC – 7:15 PM UTC. A live discussion with host Mark Oakley, joined by authors: Stephen Cherry 'Thy Will be Done', Hannah Steele 'Living His Story', Sheila Upjohn 'The Way of Julian Norwich', and Samuel Wells 'A Cross in the Heart of God'. Livestream link at https://www.facebook.com/events/420618378988391.

Animals and the Church: Preaching in the Age of Factory Farming - Tuesday 2 February, 10:30 AM in Eastern Time (US and Canada) / 3.30 pm GMT. Register at https://duke.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_R0DhJ5TtSfW7TM6_I1OJvw. A conversation with Ellen Davis and Sam Wells. The conversation will run for roughly 30 minutes and will include a Q&A time. The event is free and open to faculty, students, clergy, and interested lay people. Registration is required but free.

Nazareth Community Online Workshop: Monday 8th February 2021, 2.00 – 3.30pm, Zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/introduction-to-the-nazareth-community-workshop-tickets-136408630887. All welcome. An experiment in being with: with Silence; with Scripture; with Service; with Sacrament; with Sharing; with Sabbath; and Staying with. The Nazareth Community was established at St Martin’s in March 2018, now with over seventy five members. The workshop will be led by Revd Richard Carter and Revd Catherine Duce, and is an opportunity to learn about the life of the community, and to consider how it could be applied in your own contexts. Richard is the leader of the Nazareth Community and author of The City is My Monastery: a Contemporary Rule of Life; published by Canterbury Press in 2019. The afternoon will mirror the Saturday morning sharing time. The session will include: An introduction to the Nazareth Community’s simple way of life; Prayer & silence; A shared lectio divina; Q&A; and time for your own reflections.

Biblical Studies class: Monday 8 February, 19:30-21:00 (GMT), Zoom meeting. Register in advance: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMrcOmgrTgsHt2ceY7LepLhQYqQxS1G1ix9. Gospels & Acts - Lecture 03 The Synoptic Problem.

Preaching in Lent, Holy Week and Easter: Tuesday 9 February 2021, 10.30am - 5.30pm. Book at https://festivalofpreaching.hymnsam.co.uk/preaching-in-lent-holy-week-and-easter/. Join us for a one-day, online festival including worship, lectures and reflection. Tickets are £20, or £10 for subscribers to either the Church Times or The Preacher.
Programme
  • 10.30am Welcome
  • 10.35am Sam Wells: Things Too Wonderful for Me - a sermon on Job 42: 1-6, 10-17
  • 11.00am Jane Williams: What’s the point of a sermon? A view from the pew
  • 11.30am Break
  • 11.45am Luigi Gioia: The Victory of God’s Humour - a sermon on Matthew 25.31-46
  • 12.15pm Bishop Guli Francis-Dehqani: Father, Forgive
  • 12.45pm Lunch break - including Great Sacred Music on the theme of Holiness with the St Martin’s Singers
  • 2.00pm David Hoyle: Preaching after Emmaus – Losing your voice to find another
  • 2.30pm Mark Oakley: Lady Lent, pork pies and Bruegel: preaching with art
  • 4.30pm Live sermon preparation with HeartEdge
God in Exile: Interfaith perspectives on welcoming refugees - Thursday 11 February, 16:00-17:30 (GMT), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/sacred-texts-in-migration-interfaith-perspectives-tickets-136925819813. This is the second of a 4-part series that explores the themes of Migration, Theology and Community. In this interactive session, panelists Pádraig Ó Tuama, Sofia Rehman, Rabbi Robyn Ashworth-Steen, and Lia Shimada (chair) will discuss ways in which sacred religious texts shape, and are shaped by, migration and community. Mapping Faith: Theologies of Migration and Community (published by Jessica Kingsley, 2020) brings together over 35 writers, poets, artists and practitioners, from primarily Jewish, Muslim and Christian backgrounds. Royalties from book sales will be donated to the Helen Bamber Foundation, with whom HeartEdge has a longstanding relationship. This event is co-sponsored by the Susanna Wesley Foundation, which facilitated the production of the book.

‘Living God’s Future Now’ - HeartEdge monthly dialogue: Thursday 11 February, 18:00 (GMT), Zoom meeting - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/living-gods-future-now-sarah-coakley-tickets-134805166883. Sam Wells and Sarah Coakley will be in conversation to discuss how to improvise on the kingdom. Sarah Coakley has retired from the Norris-Hulse Professorship at Cambridge University, in which role she served from 2007 to 2018. From 2018 to 2020 she is an Honorary Professor at the Logos Institute, St Andrews University, and from 2019 she is Visiting Professorial Fellow at the Australian Catholic University (Melbourne and Rome). She is a Life Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford, an Emeritus Fellow of Murray Edwards College, Cambridge, a Fellow of the British Academy (2019), and a member of the European Academy of Arts and Sciences. She holds honorary degrees from the Universities of Lund, St Andrews, Toronto (St Michael’s College), and London (Heythrop College).

Knowing your parish: Mapping relationships – Monday 15 February, 14:00-15:30, zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/knowing-your-parish-mapping-relationships-tickets-136402899745. Join us as we look at ways to understand your local community and consider how you might work within it. Using examples and stories, we’ll think about how church communities have discovered new ways of partnership, re-connected with those around them and found God in ways they weren’t expecting. There will be a focus on case studies and ways people have built new and creative community partnerships. Come prepared to listen and contribute and maybe go away thinking about new ways of being a good neighbour in your local area. With Richard Jones, Parish Giving Advisor for the Diocese of Hereford, Sarah Rogers, Watermark Collective, and Jo Beacroft-Mitchell (Generous Giving and Stewardship Team Leader for the Diocese of York).

Into the margins: A reflective process on change and transformation - Friday 19 February 2-3.30pm, Zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/138233061809. Into the margins looks at what happens when we are in the margins – and how we can be transformed by those in the margins. This Zoom-based reflective process looks at different aspects of change and transformation. The process is introductory, lasting 60-90 minutes, and is concerned with the concept of spiritual journeying. The session will focus on our own lives, but can in principle be applied to our Churches, community groups or other organisations to which we belong. The session is designed and led by Chris Bemrose. Chris is a trained Social Sculptor: using the arts, broadly defined, to bring about social, ecological and spiritual change. He is a former General Secretary of L’Arche International, building communities around the needs and gifts of people with learning disabilities. He is also a hospice visitor and former management consultant.

Inspired to Follow: ‘Who is my Neighbour? – A journey through Lent’ - Sunday 21 February, 14:00 (GMT), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/inspired-to-follow-who-is-my-neighbour-tickets-133589749537. ‘Inspired to Follow: Art and the Bible Story’ helps people explore the Christian faith, using paintings and Biblical story as the starting points. The course uses fine art paintings in the National Gallery’s collection as a spring board for exploring questions of faith. Session 1 - Being Waited on by Angel Neighbours - 1 Kings 19:1-9 and ‘Landscape with Elijah and the Angel’, Gaspard Dughet, about 1663, NG1159.

Biblical Studies class: Monday 22 February, 19:30-21:00 (GMT), Zoom meeting. Register in advance: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMrcOmgrTgsHt2ceY7LepLhQYqQxS1G1ix9. Gospels & Acts - Lecture 04 The Synoptic Problem.

‘Church, LGBTI+ equality and the priesthood of all believers’ - St Bride's Public Theology Lecture for LGBT+ History Month: Monday 22nd February, 18:00 (GMT), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/church-lgbtqi-and-the-priesthood-of-all-believers-tickets-135361771703. Savitri Hensman will explore the concept of the church as a movement or community rather than collection of institutions and its members’ part in the shifts in attitudes and practice in church and society. LGBT+ History Month is a month-long annual celebration of lesbian, gay, bisexual trans, and non-binary history, including the history of LGBT+ rights and related civil rights movements. In the United Kingdom it is celebrated in February each year, to coincide with the 2003 abolition of Section 28. This year's theme is Body, Mind and Spirit. Savi Hensman is an activist and writer based in London and was one of the founders of the London's Black Lesbian and Gay Centre. Savi is a regular contributor to Ekklesia, who published her first book "Sexuality, Struggle and Saintliness: Same-Sex Love and the Church" . She has also written for The Guardian, The Church of England News, as well as writing poetry.

Creating a New Communion: Tuesday 23 February, 10:00-11:30 (GMT), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/lent-course-creating-a-new-communion-tickets-138238445913. Exploring how generosity, gratitude, giving and fundraising call us into communion with God and with one another. Suitable for clergy and lay leaders. Inspired by Henri Nouwen and his wonderful book The Spirituality of Fundraising join this five-session free online study and discussion series, hosted by HeartEdge, and facilitated by the Dioceses of Hereford and York. Through Lent we’ll explore together Nouwen’s deep conviction that the ground of our common humanity and our life’s work is to accept the “call to be deeply, deeply connected with unconditional love, with our own fragile humanity, and with brothers and sisters everywhere.” What does this mean for you? For your ministry? For the church of today? For generosity, gratitude, giving and fundraising? Booking your free ticket and Zoom access code via eventbrite at … Pre-session reading of ‘The Spirituality of Fundraising’, by Henri Nouwen although not essential, is recommended.

Inspired to Follow: ‘Who is my Neighbour? – A journey through Lent’ - Sunday 28 February, 14:00 (GMT), zoom - https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/inspired-to-follow-who-is-my-neighbour-tickets-133589749537. ‘Inspired to Follow: Art and the Bible Story’ helps people explore the Christian faith, using paintings and Biblical story as the starting points. The course uses fine art paintings in the National Gallery’s collection as a spring board for exploring questions of faith. Session 2 - Being a Neighbour to Those Close to Us - Genesis 4:25 - 5:5 and ‘Adam and Eve’, Jan Gossaert (Jean Gossart), about 1520, L14 – on loan from The Royal Collection Trust.

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Henryk Gorecki - Beatus Vir: Psalm.

Living God's Future Now - w/c 31 January 2021

HeartEdge events this week - Church leaders, laypeople and enquirers welcome. Together we will seek to renew the broad church and develop the part that we all play in God's mission in 2021.

Lent Books: Discussion and Readings - Monday, February 1, 2021 at 6 PM UTC – 7:15 PM UTC. A live discussion with host Mark Oakley, joined by authors: Stephen Cherry 'Thy Will be Done', Hannah Steele 'Living His Story', Sheila Upjohn 'The Way of Julian Norwich', and Samuel Wells 'A Cross in the Heart of God’. Livestreamed link here - https://www.facebook.com/events/420618378988391.

Animals and the Church: Preaching in the Age of Factory Farming - Tuesday 2 February, 10:30 AM in Eastern Time (US and Canada) / 3.30 pm GMT. Register here - https://duke.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_R0DhJ5TtSfW7TM6_I1OJvw. A conversation with Ellen Davis and Sam Wells. The conversation will run for roughly 30 minutes and will include a Q&A time. The event is free and open to faculty, students, clergy, and interested lay people. Registration is required but free.

Sermon Preparation Workshop - Tuesday 2 February, 16:30 (GMT), livestreamed the HeartEdge Facebook page here - https://www.facebook.com/theHeartEdge. Discussion of preaching plus the lectionary readings for the forthcoming Sunday, with Sam Wells and Sally Hitchiner.

Community of Practitioners workshop - Wednesday 3 February, 16:30 (GMT), Zoom meeting. Email Jonathan Evens at jonathan.evens@smitf.org to register. A gathering for church leaders, lay and ordained, with opportunities for reflection on experience and theology.

Highlight...

Art and Social Action was a workshop in which four artists shared a variety of different artworks which explore social issues. The workshops considered how churches and others can use art to start conversations, reframe narratives and lead to change. The examples viewed were moving and the practical takeaways were empowering. Watch here - https://www.facebook.com/theHeartEdge/videos/?ref=page_internal.

See www.heartedge.org to join HeartEdge and for more information.

Over the next few months we are looking at everything from growing online congregations, rethinking enterprise and community action to doing diversity, deepening spirituality and responding to social need.

Are we missing something? Be in touch about your ideas for development and change.

Please note that invitations will be sent 24hrs, 12hrs, 1hr and 10 mins before an event, mostly to minimise the chance of misuse. Thank you.

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Roxanna Panufnik - Three Paths To Peace.

Saturday 30 January 2021

Windows on the world (312)


Bourton-on-the-Water, 2019

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This Picture - Death's Sweet Religion.

Friday 29 January 2021

Seeing is Receiving: The art of contemplation (6)

5. Sources

Chelmsford Cathedral is familiar territory for me, being the Cathedral where I was ordained as a deacon. Since then I have attended many Diocesan services, organised exhibitions and events, and have also spoken in the Cathedral on several occasions. It was also where I began my sabbatical art pilgrimage, when attending a service to celebrate the centenary of Chelmsford Diocese. Despite its familiarity, this Cathedral continues to surprise and entrance. Examining the sources and connections of its art only deepens the encounter.

The dedications of the Cathedral are to St Mary the Virgin, St Peter, and St Cedd. These dedications feature in much of the work commissioned. Cedd is the subject of Mark Cazalet's engraved glass window in St Cedd's Chapel, commissioned for the centenary of Cathedral and Diocese. He also has a bit part in Cazalet's Tree of Life located in a blank window space within the North Transept and mimicking the mullions and tracery of the original window. The image of a single tree has been a recurring theme in Cazalet's work, influenced by the sense of place found within the English Romantic landscape tradition. Cazalet's image of an Essex oak as Tree of Life uses symmetry to explore the theme with one side showing the Tree dying back and the other bursting into life.

Cazalet and Peter Eugene Ball were two names that I knew I would encounter again and again on my pilgrimage as they have been among those contemporary artists most frequently commissioned by the Church in the UK. Ball is a sculptor who works with found objects, predominantly wood, which he then embellishes with beaten metals such as gold leaf. His Christ in Glory located high above the Nave with its outstretched arms is a welcoming image. On a smaller scale and possessed of a still serenity are his cross and candlesticks for the Mildmay Chapel and his Mother and Child in St Cedd's Chapel.

Earlier commissions were no less significant however. Georg Ehrlich's sculpture The Bombed Child in St Peter's Chapel and his relief Christ the Healer are particularly affecting. The commissioning by the Church in the UK of work from artists who were refugees from the Nazi's would prove to be another recurring feature of my pilgrimage. Former Dean, The Very Revd Peter Judd, said of The Bombed Child: ‘A mother holds her dead child across her lap, and the suffering and dignity of her bearing don’t need any words to describe them – that is communicated to anyone who looks at her.’[i]

John Hutton's Great West Screen at Coventry Cathedral is one of the most notable works of religious art of the 20th century in Britain. Here his etched window is an image of St Peter. Elsewhere in the Diocese Hutton's work can also be found at St Erkenwald's Barking and St George's Barkingside. The work of Thomas Bayliss Huxley-Jones also features elsewhere within the Diocese. His Woman of Samaria at St Peter's Aldborough Hatch and the Christ figure above the South Porch of St. Martin Le Tours church, Basildon are both fibreglass figures. At the Cathedral, Huxley-Jones' work includes a Christus in St Cedd's Chapel, a carving of St Peter on the south-east corner of the South Transept and 16 stone carvings representing the history and concerns of Essex, Chelmsford, and the Church.

The number and variety of commissions which feature within this Cathedral mean that even in a packed service, such as that celebrating the centenary, when each worshipper will only see from their specific place within the space a very small proportion of the artworks within the building, they will, nevertheless, be able to view something of significance and depth to enhance their experience of worship. Among the range and variety of works to be seen - which include, among others, work in bronze, glass, steel, textiles, and wood - are finally a significant collection of contemporary icons followed the dedications of the Cathedral, with the addition of Jesus. These were created by orthodox nuns from the Community of St John the Baptist at Tolleshunt Knights in Essex. The Cathedral’s commissions have therefore also served to support the revival of traditional iconography which as the iconographer Aidan Hart has argued is a characteristic of twentieth century church commissions.

All this indicates the care with which the many commissions here at Chelmsford have been undertaken and realised, with commissions often relating to specific sources found in the life or heritage of the Cathedral. As is often the case, specific individuals have played a key role in taking these commissions forward appropriately and sensitively. At Chelmsford that role was particularly played by Peter Judd, who in an earlier role as the Vicar of St Mary’s Iffley, oversaw the installation of a Nativity window by John Piper which was later counter-balanced by Roger Wagner’s The Flowering Tree. A similar concern with balance can be seen at Chelmsford, in particular in the decision to commission Cazalet’s engraved St Cedd window in St Cedd’s Chapel as a counter-balance to Hutton’s engraved St Peter window in St Peter’s Chapel.

Commissioning several works from the same artists and positioning these at different locations within the space also indicates an awareness of the differing ways in which visitors and worshippers use and respond to the space. Artworks integrated within the life and architecture of a church are not viewed in the same way as works within the white cube of a gallery space and this needs to be understood and handled with sensitivity during the commissioning process. The result, as here, can be a sense of overall integrity and harmony within a space which holds great variety and diversity. Where this occurs, the whole and its constituent parts image something of the Trinitarian belief – the one and the many - which is at the heart of Christianity.

Slowing down to sustain silent looking by immersing ourselves in the world created by the work will in time also lead us outwards once again to consider the relationship of the work to the artist and the world in which s/he brought it to birth. There are four facets of any artwork – the artwork itself as an artefact, the ideas and influences of the artist, the relationship that the artwork has with its historical and art historical context, and our own response and that of others to the artwork. Each of these can shape our overall response to the artwork, often in ways that we don’t expect or realize.

It is particularly helpful for contemplation to consider the sources - ideas and influences - of the artist, as, when God created human beings, we were said to be made in his image. As a result, something of the maker shows up in the thing which has been made. By knowing something about the artist, we may be able to see and contemplate more in the artwork than we otherwise would. St Paul says the same thing about God in his letter to the Romans when he says that ever since the creation of the world God’s eternal power and divine nature, invisible though they are, have been understood and seen through the things he has made (Romans 1.19—20).

Corita Kent begins her discussion of the value in knowing sources with a dictionary definition:

‘SOURCE: from the Latin surgere, “to spring up, to lift.” The beginning of a stream of water or the like; a spring, a fountain. The origin; the first or ultimate cause. A person, book, or document that supplies information. A source is a point of departure.’[ii]

For the artist everything and anything can be a source. Sources, Kent suggests, free us ‘to depart from something rather than from nothing or everything.’[iii] This ‘relieves us of thinking we have to make something new or great’ by enabling us to work with what is at hand while seeking to use the source as a reference and not as something to duplicate.

Kent encourages artists to do two important things in relation to their sources. The first is to ‘use and build on the ideas of others.’ She notes that T. S. Eliot says that a minor poet borrows, a great poet steals. ‘Borrowing implies that the source really keeps possession,’ while stealing ‘implies that the source has become the property of the thief.’[iv] However, when we know we are building on the ideas of others, ‘it is good to take responsibility and say thank you for the use of the material.’ So, when you can, ‘salute your source, otherwise, without heart or conscience, the work might become plagiarism.’[v]

Our primary sources are the Word of God; principally Jesus, but also creation and the Bible. Richard Carter commends holy listening, attentiveness to the Word made flesh as essential to a rule of life. He writes: ‘You will return to the same stories again and again always with new questions as you bring your life to the Scriptures and the Scriptures to life’:

‘Like Jesus, we need to listen, to question, to discover for ourselves and to return to the Scriptures again and again. We seek openness to the Word of God, spaciousness in us so that we allow the Scriptures to dwell in us and ourselves to dwell in Scripture. The Word made flesh. An obedience to God’s Spirit within us.’[vi]

Our sources are our points of departure; the place from which prayer or contemplation begins. We need a starting point for any journey, whether geographical or within the mind or heart. In the same way that Kent encourages artists to see everything and anything as a potential source, so the mystics prompt us to see that God works in and through the ordinary and every day, through the people and things around us. As Daniel Siedell noted in the quote that sparked this book and enquiry, we therefore need to be paying attention and looking out for signs of his activity and presence. We need to be listening for the Holy Spirit to prompt us to look at some ordinary thing or ordinary person in order to see the face of God.

In the film American Beauty, Ricky shows Jane a blurry video of a plastic bag blowing in the wind among autumn leaves. As they watch he explains that ‘this bag was, like, dancing with me. Like a little kid begging me to play with it. . . . And that’s the day I knew there was this entire life behind things, and this incredibly benevolent force, that wanted me to know there was no reason to be afraid. Ever.’ ‘Sometimes,’ he says, ‘there’s so much beauty in the world I feel like I can’t take it, like my heart’s going to cave in.’[vii] To encounter God as that incredibly benevolent force that wants us to know that there is no reason to ever feel afraid, we need to pay attention to the beauty of the ordinary, overlooked things in life, like a plastic bag being blown by the wind. As Saint Augustine said, ‘How many common things are trodden underfoot which, if examined carefully, awaken our astonishment.’[viii]

Jean Pierre de Caussade was a French Jesuit priest and writer known for Abandonment to Divine Providence and his work with Nuns of the Visitation in Nancy, France. De Caussade coined a phrase to describe what we have just been talking about. He called it 'The Sacrament of the Present Moment,' which:

‘refers to God's coming to us at each moment, as really and truly as God is present in the Sacraments of the Church ... In other words, in each moment of our lives God is present under the signs of what is ordinary and mundane. Only those who are spiritually aware and alert discover God's presence in what can seem like nothing at all. This keeps us from thinking and behaving as if only grand deeds and high flown sentiments are 'Godly'. Rather, God is equally present in the small things of life as in the great. God is there in life's daily routine, in dull moments, in dry prayers ... There is nothing that happens to us in which God cannot be found. What we need are the eyes of faith to discern God as God comes at each moment - truly present, truly living, truly attentive to the needs of each one.’[ix]

Similarly, Simon Small has written that: ‘To pay profound attention to reality is prayer, because to enter the depths of this moment is to encounter God. There is always only now. It is the only place that God can be found.’ So, contemplative prayer is ‘the art of paying attention to what is.’[x]

As a member of the Carmelite Order in France during the 17th Century, Brother Lawrence spent most of his life in the kitchen or mending shoes, but became a great spiritual guide. He saw God in the mundane tasks he carried out in the priory kitchen. Daily life for him was an ongoing conversation with God. He wrote, ‘we need only to recognize God intimately present with us, to address ourselves to Him every moment.’

As a result, ‘The time of action does not differ from that of prayer. I possess God as peacefully in the bustle of my kitchen, where sometimes several people are asking me for different things at the same time, as I do upon my knees before the Holy Sacrament.’

‘It is not needful to have great things to do. I turn my little omelette in the pan for the love of God. When it is finished, if I have nothing to do, I prostrate myself on the ground and worship my God, who gave me the grace to make it, after which I arise happier than a king. When I can do nothing else, it is enough to have picked up a straw for the love of God.’

‘We ought not to be weary of doing little things for the love of God, who regards not the greatness of the work, but the love with which it is performed.’[xi]

This sort of spirituality - the sense of the presence of God in all things, and the possibility of honouring God in every action, as the source of spirituality - is also found in our hymn books. We sing:

‘Teach me, my God and King,
In all things thee to see,
And what I do in any thing,
To do it as for thee:’

George Herbert’s hymn, originally a poem called ‘The Elixir,’ ends with these words:

‘A servant with this clause
Makes drudgery divine:
Who sweeps a room, as for thy laws,
Makes that and the action fine.

This is the famous stone
That turneth all to gold:
For that which God doth touch and own
Cannot for less be told.’[xii]

If we practise the presence of God in the sacrament of the present moment, as Brother Lawrence and Jean Pierre de Caussade teach us, then we will become able to see signs of God’s activity and presence all around us and this will become the source of our prayer and creativity.

In the same way, all art is created in a particular time and place – its present moment - being in relationship with that contemporary context whilst also relating in some way to its art historical context. One Lent I was involved in the first showing of a digital installation by Michael Takeo Magruder called Lamentation for the Forsaken. In this piece the artist evokes the memory of Syrians who have passed away in the present conflict by weaving their names and images into a contemporary Shroud of Turin. That installation couldn’t be understood without reference to the then current refugee crisis or to past depictions of Christ, especially the Turin Shroud itself. We understand each other and artworks more by observing how we react and respond to events around us and to our histories and heritage. The artwork also became a focus for awareness and prayer as we explored the sources that had led to its creation. This is also why contemplation of the sources which inspired the artist has value, both for us and for others with whom we share our reflections.

Explore

View https://imago-arts.org/betty-spackman-a-creature-chronicle/ and https://static1.squarespace.com/static/59b04904e5dd5b7fad3953e1/t/5e5d785310cf69734cf6d2a2/1583183958600/CC+PROGRAM+BOOKLET.pdf to see a project using its sources as the basis for its form.

Betty Spackman has a background in animation and, having taught visual storytelling for many years, has underpinned her interest in narrative as an important part of a work entitled A Creature Chronicle. This installation combines the stories of both science and religion using well known art works as mediators and commentators to explore ethical concerns in both fields regarding transgenics and the development of post humanism. These stories and images are her sources. Presenting itself as a non-linear multi-layered storyboard the work functions as a catalyst for dialogue - a physical presence to be walked around and sat inside, with visual stories to be ‘read’ or discovered, contemplated, and discussed.

The basic structure of A Creature Chronicle is a 24ft in diameter circle of panels painted on both interior and exterior surfaces. As an architectural space it references a fire pit, a cave, a chapel, a hut. It is a place of contemplation and conversation. The circle is a universal symbol appearing in all world religions and science and is used in this work as a design element loaded with multiple complex symbolisms that repeat and spin their overlapping meanings.

Spackman’s intent was that combining the narratives of faith and art and science, even as fragmented visual quotes (these being her sources), would be a way to break the linear lines of ‘telling’ and give space for the various narratives to connect, conflate even. Her hope was that collaging the image stories from faith and art and science might help others see how they may have some common ground and allow conversations to be more than binary and argumentative. She wanted to invite contemplation and conversation by being hospitable in bringing many different voices (or sources) together on equal terms. The collage and the circular, double sided ‘storyboard’ encouraged this equitability as one can ‘read’ from any direction in any order even though there is a rough chronology implied.[xiii]

Spackman has said: ‘I place the Superman logo beside a human uterus and the story of Superman and the story of human birth create meaning by being in proximity. Why do we want to be super, to be heroes? Why is the goal of transhumanism to augment us, to rebirth us into super humans? What is the role of the woman, of reproduction? Who decides how birth of a new being will happen? And the plot thickens and becomes more and more complex. If I say ‘uterus’ one of my friends will tell her story of having a hysterectomy and someone else will tell a story of an abortion and someone else will tell a story of cloning and so on. The stories are always multiple and complex. Some are true and beautiful and some are not.’[xiv]

A Creature Chronicle is about ‘how we tell our stories of the origin and evolution of life’ but is also a chronicle of Spackman’s ‘own process of discerning ways of seeing and believing through the kaleidoscope of images’ she has collected over the course of her life:

‘I collage the fragments of my wonder and my wandering with various selected symbols from faith and science – ‘glued’ together and in part interpreted by fragments of well-known artworks. They are a disclosure of my curiosity as well as my convictions, simultaneously constant and evolving. It is a very personal story in that regard and I am cognizant of my choices being filtered through my own limited experiences, and therefore, aware of their limitations …

I believe … that there is a source and significance to life, although as an artist and writer I know how complicated it is to try and use either words or images to express or explain what we think or experience or discover. The scientist and theologian both try to define what life is about, the artist perhaps stands between them, sometimes mediating, sometimes ignoring them both. None of us speaks very clearly. Yet sometimes, through the babble of our various languages and our inadequate symbolic diagrams, we manage to communicate something – even if it is just our questions. But in comparing notes we might find there is more to be in awe of than to argue about. I hope so.’[xv]

In this way, and, perhaps, more than at any other time in human history, Spackman believes, the arts can play the role of mediators, interpreters, and inquisitors – as well as comforters, and healers - providing places of hospitality and humility where the big questions of life can be examined freely and safely. This is her achievement in A Creature Chronicle, made possible by collaging together a multiplicity of sources from the arts, religion and science.

Wonderings

I wonder what the sources for your personality, beliefs and practices are. I wonder what it is or who it is that has formed you.

I wonder how you discovered the sources for the personality, beliefs and practices of someone significant for you.

I wonder what your favourite piece of art - dance, drama, film, music, visual art etc. - is. I wonder how much you know about its creation, how you came by that information and how it enhances your appreciation.

Prayer

God of pilgrimage, lead me on a journey back in time to know myself more deeply through the people, places, experiences and ideas that have shaped me. As I map my pilgrimage, open my eyes to the ways you have created, led and formed me. Amen.

Spiritual exercise

Draw a map of the places that have formed you (however you wish to define formation). If there is the opportunity revisit those places and pray there about all that happened to you in that place. However, as will be the case for most of us, if that is not possible make that pilgrimage of prayer in your mind using anything that you have to hand to remind you of those places.

Art activity

See what interests you about sources from the information available in the National Gallery’s Art & Religion strand - https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/research/about-research/art-and-religion.

Read this interview with Betty Spackman - https://www.artlyst.com/features/betty-spackman-posthumanism-debates-interview-revd-jonathan-evens/.



Click here for the other parts of 'Seeing is Receiving'. See also 'And a little child shall lead them' which explores similar themes.


[i] https://www.marconi-veterans.com/?p=807

[ii] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.40

[iii] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.47

[iv] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.51

[v] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.58

[vi] R. Carter, The City is my Monastery: A contemporary Rule of Life, Canterbury Press Norwich, 2019, p.98

[vii] A. Ball, American Beauty screenplay, 1999 - http://www.screenplaydb.com/film/scripts/American%20Beauty.pdf

[viii] St Augustine, ‘Letter 137’, Selected Letters translated by J. G. Cunningham, Logos Virtual Library - https://www.logoslibrary.org/augustine/letters/137.html

[ix] Elizabeth Ruth Obbard, Life in God's NOW, New City, 2012

[x] Simon Small, From the Bottom of the Pond, O Books, 2007

[xi] Brother Lawrence, The Practice of the Presence of God, Hodder & Stoughton, 2009

[xii] G. Herbert, ‘The Elixir’ in The Temple, Penguin Classics, 2017

[xiii] B. Spackman, A Creature Chronicle. Considering Creation. Faith and Fable. Fact and Fiction.,Piquant, 2019

[xiv] https://www.artlyst.com/features/betty-spackman-posthumanism-debates-interview-revd-jonathan-evens/

[xv] B. Spackman, A Creature Chronicle. Considering Creation. Faith and Fable. Fact and Fiction.,Piquant, 2019

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Paul Field - Hollow Hotel.

Saturday 23 January 2021

Windows on the world (311)


Bradwell, 2018

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MacIntosh Ross - Gloria.

Friday 22 January 2021

HeartEdge January Mailer

Click here for the January HeartEdge Mailer with ideas, resources, stories, connections and HeartEdge news. 

We are a global ecumenical movement:
  • We are churches and organisations developing mission.
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The Welcome Wagon - Galatians 2.20.

Seeing is Receiving: The art of contemplation (5)

4. Silent

Brian Clarke says that stained glass ‘can transform the way you feel when you enter a building in a way that nothing else can!’[i]

I would concur, especially after arriving at l’Abbaye de la Fille Dieu in Romont in time for a memorable service of Vespers followed by silent contemplation in the still onset of darkness falling. Tomas Mikulas, the architect on the restoration of this Cistercian Abbey, has stated that the overall goal of the restoration was to offer both nuns and visitors an ‘atmosphere conducive to meditation and prayer.’ Mikulas suggests that it is the ‘warm and vibrant atmosphere’ created by Clarke’s windows ‘with the changing light of day’ that ‘makes a decisive contribution’ to the space and to the restoration as a whole.[ii]

There are several reasons why this was a surprising outcome in this context. Early on in his career Clarke realised that he had to ‘shake off the ecclesiastical image’ of stained glass ‘if he was going to make any impact in the medium’: ‘I looked for opportunities in all kinds of public buildings and declined opportunities in the church. I fought for that and continue to fight for that. It's a lifelong pilgrimage.’[iii] Not only that, but within the Abbey a group of nuns actively opposed Clarke’s designs on the basis that they were too colourful for a Cistercian chapel. This group was concerned that the strong presence of the windows would overpower the building and that the colour of the windows would reduce the visibility of the murals (dating from the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth centuries) which have been preserved through the restoration.

Mikulas insisted on Clarke and was supported by the Abbess, Mother Hortense Berthet, who ‘loved and encouraged’ the stained glass project. Mikulas writes that she was always far-sighted and, where others could be entrenched behind their ‘achievements and habits,’ she would always ‘promote and encourage projects and renewal.’[iv] The restoration work here, including Clarke’s windows, provides an object lesson in such projects due to the depth of understanding of the history and context developed by Mikulas; one involving listening, collaboration and perseverance in the service of a historic monument and a contemporary community of nuns. Ultimately, this has meant searching for the presence of Christ and the acceptance of others in the great Cistercian Trappist tradition.

His overall goal was the creation of a new and coherent building which was respectful of the buildings’ history while also servicing its use as a place of worship: ‘The colour of the windows is in relation to the path of the sun’s movement and to the nun’s daily liturgy and prayer – ‘starting from the mystical and blue morning in the sanctuary, to warm tones in the nave later in the day’ – and the glass chosen and developed for the windows, some hand-painted by Clarke, responds to the orientation of the building, with richly textured transparent glass in the east, south and west windows, and opaque glass in restrained colours in those that face north, which face onto cloisters and receive only weak natural light.’[v] Mother Hortense responded by saying: ‘I asked the artist before the creation of his stained glass that they carry a message of hope for those who come to share our prayer. I feel that my wish is wonderfully realized in this joyous, dynamic rise towards a future made all of light.’[vi]

At Vespers in l’Abbaye de la Fille Dieu there was a powerful sense of being caught up in a heavenly space and the great corporate song of heaven as the wondrous harmonies of unified plainsong responses combined with the mystical light of Clarke’s windows. Stained glass can transform the way we feel when we enter a building like l‘Abbaye de la Fille Dieu because, as Clarke has said, art brings ‘beauty and something of the sublime into the banality of mundane experience.’[vii]

My slowing down to look over a sustained period immersing myself in the world of this work was then aided by silence and the waning of the light. Just as Bill Viola’s videos, by their form, often encourage us to slow down, so, stained glass, paintings, sculptures and other forms of non-digital/performance art compel us, by their form, to silent contemplation.

‘Painting does not have anything to say’, writes T.J. Clark. Clark derives his obvious, though often over-looked, statement from John Ruskin: ‘I am with Ruskin in thinking that a picture is not by its very nature ideology’s mute servant, and has at its disposal kinds of intensity and disclosure, kinds of persuasiveness and simplicity, that make most feats of language by comparison seem abstract, or anxiously assertive, or a mixture of both.’[viii]

The peculiar advantages that painting’s muteness give it over the spoken or written word are, firstly, that ‘the ‘openness’ of the image can provide a space for the insubordinate, or at least the blessedly unserious’. This is of particular significance in ‘times of enforced orthodoxy (that is, most of the time)’. Secondly, it can make an imaginative wished for vision of history spellbinding, persuasive and concrete, while, at the same time, giving an awareness of the human, earthbound and matter of fact nature of that vision. This is of particular significance in times when ‘the main established metaphors and images look to be indelible, however often they are subjected to the fires of disbelief’.[ix] At the heart of Clark’s insight is the reality that in one image, without recourse to words or text, painting can create a new world which nevertheless continues to relate to this world.

Clark makes these points in a book where he writes, using many words, about images by Giotto, Bruegel, Poussin, Veronese, and Picasso. All of these have literary sources, knowledge of which many viewers bring with them to the paintings when seen. Painting’s separation from words and text is not, therefore, as complete as Clark seems to suggest. Additionally, contemporary art makes significant use of text and sound while retaining some of the qualities of which Clark writes. Despite this, the muteness of painting is, as Clark argues, worthy of remark and reflection.

George Pattison makes a similar point in reflections on Mark Rothko’s painting Black on Maroon: ‘Rothko confronts us with the question: ’But what do you say about it?’ The painting ‘tells’ us nothing: the burden of deciding how to see it is thrown back on us, the viewers – as Rothko explicitly says when he comments that he is equally open to his work being seen in a sacred or secular way. With regard to ‘what’ it means, the painting does not offer any determinate content or specific message. Instead, it opens up a field of pure possibilities, a ‘potential’ space that invites the co-creativity of the viewer.’[x]

Pattison commends slow waiting with the painting until it reveals what it is, in its essence. The muteness of the painting challenges us to do so and when we look for 15-30 seconds or read the label alongside without then looking again at the painting, it is a challenge that we duck.

The poet Ian Wedde comments on the value we accord to words suggesting that we think it perverse to be reticent. He asks whether there is a silence ‘not sullen or inarticulate, but respectful,’ a reticence ‘leaving space in which the words of others can be heard.’ He asks ‘what kind of art might such a space create’ and ‘what kind of art might create such a space?’[xi]

Richard Carter commends silence as the most spacious language available to us:

‘It is silence that offers space for our lives
Too big and complex to be contained or explained by
any words
It is the silence of God that gives a home
to all the hopes, the fears, the fragments, the layers, the
tangents, the tangles and the tearings
And in the silence God holds us, all of us, and tells us
‘You are mine.’
The light, the dark, the shadow,
the sun, the rain, the wind,
the rainbows of our lives
We seek to discover the silence of our God
at the very centre of all that we are
The living centre
that makes the fullness of our humanity possible
Silence is the only language spacious enough to include
everything.’[xii]

Carter argues that silent contemplative space is the ground of our being and, as such, has made it foundational to the sevenfold rule of life (silence, service, scripture, sacrament, sharing, sabbath, staying with) practised by the Nazareth Community at St Martin-in-the-Fields. Discovering silence is about creating space for meeting; a meeting in which we ‘let the sky in, the light in, the earth in, let prayer in’ and in which we are ‘open and naked before God, the immensity of the universe, the enormity of eternity.’ In silence we ‘rediscover our humanity and a world infused by God’:

‘We are always moving
So we don’t see
Always talking
So we don’t hear
Or we hear in snatches, or bites
But we do not listen to the heights or depths.

You are actually have to stop to see
To be still to notice
How often we walk through rather than being with
Walk past without offering time or space
Take the photo without realizing that the true camera is our
inner eye
We think we have to catch up with the world
Actually, we have to be still enough to let the world catch
up with us
And meet us in the still place
Our lives can be like fast trains rushing through a station
So fast you cannot read the signs
Only a flash of colour and blue of people and place
No time to notice
Or see the signs of God

Here and now
Stop
Be in the moment
Lest you miss it and let your mind and body race on
To further racing’[xiii]

Entering silence is a return to the ground of our being because, for all of us, seeing comes before words, as John Berger reminds us in Ways of Seeing: ‘The child looks and recognises before it can speak. But there is also another sense in which seeing comes before words. It is seeing that establishes our place in the surrounding world; we explain the world with words, but words can never undo the fact that we are surrounded by it. The relation between what we see and what we know is never settled … We never look at just one thing; we are always looking at the relation between things and ourselves. Our vision is continually active, continually holding things in a circle around itself, constituting what is present to us as we are.’[xiv]

As a result, Carter sees art as prayer:

‘I had not realised before, but art is a meditation
Because it is a deeper way of looking at the world
A way of seeing both light and shadow
Of observing the detail that escapes the glazed eye
And all the while seeing it through the context of your own
life and the context of the artist
Seeing is reciprocal
It is seeing the relationship between things and the
relationship with you
The proportion, the colour, the shape, the light, the energy,
the narrative, the life evoked
It is seeing how lines intersect and spaces open up
It is recognizing horizons
The sky above
The earth beneath
The still water in the foreground
It is seeing the tiers of life
It is standing and gazing
No longer my head in the focus but the panorama of life in
which I too am part
For I am the seer
It is breaking through the diatribe and seeing
Creation with all its seams of wonder.’[xv]

Following her conversion to Roman Catholicism in 1913, religious subject matter appeared in Gwen John's art in the form of paintings and drawings of religious figures, some historical and some contemporary. She also became an artistic observer of the religious life of the Catholic community in Meudon where she had made her home. However her depth of faith was primarily expressed through the practice of her art. She wrote of entering 'into art as one enters into religion' and the attention that she paid both to the subjects of her slowly evolving oil paintings and in the rapid sketches she made of local people in church seem to have equated with prayer for her. She viewed herself as a sensual creature unable to pray for any length of time but, inspired by the 'Little Way' of Saint Therese of Lisieux, which outlines how the smallest thing can be done in the name of God, wrote that she must be a saint in her work. What she could express in her work, she wrote, was the 'desire for a more interior life'.

In her art, John achieved a sense of quiet meditation on the beauty of everyday existence that sets her work alongside that of Jean-Baptiste-Simeon Chardin, Giorgio Morandi and Vilhelm Hammershoi. Ultimately for her, post-conversion, this sense of stillness and tranquillity derived from her prayerful attention to the holiness of each moment. She wrote of seeing ‘that God is a God of quietness’ concluding ‘and so we must be quiet’.[xvi] By this means, she truly became 'God's little artist ... a seer of strange beauties, a teller of harmonies’.

By depicting the silent interior life through rooms full of human presence but empty of human beings (domestic scenes or still life’s) or women seated alone in contemplation, she begins a ‘journey of wonder’ for us ‘and then leaves us to travel alone with our thoughts, to listen to the work and its setting rather like the words of a poem.’[xvii] Listening to the setting of the work brings us to reflection on its sources.

Explore

In 2010 for The Artist is Present, her performance piece New York’s Museum of Modern Art, Marina Abramovic sat, motionless and silent every day during museum hours for three months, directly opposite members of the public who queued to spend time in silent dialogue with the artist. This piece, which was about stillness, silent contemplation and being in the present, presented silence as a context for observation and reflection and a mode of communication.

During this piece the artist had the idea for the Marina Abramovic Institute which offers workshops designed to bring body and mind to a quiet state and events in quiet and non-hierarchical spaces with exercises designed to connect with oneself and others through observation.

Abramovic has listed her rules for artist’s regarding silence in a manifesto published as part of her memoir Walk Through Walls. See https://vimeo.com/72711715 for The Artist is Present and https://www.brainpickings.org/2016/11/30/marina-abramovic-artist-manifesto/ for the Manifesto. Another significant statement on art and silence is by Susan Sontag - http://www.susansontag.com/SusanSontag/books/stylesOfRadicalWillExerpt.shtml.

For paintings created in silence which retain the atmosphere of silence, look at the work of Celia Paul, as well as that of Gwen John. For many years Celia Paul’s mother used to climb the 80 steps to this studio in order to sit for her. She would arrive exhausted and out of breath but then would pray in silence as she sat for her daughter, the air being charged with prayer. Paul’s paintings are no less charged with prayer, as, although not conventionally religious, prayer, she says, is still in her bloodstream. A strong sense of peace emanates from her work as she juxtaposes direct observation with mysticism. The peace which emanates is hard won, as is the seclusion found within her studio amidst the complexities of the relations she paints. She paints peace, while painting in peace, despite the disruptions of guilt and grief that arise from her past; a new day, a new dawn is depicted undefined by the past.

‘Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O Lord’ is the prayer that would most readily characterise these pieces, as the emergence of light is often Paul’s subject, resolution and goal. A halo effect surrounds Paul’s features in Self Portrait with Narrow Mirror. The sun, hidden by a dominating dark central tree, streams rays of illuminating light on The Brontë Parsonage lit from without among sombre blues and greys. The light in Kate in White, Spring 2018 overwhelms and overawes spilling over and enveloping the sitter. Breaking, Santa Monica provides a word and image for the peaceful light which breaks through, emerging and emanating from her canvases. God is in the light which pierces the darkening gloom within these works. My Mother and God is 167.3cm of dark canvas stretched from the still image of her sitting mother praying, with those prayers calling forth the thin band of yellow light entering the space at the apex, apotheosis and apogee of the canvas.

To explore the silence of Celia Paul’s work go to https://www.victoria-miro.com/artists/186-celia-paul/.

Wonderings

I wonder what silence means for you in your circumstances.

I wonder what you hear when there is silence.

I wonder where you encounter silence most readily.

Prayer

God of creativity and rest, what might silence be for me? Nowhere is completely silent, yet there are moments and places where noise abates and where enduring existence is heard. Lead me to such moments and places in ways that work for me where I am and who I am. Amen.

Spiritual exercise

Set aside a specific time for silence, with additional time also available for prayer afterwards. During the silence write down all that you hear in that time and all that comes into your mind. After the time of silence is complete, embrace each thing on your list as a gift and about or for that thing whether as thanksgiving or intercession.

Art activity

Visit a gallery or museum and use headphones to block out surrounding noise as you view the artworks.

Visit a church when you know there will be few people there in order to contemplate the art and architecture in relative silence.

[i] http://www.mikulas.ch/photos/2013/Fille-Dieu/2013-06_vitraux_Fille-Dieu.pdf

[ii] http://www.mikulas.ch/hortense.htm

[iii] https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/glowing-panes-brian-clarkes-stained-glass-windows-have-earned-him-global-recognition-and-the-papal-2093385.html

[iv] http://www.mikulas.ch/hortense.htm

[v] http://www.brianclarke.co.uk/work/works/item/347/5

[vi] http://www.brianclarke.co.uk/work/works/item/347/5

[vii] http://www.mikulas.ch/photos/2013/Fille-Dieu/2013-06_vitraux_Fille-Dieu.pdf

[viii] T. J. Clark, Heaven on Earth: Painting and the Life to Come, Thames & Hudson, 2018

[ix] T. J. Clark, Heaven on Earth: Painting and the Life to Come, Thames & Hudson, 2018

[x] G. Pattison, Crucifixions and Resurrections of the Image: Reflections on Art and Modernity, SCM Press, 2009, p.83

[xi] I. Wedde, ‘Where is the art that does this?’ in G. O’Brien ed., ‘Hotere: Out of the Black Window’, Godwit Publishing Ltd., 1997, p.9

[xii] R. Carter, The City is my Monastery: A contemporary Rule of Life, Canterbury Press Norwich, 2019, p.2

[xiii] R. Carter, The City is my Monastery: A contemporary Rule of Life, Canterbury Press Norwich, 2019, p.8-9

[xiv] J. Berger, Ways of Seeing, Penguin Books, 1972, p.7

[xv] R. Carter, The City is my Monastery: A contemporary Rule of Life, Canterbury Press Norwich, 2019, p.44-45

[xvi] T. Frank, Gwen John: Her Art and Spirituality - https://www.theway.org.uk/Back/461Frank.pdf

[xvii] L. Sutton in Be Still: PassionArt Trail 2016, PassionArt, 2016, p. 9

Click here for the other parts of 'Seeing is Receiving'. See also 'And a little child shall lead them' which explores similar themes.

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Simon and Garfunkel - The Sound Of Silence.

Thursday 21 January 2021

Art and Social Impact

Art and social impact: Tuesday 26 January, 14:30 GMT.
Register for a zoom invite at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/art-and-social-impact-tickets-134763030853.

This HeartEdge workshop will be a conversation with artists whose work has a social impact dimension in order to explore the question of art and social change. There will be discussion of personal journeys in addressing issues of social concern, approaches used, and expectations in terms of impact. The session will also explore ways in which churches can engage with such art and use it for awareness raising with congregations and wider.

In this workshop I will be in conversation with André Daughtry, Micah Purnell, Nicola Ravenscroft and Hannah Rose Thomas.

Here are links to websites and some recent projects by these artists:


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Amanda Gorman - The Hill We Climb.