Wikio - Top Blogs - Religion and belief
Showing posts with label c. kent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label c. kent. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 December 2024

Signs of the kingdom now and nearby

Here's the sermon that I shared at St Andrew's Wickford this morning:

In our Gospel reading (Luke 21. 25-36), Jesus talks about signs that the kingdom of God is near which are not always seen or noticed.

There is a condition called presbyopia that relates to this. Presbyopia is when your eyes gradually lose the ability to see things clearly up close. It is a normal part of aging. In fact, the term “presbyopia” comes from a Greek word which means “old eye.” You may start to notice presbyopia shortly after age 40. You will probably find that you hold reading materials farther away in order to see them clearly.

What happens is that your clear lens sits inside the eye behind your coloured iris. It changes shape to focus light onto the retina so you can see. When you are young, the lens is soft and flexible, easily changing shape. This lets you focus on objects both close-up and far away. After age 40, the lens becomes more rigid. It cannot change shape as easily. This makes it harder to read, thread a needle, or do other close-up tasks.

There is no way to stop or reverse the normal aging process that causes presbyopia. However, presbyopia can be corrected with eyeglasses, contact lenses, medication, or surgery.

This condition means that we see things close up better when we see with the eyes of a child. Jesus spoke about our needing to become like little children in order to see the kingdom of God. A Catholic nun who was also an artist called Sister Corita Kent has described the way in which children look and learn:

“Ask [a] child to come from the front of the house to the back and closely observe her small journey. It will be full of pauses, circling, touching and picking up in order to smell, shake, taste, rub, and scrape. The child’s eyes won’t leave the ground, and every piece of paper, every scrap, every object along the path will be a new discovery.

It does not matter that his is all familiar territory – the same house, the same rug and chair. To the child, the journey of this particular day, with its special light and sound, has never been made before. So the child treats the situation with the open curiosity and attention that it deserves.

The child is quite right.”

The central premise of this parable — that the kingdom is near, now — is a promise that the church needs to here regularly. Watch for the signs, Jesus says, and you will see that your redemption is drawing near, and indeed is already near.

"The Greek word here is engizo, a verb which expresses the immanence, the “coming nearness” of someone or something." So, here, "in this unusual parable and its visualization of this vital New Testament idea of “nearness,” we find the imperative of the gospel, its life-giving assurance — the Kingdom is not far off; it is not waiting; it is not an undiscovered country; it is right here in Jesus, the Son of Man, and in his proclamation. This is the good news: the kingdom of heaven has come near."

So, what is it that we’re missing, what is it that is close by, near to us, that we’re overlooking? Luke has already answered that question for us near the beginning of his Gospel. In Luke 4, we read of Jesus going to the synagogue in Nazareth, being given the scroll, reading words from Isaiah, then sitting down and saying ‘Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.’

The words he read are his manifesto and the signs that the kingdom of God is near:

‘The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because he has anointed me
to bring good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives
and recovery of sight to the blind,
to let the oppressed go free,
to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour.’

So whenever and wherever we see good news brought to the poor, release proclaimed for captive, recovery of sight for those who are blind and freedom brought to those who are oppressed then we are seeing the kingdom of God coming near.

That is what we are to look out for. That is what can often be seen nearby but which is missed when we, as the Church so often has done, look for the coming kingdom in the far distant future instead of the here and now.

'The kingdom is directly related to Jesus himself. The king is present with us, so the kingdom is near.' 'In Jesus, God was beginning to reign on earth in a new way, in fulfilment of Old Testament prophecy. Under God’s sovereign authority, righteousness will triumph over injustice and multifaceted peace will fill the earth.

Through Christ, you and I can live today under the reign of God today, however incompletely. When we seek God’s agenda for our lives, when we live for his purposes and glory, when we bow before him in worship, we are experiencing the kingdom of God, in anticipation of that day when all the earth will flourish under the glorious reign of God.'

'God's kingdom is all around you. There's nowhere you go that God doesn't reign. You either choose to recognize the truthfulness of that and live accordingly, or you choose to live in rebellion, rejecting the truth. If you choose the latter, you will find that your life doesn't go quite the way God intended. We're meant to recognize that the reign of God is all around us and to live accordingly.'

As we have seen, 'the knowledge that God's kingdom is all around us is not meant to lead us to ignore the world, saying, "None of the problems in the world really matter, because I live in the kingdom of God." Instead, it's meant to compel us to try to help this world look more like the kingdom of God. We live in rebellion, and the world lives in rebellion, so we see a lot of things in our world that are broken and reflective of our brokenness. But we pray: "Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven."' In teaching us to pray this prayer, Jesus is encouraging us to see with the eyes of a child and to see what is nearby and close up, his kingdom in our lives and our world.

This is our Advent task to look with the eyes of a child for the kingdom of God nearby now, remembering that advent means arrival and that the incarnation involved God moving into our neighbourhood as a child.

So, we pray: Grant us, Lord God, a vision of your world as your love would have it: a world where the weak are protected, and none go hungry or poor; a world where the riches of creation are shared, and everyone can enjoy them; a world where different races and cultures live in harmony and mutual respect; a world where peace is built with justice, and justice is guided by love. Give us the inspiration and courage to build it, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Innocence Mission - Cloud To Cloud

Sunday, 9 July 2023

Come as a child

Here is the reflection I shared in today's Eucharist at St Andrew's Wickford:

The poem called ‘Song of Childhood’ by Peter Handke which features in the film Wings of Desire captures, for me, something of the openness of childhood when the world lies open before us and we encounter it without cynicism or prior knowledge. The big questions of life are in front of us but we have yet found answers or the pretence that we can know all the answers.

In the poem the child has retained that openness to life and existence as she or he has grown but in our gospel reading (Matthew 11. 25-30) today we hear of people who have not. When Jesus speaks about the wise and the intelligent, he is speaking of those who think they already have knowledge of what God wants. They are those who cannot receive the new thing that God wants to give because they think they already know all there is to know. As a result, they are closed off to what God wants to share.

Jesus says that those able to receive are like children. They are not worldly wise or information wise and, as a result, they are open to what is new and what is revealed. This is how we need to be if we are to receive what God has revealed to us in Jesus.

Tom Wright says this: “Jesus had come to know his father the way a son does: not by studying books about him, but by living in his presence, listening for his voice, and learning from him as an apprentice does from a master, by watching and imitating. And he was now discovering that the wise and learned were getting nowhere, and that the ‘little people’ – the poor, the sinners, the tax collectors, ordinary folk – were discovering more of God, simply by following him, Jesus, than the learned specialists who declared that what he was doing didn’t fit with their complicated theories.”

Sister Corita Kent has described the way in which children look and learn:

“Ask [a] child to come from the front of the house to the back and closely observe her small journey. It will be full of pauses, circling, touching and picking up in order to smell, shake, taste, rub, and scrape. The child’s eyes won’t leave the ground, and every piece of paper, every scrap, every object along the path will be a new discovery.

It does not matter that his is all familiar territory – the same house, the same rug and chair. To the child, the journey of this particular day, with its special light and sound, has never been made before. So the child treats the situation with the open curiosity and attention that it deserves.

The child is quite right.”

Sister Corita went on to argue that through practice adults can learn once again to see as children do. She suggested that the kind slow looking practised by children, like prayer and art, enables us to view life without being distracted and allows us to put all our attention on a special area for a time. When we slow ourselves and focus our attention in this way we begin to receive what the world around has to show us; we notice things that others don’t and come to see that ordinary things are wondrous. The art historian John Ruskin claimed that the power of seeing in this way is ‘the teaching of all things,’ and that ‘To see clearly is poetry, prophecy, and religion – all in one.’

This is a form of prayer taking us to a place and space full of delight and wonder; prayer, poetry and prophecy. Children naturally see this through the attention that they pay to the world around them, until we, as adults, teach them otherwise. Like the poet Thomas Traherne, we need to unlearn the dirty devices of this world in order to become, as it were, a little child again that we may enter into the Kingdom of God.

Unless you come,
come as a child,
not grasping but trusting,
not arrogantly but humbly,
not resisting but accepting,
not feebly but vigorously,
not giving but receiving,
not self-centred but God-centred,
not teaching but feeding,
not gaining life but losing life,
not leaving but returning,
not closed, but open.

Unless you come,
come as a child,
you cannot enter
the kingdom of God.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Van Morrison - Song Of Being A Child.

Friday, 12 February 2021

Seeing is Receiving: The art of contemplation (8)

7. Sparking

A tale of two churches is central to the story that I sought to tell through my sabbatical art pilgrimage. The two churches are Notre-Dame des Alpes in Le Fayet and Notre-Dame de Toute Grâce on the Plateau d'Assy. Both are only kilometres apart in the French Alps and were built by same architect in a similar style yet they represent different stages in the sparking of inspiration from the Holy Spirit that led to the twentieth century’s revival of sacred art.

My sabbatical art pilgrimage involved visits to significant sites connected with the renewal of religious art in Europe during the twentieth century. In Europe I visited sites connected with the artists surrounding Maurice Denis, Jacques Maritain, Albert Gleizes and Marie-Alain Couturier, while, in the UK, I primarily visited sites which highlighted the influence of the innovatory commissions undertaken by George Bell and Walter Hussey. These were they that were primarily responsible for the sparking of inspiration in church commissions in this period of time.

At the beginning of the twentieth century modern art looked, sounded and felt very different from the art that had traditionally been made for the Church. This meant that the Church tended to avoid using modern art while many modern artists were excitedly exploring new ways of creating art and often couldn’t see any connection between what they were doing and the styles of art which the Church continued to use.

As a result, a whole segment of society – artists and art lovers – was not being impacted by Christianity. Denis, Maritain, Gleizes, Couturier, Bell and Hussey made it their life’s work to reconnect the Church with modern art. The key debate that they had, through their actions and writings, was whether the sparking of inspiration was best done by artists who were Christians and who primarily focused their work on church decoration or by artists who were reckoned to be contemporary masters, regardless of whether or not they practised the faith.

It was that debate which was played out through the commissions for the churches at Le Fayet and Assy. The decoration of St. Paul Grange-Canal in Geneva by Denis, Alexandre Cingria and others in 1913 – 1915 served as a manifesto for the renaissance in modern sacred art that they and others facilitated. This led to the founding in 1919 of the Ateliers d’Art Sacré in Paris by Denis and Georges Desvallières as well the Group of St Luke and St Maurice in Switzerland by François Baud, Cingria, Marcel Feuillat, Marcel Poncet and Georges de Traz. Both groups produced significant work for many churches in subsequent years.

In 1935 the Group of St Luke secured the decoration of the new church of Notre-Dame-des-Alpes by means of a tender process assessed by Maritain, the Catholic art critic Maurice Brillant and the director of the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Geneva, Adrien Bovy.[i] The process and the resulting work was a showcase for the renaissance of sacred art in which Denis, Maritain and Cingria had played key roles. It was this stage of the revival that was later challenged by the commissions selected for Notre-Dame-de-Toute-Grâce.

Although he trained at the Ateliers d’Art Sacré and worked on schemes of stained glass with its artists, together with his fellow Dominican Friar Pie-Raymond Régamey, Couturier argued in ‘L’Art sacré’, the journal which they jointly edited, that ‘each generation must appeal to the masters of living art, and today those masters come first from secular art.’[ii] Couturier worked with the parish priest at Assy, Canon Jean Devémy, on commissions for the church at Assy.

Initially their commissions were within the earlier phase of the renaissance of sacred art as sparked by the Holy Spirit. On the basis of his work at Le Fayet, Devémy selected Maurice Novarina as architect for Assy. As at Le Fayet, Novarina used his regional style with a chalet-style pitched roof and locally sourced materials. Initial commissions for the nave windows went to artists who had been active in modernist Church decoration before the war but Couturier then moved on to commission Pierre Bonnard, Marc Chagall, Fernand Léger, Jacques Lipchitz, Jean Lurçat, Henri Matisse, Germaine Richier and Georges Rouault.

William S. Rubin noted that this ‘radical aspect’ of Couturier’s plan proved deeply controversial as commissioning modern ‘masters … from secular art’ meant that ‘Side by side with works of the pious Catholic Rouault one saw those of Jews, atheists, and even Communists - a revolutionary situation that struck the keynote of a new evangelical spirit ...’ As a result, ‘Even before its dedication in 1950, the church had become the center of an increasingly bitter dispute which was to cause a marked rupture between the liberal and conservative wings of the clergy and laity during the following years.’[iii]

Despite the controversy caused Couturier’s approach to commissioning sparking inspiration for others and has become part of the commissioning landscape for churches. In England, Bishop Bell sought ‘ways and means for a reconciliation of the Artist and the Church’ while Hussey made it the great enthusiasm of his life and work ‘to commission for the Church the very best artists.’ Both experienced opposition and criticism but at St Matthew’s Northampton, St Michael and All Angels Berwick and Chichester Cathedral enabled commissions by a range of contemporary masters.

My visits to these and other churches confirmed for me the continuing value of commissions made at both stages of the twentieth century renaissance in sacred art. Both churches, Le Fayet and Assy, contain artworks which speak powerfully and movingly of the Christian faith and therefore also inform the spirituality of those who see them. Significant work was done throughout the twentieth century both by artists who were Christians and who primarily focused their work on church decoration and also by artists who were reckoned to be contemporary masters, regardless of whether or not they practised the faith. This continues to be the case in contemporary church commissions and, as a result, one of the lessons we can learn from the twentieth century revival of sacred art and its sparking of inspiration is that debate which sets ‘Christian’ artists against secular masters is unnecessary.

Churches need encouragement and validation to commission challenging and innovative work from either group of artists because the sparking of inspiration by the Holy Spirit derives not from our alignment with statements of belief but from the sharing of our contemplative seeing. As we have been reflecting through this book, this is based on slowing down in order to sustain silent looking by immersing ourselves in the world created by the work combined with reflection on sources. It is this that enables a positive cycle of creativity by sparking inspiration from the Holy Spirit.

Jesus’ disciples spent three years not understanding what he was saying and doing before running away, deserting and denying him at the crucifixion. Then the Day of Pentecost happened and the coming of the Holy Spirit was the moment when it all came together for them, when they finally understood and both knew their part in God’s plan and could begin to play it.

When the Spirit came they could speak in languages they had never learned and were understood, they could explain the scriptures although they were uneducated and their explanations made sense. They could proclaim Jesus as Lord and Christ and people responded to their challenge, and they knew how to structure and organise the new community that grew around them in response to their message. All that Jesus had said to them and done with them suddenly made sense and was useful to them because the Spirit had come and brought clarity and revelation. That is what Jesus had promised them would happen. That is the work which the Holy Spirit comes to do in our lives. Jesus told the disciples that when the Spirit came he would lead them into all truth. In other words, they would have that experience of inspiration being sparked; of revelation, of clarity, of things making sense, coming together and connecting.

This is an experience that is common to artists. Written In My Soul is a series of interviews with some of the most well-known singer-songwriters from the 1950s onward. Many of these great artists – Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Van Morrison and others - felt that their songs were given to them in moments of revelation, that their songs were already written and ‘came through them as though radio receivers – without much conscious effort or direction.’[iv]

That is an experience of the Spirit coming, although often not recognised as such. It has also been my experience, both in creating and preaching. I will often reflect or meditate on an experience, a song, an image, a Bible passage, by putting it in my mind, carrying it around in my mind over several days or weeks, reminding myself of it from time to time and just generally living with it for a period of time. When I do so, then I find that, at some unexpected moment, a new thought or idea or image will come to me that makes sense or takes forward the experience or song or image or passage on which I had been reflecting.

This is not just something for artists or even for preachers, it is something that can happen for us all; not just in major life-changing moments of revelation but also in a series of minor everyday epiphanies. Corita Kent writes that there is ‘an energy in the creative process that belongs in the league of those energies which can uplift, unify, and harmonize all of us.’ This energy or spark or inspiration, ‘which we call “making,” is the relating of parts to make a new whole.’[v]

If done well, this sparking of creativity gives rise to a sparking of response: ‘… the work of art gives us an experience of wholeness called ecstasy – a moment of rising above our feelings of separateness, competition, divisiveness “to a state of exalted delight in which normal understanding is felt to be surpassed” (Webster’s).’ This is as we should expect, as the ‘very word imagination implies that you are into territory no one has ever been to before.’ As a result, ‘a rigid discipline that demands one “right” way is confining and limiting.’[vi]

There is a third spark that precedes those describes thus far. Kent says that new ideas ‘are bursting all around and all this comes into you and is changed by you.’[vii] We are all each other’s sources and anything that comes our way, including the work of artists, ‘is a place for starting’.[viii] Contemplative prayer or reflection enables us to see and grasp these inspirations as they burst around us. Sparks of inspiration and creativity come to us in this way because, as Anaïs Nin notes, there are ‘very few human beings who receive the truth, complete and staggering, by instant illumination.’ Instead, we ‘acquire it fragment by fragment on a small scale, successive developments, cellularly, like a laborious mosaic.’[ix]g

The acquiring of fragments and creative linking of these to form a mosaic as commended by Kent and Jan Steward via Nin may remind us of Betty Spackman’s approach with ‘A Creature Chronicle’. Another artist inspired to create in this way, as a means of mirroring or depicting the contemplative creative process itself, was Marc Chagall. Chagall’s art is one that connects and reconciles disparate images of Bible, experience, history, memory and myth on the canvas through colour and composition. In his work Chagall links up different, unusual and unlikely images in a way that makes visual and emotional sense; in a way that communicates his love of his home, his world, his people, its sights, sounds and smells. He succeeds in ‘achieving a pictorial unity through the yoking of motifs taken from different realms of given reality.’[x] He reconciles emotions, thoughts, and reminiscences with lines, colours and shapes to create harmonious, meaningful paintings. Walther and Metzger have suggested that ‘no other twentieth century artist had Chagall's gift for harmonising what were thought to be irreconcilable opposites.’[xi] That was actually far from being the case, yet the fact that this might seem so is to recognise the lack of awareness and understanding shown to the art of contemplation in modern and contemporary art by critics and the Church alike. This has been to the wider detriment of society and has meant that some artists using the approaches described in this book have been under-appreciated in regard to recognition and, in other respects, as to intent.

The approaches to creative and Spirit-inspired sparking of these artists have synergies with the approaches of David Jones in The Anathemata and T. S. Eliot in The Waste Land. What these poets did in constructing a whole from fragmentary materials is also essentially similar to the form and construction of the Bible itself. Writer and minister, Mike Riddell has described the Bible as 'a collection of bits' assembled to form God’s home page while the Anglican priest Mark Oakley used a more poetic image when he wrote that the Bible is 'the best example of a collage of God that we have.' Riddell continued by saying that, 'what holds all these bits together is the fact that they somehow represent the continued involvement of God with the world in general and humanity in particular.'[xii] Oakley suggested that 'held together, they form a colourful and intriguing picture that draws us into its own landscape' and enables Christians to 'glimpse something of the divine being and his life in the world' and find 'a vocabulary for the Christian life.'[xiii]

What also holds them together is the Spirit-inspired sparking of creativity in creating and linking fragments of meaning that we have been exploring through the work of Chagall, Eliot, Jones, Kent and Spackman. It may be that it is this form of inspiration to which the Bible itself wants to point us when, in 2 Timothy 3.16, we read that ‘All scripture is inspired by God.’ Sparks of the Spirit – the inspiration of God – come not in one fully realised and systematised creation but fragment by fragment, to be creatively linked and held together in a collage of revelation.

This place of renewed inspiration, creativity and revelation is reached by means of learning to see as opposed to merely looking. The ways of learning to see that we have explored enable us to genuinely pay attention by slowing down, sustained looking, surrendering ourselves to art by immersing ourselves within it, staying with the silence inherent in much art, study of sources, the sharing of experiences, and an openness to inspiration, the sparking of the Spirit. In learning to use these ways of paying attention we are opening the gift the artist offers of sharing with us the mindful and prayerful act of seeing; to spend time noticing, looking intently and making careful observation in order to make material from their thoughts and ideas. With these ways of seeing in place, we can now see that there is beauty in all art and life as seen through the concept of sacrament, of heaven in the ordinary, including the artefacts of art. It is this that we contemplate. It is this to which we pay attention. It is this that is prayer.

Explore

Chagall's unitive vision finds echoes in the work of some of his peers and has been taken up, responded to and developed by other later artists.

Cecil Collins, in painting fools and angels found a means of depicting divine and human action and response. Collins viewed art as ‘an interpenetration between worlds, as a marriage of the known with the unknown’. In art, he said, the ‘imagination searches out and prefigures the mysterious unity of all life’. As a result of this metaphysical purpose and exploration ‘a picture lives on many different levels at once, it is an interpenetration of planes of reality, it cannot be analyzed or anatomised into single levels because one level can only be understood in the light of others. The reality or interior life of the picture can only be realised as a total experience.’[xiv] That total experience in Collins' work is unitive experience; whether this is the attempt at reconstituting the world that is Images in Praise of Love or the complex combination of symbol and structure that hymns the marriage union and reconciles masculine and feminine qualities in The Artist and His Wife.

Collins was also preoccupied by our expulsion from the Garden of Eden and our longing to return; in itself a reconciliation. This is a theme that was also taken up by Norman Adams. Adams' produced a questioning, probing work based on the expulsion and inspired by Paul Gauguin's Where do we come from? Who are we? Where are we going? An everyman figure is on a sloping pathway which he could be ascending or descending. Above him is a mass of blooming flowers, below a confused, muddy zone of swirls and scraping. His predicament poses the question to us as viewer, are we returning to Eden reconciled to God or descending into confused self-interest? The religious subject matter of Norman Adams' paintings provides him with geometry, a structure of lines and circles that allows his complex colours, his masterly and distinctive use of watercolour, to work their magic.’[xv] For Sister Wendy Beckett this ability of Adams' suggests that a mystical sense of oneness is making itself visible in his work.[xvi]

John Reilly was as strong and explicit as Collins in setting out his intentions: ‘My paintings are not concerned with the surface appearance of people or things but try to express something of the fundamental spiritual reality behind this surface appearance. I try to express in visible form the oneness and unity of this invisible power, binding all things into one whole.’[xvii] Using lessons learnt from Orphism and Rayonism he constructed a pattern of rippling rays emanating from a central source of light. Within this structure he set objects and figures composed of abstract shapes and colours that are indicative of their spiritual qualities. A painting like No Parting includes natural formations, animals, human figures and plants held together, underpinned, in eternal circulation by the central point, which some may see as a pictorial device structuring a work of beauty and others as symbolic of God. In Universal Power - The Fourth Day of Creation we are shown a snapshot of creation, of the first reconciliation of shape and form. As Reilly's abstract shapes spiral out from the central point they coalesce into those same fundamental, elemental shapes of bird, plant and human life.

For David Jones reconciliation comes through the tangle of associations and allusions triggered by words and images. Caroline Collier has noted his ‘fondness for entwinings, for complications, interrelationships, layers and correspondences.’[xviii] We see this most clearly in his use of line but, as Nicolette Gray notes in her comments on Curtained Outlook, the level of unity achieved throughout his work is much greater than simply this alone:

‘The artist has woven a complex of components into a new unity. The verticals of the window-frame, the windows and balustrade of the house outside, and of the jug on the table, are counterbalanced by the horizontal of the sill and the balcony, and by the outward-moving diagonals of the table, the toothbrush and box lid, and the downward-moving lines of the house. Movement runs throughout the composition - there is not a single straight line, not a flat wash of colour. The sudden accents of colour/tone/drawing pick up the movement of the composition. The drawing itself is part soft pencil, part brush drawing in colour, here sketchy, there emphatic. All the elements are worked together: form and content have been reconciled, unity combined with movement.’[xix]

Giles Auty, in writing of Norman Adams, noted that he belongs ‘to a relatively small tradition of painters whose outlook is positive’: ‘An affirmative vision such as his is especially rare in the modern art of the West, artists preferring to shelter more frequently behind masks of disillusionment and cynicism. Indeed, such negative views of life have the additional bonus of being perennially in fashion, the large black-humoured painting sharing something of the timeless chic of the little black dress.’[xx] The tradition of affirmative, unitive, figurative art may be small yet it remains significant, if undervalued.

Wonderings

I wonder if you can recall a moment when something new was sparked in you.

I wonder if you can remember what led to that sparking and how it felt.

I wonder what you did with that new something.

Prayer

Creating God, for whom creation is your prayer, may I see creativity as noticing and naming, letting all things be by attending to them for your sake and to see your goodness; that all may be well and all manner of thing be well. Amen.

Spiritual exercise

Take the phrase ‘Through the veil’ and ruminate on it in your heart and mind. Create a list in whatever way you wish of all that this phrase brings to mind for you. Use your list to begin a creative project of whatever kind you wish entitled ‘Through the veil’.

Art actions

View John Reilly’s work at http://thejohnreillygallery.co.uk/index.htm.

Watch the documentary ‘Bill Viola: The Road to St Paul’s’ which follows the world’s most influential video artist Bill Viola and his wife and close collaborator Kira Perov over a twelve-year period as they undertake and complete the installation of their two permanent video works, Mary and Martyrs, in St. Paul’s Cathedral.
 

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


[i] L. Mamedova, ‘L’église Notre-Dame des Alpes à Saint-Gervais-le Fayet : une collaboration entre un architecte savoyard et un artiste genevois’, Publié dans L. el-Wakil et P. Vaisse, Genève-Lyon-Paris. Relations artistiques, réseaux, influences, voyages, Genève, Georg, 2004 - http://www.okam-design.com/lada/files/Fayet-article.pdf

[ii] M-A Couturier, ‘What Assy Teaches Us’ in Sacred Art, University of Texas Press, 1989, p.52

[iii] W.S. Rubin, Modern Sacred Art and the Church of Assy, Columbia University Press, New York & London, 1961

[iv] B. Flanagan, Written In My Soul, Omnibus Press, 1990, p. xii

[v] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.5

[vi] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, pps.90-91

[vii] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.50

[viii] C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.48

[ix] Cited in C. Kent & J. Steward, Learning by Heart, Allworth Press, 2008, p.94

[x] Ingo F. Walther and Rainer Metzger, Marc Chagall 1887 – 1985: Painting as Poetry, Taschen, 2000, p. 20

[xi] Ingo F. Walther and Rainer Metzger, Marc Chagall 1887 – 1985: Painting as Poetry, Taschen, 2000, p. 89

[xii] M. Riddell, God’s home page (Oxford: The Bible Reading Fellowship, 1998), pps.24 & 25

[xiii] M. Oakley, The Collage of God (London: Darton, Longman and Todd Ltd, 2001), p.21

[xiv] Writings and statements by the Artist, Cecil Collins A Retrospective Exhibition, Judith Collins, Tate Gallery, 1989

[xv] M. Walters in ‘Images of Christ’, Modern Painters VI/2

[xvi] Sister W. Beckett, ‘Norman Adams’ in Modern Painters IV/1

[xvii] J. Reilly, ‘Introduction’ in The Painted Word: Paintings by John Reilly, Cross Publishing, 2008

[xviii] Caroline Collier, ‘Under the Form of Paint ...’ in David Jones: Paintings. Drawings. Inscriptions. Prints., The South Bank Centre, 1989

[xix] N. Gray, The Paintings of David Jones, Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd, 1989

[xx] G. Auty, ‘An Affirmative View’ in Norman Adams, R.A., Christopher Hull Gallery, 1991


----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bob Dylan - Every Grain Of Sand.

Friday, 25 December 2020

And a little child shall lead them

Here's my sermon for Midnight Mass at St Martin-in-the-Fields

This will be a sign for you: you will find a child wrapped in bands of cloth and lying in a manger.

What does Christmas look like today? Artist Nicola Ravenscroft has given us a vivid portrayal in her installation ‘With the Heart of a Child.’ It's on display below us in our crypt. The crypt is currently closed, so I'm going to describe the sculpture to you. It shows us seven life-size bronze children - one from every continent on Earth. Each one is simply dressed in soft silk. Each is leaning forward hopefully as if poised to dive into the future. Their eyes are closed as if they are dreaming into their future, anticipating things unseen.

Nicola writes that, as mother, and artist, she has agonised at the sight of our fractured society, our impending climate catastrophe, and our collective fear. She sees a desperate need for creativity and togetherness to arrest this. Her belief is that children can quietly lead us into recognising the truth of our ‘universal ONENESS, our oneness with each other and our oneness with the Earth’. So, her response to the challenges we currently face, especially this Christmas, has been to create this international group of little leaders pointing us towards understanding and TOGETHERNESS. They are an encouragement ‘to do whatever it takes to find solutions, to heal our broken planet, and so, to save our future.’

The prophet Isaiah promised a child born for us who would establish endless peace upheld with justice and righteousness: ‘For a child has been born for us, a son given to us; authority rests upon his shoulders; and he is named Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.’ Isaiah also told of a little child who shall lead. He described a time when the wolf shall live with the lamb, the leopard lie down with the kid, the calf and the lion and the fatling together, and a little child shall lead them.

Isaiah's vision of the peaceable kingdom was centred on a child born to be the Prince of Peace. When that promised child came among us, he said: ‘Let the little children come to me, and do not stop them; for it is to such as these that the kingdom of God belongs’, ‘Unless you change and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven’, ‘Whoever becomes humble like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven’ and ‘Whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me.’

So, the child born for us in Bethlehem leads us to become like children. Why is this so? I want to suggest two reasons. The first is about a vulnerability revealing the interdependence of which Nicola speaks and the second, a way of looking revealing our connection with creation.

First, vulnerability. The Christmas story is that the God we think of as an all-powerful protector chose to become wholly dependent on human beings for his own protection. As a human baby God was wholly dependent on other human beings, primarily Mary and Joseph, for his protection and, as we hear regularly on the news, human beings don’t actually have a very good track record when it comes to treating children well. God was willing to take the risk of coming into our world; a world in which genocides occur and in which innocent children are abused and die - as happened with the massacre of the innocents in Bethlehem and beyond, a world in which he, though innocent, was tortured as a criminal and strung up on a cross to die:

“And the word became … / Wordless / Flesh / A baby with no words / And the voice of the maker became a hungry voice / A cry for food / A cry for milk / The voice that made gravity cried out for fear of falling / The voice that made women cries for a woman’s breast and screams with disappointment when it is denied …

Then now God is this small thing / Is a baby / Is a baby that can be dropped or hurt or left unfed, left unchanged, left wet and smelly / Or be child-abused.” (‘Image of the Invisible,’ Late, Late Service)

That was the reality of the incarnation and of the Christmas story. That is what it meant for Jesus to be born. It is the ultimate identification. God became flesh and blood and moved into our neighbourhood with all that that involves, not just at the beginning of his life but throughout. Why does this matter? It is when we are vulnerable that we are most aware of our need of others; that intrinsic interdependence that Nicola suggests is revealed to us by our experience of birth and childhood.

The sense of vulnerability engendered by the pandemic originally brought us a sense of community like never before as neighbours left notes offering help to those in their streets, as food banks supplied those in need, as we stood on our streets to applaud NHS and care workers, and as those same workers give sacrificially to care for those in need. If we follow the little child who leads we will see more community connection because, if we develop the heart of a child, our sense of vulnerability will reveal our interdependence and need one of another.

The second path to connection through childlikeness is about looking. As a baby Jesus was wholly dependent on others, as a child he began to explore the world around him using his sight, because sight precedes speech. We know from his parables and teaching that his learning was firmly rooted in the natural cycles of sowing, growing and reaping combined with deep appreciation for the beauty of the natural world, including the lilies of the field, and the value of each creature, including sparrows that cannot fall without God knowing. This understanding and appreciation derived from the attention he paid as a child to the natural world around him.

Artist and nun Sister Corita Kent once described a child’s journey from the front of the house to the back to illustrate the way children see the world, the attention they pay to it, and the wonder that they find. That short journey would ‘be full of pauses, circling, touching and picking up in order to smell, shake, taste, rub, and scrape’, ‘every object along the path will be a new discovery’ because ‘the child treats the situation with the open curiosity and attention that it deserves.’

Sister Corita went on to argue that through practice adults can learn once again to see as children do. She suggested that the kind slow looking practised by children, like prayer and art, enables us to view life without being distracted and allows us to put all our attention on a special area for a time. As would have been the case for the child Jesus, when we slow ourselves and focus our attention in this way we begin to receive what the world around has to show us; we notice things that others don’t and come to see that ordinary things are wondrous. The art historian John Ruskin claimed that the power of seeing in this way is ‘the teaching of all things,’ and that ‘To see clearly is poetry, prophecy, and religion – all in one.’

This is a form of prayer taking us to a place and space full of delight and wonder; prayer, poetry and prophecy. In this prayerful space and attitude we see the peaceable kingdom into which the child born in Bethlehem wishes to lead us. For many of us that was part of our original lockdown experience, as we walked in green spaces and, in the silence, heard the birds sing like never before.

Children naturally see that peaceable kingdom through the attention that they pay to the world around them, until we, as adults, teach them otherwise. That is why the children are our future and can lead the way into a better future. Like the poet Thomas Traherne, we need to unlearn the dirty devices of this world in order to become, as it were, a little child again that we may enter into the Kingdom of God.

Nicola Ravenscroft intuitively understands these truths and, as a maternal sculptor, creates children that through their connection to nature grant us a vision of the peaceable kingdom toward which they wish to lead us. In words taken from the novelist Joseph Conrad, her urgent prayer is that the children she has sculpted, ‘shall awaken in the hearts of the beholders, that feeling of unavoidable solidarity: of the solidarity in mysterious origin, in toil, in joy, in hope, in uncertain fate, which binds all to each other, and all humankind to the visible world.’

These are the children the adult Jesus called us to welcome, the children we are to become, the children to whom the peaceable kingdom belongs. They stand together peacefully in our Crypt as friends, vulnerable and strong, silently singing out their call to change. These little bronze children lead with trusting feet, plump and bare. The Prince of Peace is with them and calls us to let them lead the way saying the kingdom of heaven belongs to children, and anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it. 

Our world with its current catastrophes, fractures in society, and collective fears is crying out for change and hope. The baby born at Bethlehem remains the sign that we, too, need to be born again if our world is to know new life and fresh hope. That is the Christmas we need today and so, together with Nicola, my prayer is that we let the baby wrapped in bands of cloth and lying in a manger lead us to become like children ourselves; open to vulnerability, embracing interdependence, paying prayerful attention to the world and thereby entering Christ’s peaceable kingdom.


I will be continuing to explore the themes of the sermon in a new series of posts called 'Seeing is receiving: The art of contemplation', the first of which will follow this post. Click here to read the first post in this new series.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Randall Thompson - The Peaceable Kingdom.

Saturday, 18 April 2020

Andy Warhol: Catholicism, Work, Faith And Legacy

My latest piece for ArtWay was originally published by Artlyst and is about Andy Warhol and the Catholic faith as explored in exhibitions at the Andy Warhol MuseumTate Modern and the National Gallery:

'As Eugene McCarraher has explained, in The Enchantments of Mammon, ‘Warhol incorporated the formal aspects of Byzantine iconography into Pop Art.’ His ‘Campbell’s Soup cans and Coca-Cola bottles – mass-produced objects with no personal signature – recalled the anonymity and deliberate repetitiveness of Byzantine iconographers.’ ‘Warhol explained, “Pop Art is a way of liking things,” a celebration of those “great modern things” that comprise the humble matter of everyday life – a realm where, in Orthodox tradition, the divine always manifests itself sacramentally.’

The critics at the time failed to understand this aspect of Warhol’s work but it was clearly apparent to Sister Corita Kent on a visit in 1962 to the Ferus Gallery in LA to see Warhol’s breakthrough exhibition of Campbell’s Soup Cans. ‘Coming home,’ she said, ‘you saw everything like Andy Warhol.’ Kent found inspiration in signs and advertising for vibrant screen printed banners and posters that provided an opportunity to show the sacred in the most mundane.'

My visual meditations for ArtWay include work by María Inés Aguirre, Giampaolo Babetto, Marian Bohusz-Szyszko, Alexander de Cadenet, Christopher Clack, Marlene Dumas, Terry Ffyffe, Antoni Gaudi, Nicola Green, Maciej Hoffman, Giacomo Manzù, Michael Pendry, Maurice Novarina, Regan O'Callaghan, Ana Maria Pacheco, John Piper, Albert Servaes, Henry Shelton and Anna Sikorska.

My Church of the Month reports include: Aylesford Priory, Canterbury Cathedral, Chapel of St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus and the Holy Face, Hem, Chelmsford Cathedral, Churches in Little Walsingham, Coventry Cathedral, Église de Saint-Paul à Grange-Canal, Eton College Chapel, LumenMetz CathedralNotre Dame du Léman, Notre-Dame de Toute Grâce, Plateau d’Assy,Romont, Sint Martinuskerk Latem, St Aidan of Lindisfarne, St Alban Romford, St. Andrew Bobola Polish RC Church, St. Margaret’s Church, Ditchling, and Ditchling Museum of Art + Craft, St Mary the Virgin, Downe, and St Paul Goodmayes, as well as earlier reports of visits to sites associated with Marian Bohusz-Szyszko, Marc Chagall, Jean Cocteau, Antoni Gaudi and Henri Matisse.

Other of writings for ArtWay can be found here. My pieces for Church Times can be found here. Those for Artlyst are here and those for Art+Christianity are here.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Velvet Underground - Jesus.

Saturday, 28 March 2020

Artlyst: Art And Faith - A Time For Seeing

My latest article for Artlyst reflects on the possibilities that lockdown provides for contemplation through art:

'Works of art create their own space for contemplation and come alive when they are contemplated; firstly by the artist in their creation and secondly in their viewing by those who come to look. Art galleries are, therefore, places of contemplation and are generally constructed to facilitate this purpose, i.e. as minimalist white cubes containing little that will distract the viewer from the art ...

Whether we see connections or disjunctions between art and faith, this would seem to be a time for seeing – for insight – whether creating or contemplating. How will the art world create cells of contemplation now the galleries are closed and how will the cells we create teach us everything we need to know?'

My other Artlyst pieces are:

Interviews:

Articles:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Blind Boys of Alabama (featuring Justin Vernon) - Every Grain Of Sand.

Saturday, 21 March 2020

Slow Art: James Turell & Andy Warhol

The final chapter of Arden Reed’s 2017 book Slow Art: The Experience of Looking, Sacred Images to James Turrell compares and contrasts the work of Turrell and Andy Warhol in order to establish whether they are, respectively, ‘the Angel and Demon of Slow Art.’ It is of interest, therefore, that the exhibition of new works by Turrell at Pace Gallery overlapped briefly with the Warhol retrospective at Tate Modern, as this, too, enabled the opportunity to compare and contrast the work of both.

Slow art is structured to slow the viewer in order that greater attention is paid to the artwork generating a contemplative state. Reed argues therefore that ‘slow art is not a thing but an experience, an ongoing conversation between artwork and spectator.’ For Reed, the work of Turrell encapsulates slow art par excellence, while, for many, the perception of Warhol’s art and practice is the antithesis; being focused on ephemeral consumables – the instant and immediate. Reed, though, is aware of the way in which such stereotypes of Warhol’s art, as fast art, sell his actual practice short. Therefore, the overlapping of the Turrell and Warhol exhibitions in London at this time provide an opportunity to revisit the contrasts between the two, as made by Reed.

Turrell’s recent Constellation works, three of which are currently at Pace Gallery, are culminations of his lifelong pursuit of an art of light, space, and time. Presented in site-specific chambers, the works feature elliptical and circular shapes with a frosted glass surface animated by an array of technically advanced LED lights, which are mounted to a wall and generated by computer programming. With a run time of several hours, the programmes run on a loop that is imperceptible to the viewer generating light changes that are subtle and hypnotic, one colour morphing into the next.

The Constellation works generate what the artist has called ‘spaces within space.’ His luminous portals are instruments for altering our perception prompting a transcendental experience; gazing into them, as Oliver Shultz, Curatorial Director, Pace Gallery, notes, ‘results in the slow dissolution of the boundaries of the surrounding room, enveloping the viewer in the radiance of pure colour.’ That experience is not immediate, but is realised as the viewer settles in to the experience within a computer programmed loop running for hours, not minutes.

Turrell is, therefore, an artist of duration for whom ‘experiencing is the object’ and whose installations enable us to ‘perceive ourselves perceiving.’ He creates theatres of perception in which light shows are performed. Reed writes that this is like ‘watching a play in which little happens – one by Samuel Beckett, say – we sit (or stand, or lie down) and look at a stage where Turrell makes “light shows” – makes light show.’

In this way, he ritualizes looking by asking us to submit to the art and enter the experience. He says, ‘I don’t think I ask too much. I ask you to wait.’ Again, ‘I’m a slow guy. I like slow planes … In a way that’s true with art, too. Things that require more time give back more. I think it’s okay to take time. It seems more direct actually.’

Sleep, made over several nights in summer and autumn 1963 with a 16mm camera and shown at the start of the Tate’s retrospective, is a clear demonstration of Warhol as an artist of duration; as with Turrell, a slow artist. The film shows 22 close-ups of the poet John Giorno, who was briefly Warhol’s lover, as he sleeps in the nude. Warhol shot around 50 reels of film for Sleep, each one lasting only three minutes. He edited them to fashion a movie without movement. The final version repeats many scenes and lasts over five hours. It is projected in slow motion, giving a dream-like feel. Giorno said that Warhol made the movie Sleep ‘into an abstract painting: the body of a man as a field of light and shadow.’

Reed notes that the pacing and length of a work like Sleep ‘call to mind meditative practices.’ He quotes Jonas Mekas reflecting on Warhol’s use of cinema:

‘Film is transported to a plane that is outside the suspense, outside the plot, outside the climaxes … We study, watch, contemplate, listen – not so much for the ‘big actions’ but for the small words, intonations, colors of voices, colors of words … We begin to realize that we have never, really, seen haircutting, or eating,’ because ‘we watch a Warhol movie with no hurry. The first thing he does is to stop us from running.’

Mekas brings us to a second element of Warhol’s practice as a slow artist, which is to enable us to stop and see the fast, ephemeral or mundane aspects of our existence as though for the first time. Warhol said that ‘Pop artists did images that anybody walking down Broadway could recognize in a split second – comics, picnic tables, men’s trousers, celebrities, shower curtains, refrigerators, Coke bottles – all the great modern things that the Abstract Expressionists tried so hard not to notice at all.’ Artists notice things that others don’t and bring those things to our attention. So, while Pop art images could be recognized in a split second, they were not intended to be viewed in a split second. Instead, they enable us to realize that we have never really seen comics, picnic tables, men’s trousers, celebrities, shower curtains, refrigerators, Coke bottles etc. because we had only previously recognized them in a split second without paying them the attention that is their due.

Eugene McCarraher noted, in The Enchantments of Mammon, that Warhol said, ‘“Pop Art is a way of liking things,” a celebration of those “great modern things” that comprise the humble matter of everyday life – a realm where, in Orthodox tradition, the divine always manifests itself sacramentally.’ This aspect of Warhol’s art was immediately apparent to Sister Corita Kent on a visit in 1962 to the Ferus Gallery in LA to see Warhol’s breakthrough exhibition of Campbell’s Soup Cans. ‘Coming home,’ she said, ‘you saw everything like Andy Warhol.’ As a result, Kent found inspiration in signs and advertising for vibrant screen-printed banners and posters that provided an opportunity to show the sacred in the most mundane.

The Tate Retrospective explores the extent to which themes of faith recur throughout Warhol’s life, including concluding the exhibition with his vast 10-metre wide canvas Sixty Last Suppers created in 1986, a few months before the artist died in his sleep while recovering from gall bladder surgery. This poignant meditation on faith, death, immortality and the afterlife, depicts six rows of ten silkscreened images, each a black-and-white reproduction of Leonardo da Vinci’s iconic mural The Last Supper depicting Christ’s last meal with his disciples before the crucifixion. A copy of the image had hung in the Warhola family kitchen as Warhol was growing up. Warhol noted, ‘It’s a good picture … It’s something you see all the time. You don’t think about it.’ To make people see it and think about it, Warhol reproduced it 60 times. Thereby, he also evoked the re-enactment of the Last Supper that takes place during every Mass.

Like Warhol wanting us to stop and really see, Turrell is also concerned to take away the distance between ‘quotidian and spiritual,’ ‘beholder and beheld,’ in order to ‘bring the cosmos down’ in order that we call our everyday existence ‘a spiritual plane.’ His Quaker experience of ‘going to greet the light’ is, as Adam Gopnik has argued, to see that ‘the mystic’s white light and ecstasies are not dim apprehensions of another realm but experiences as real and as open to investigation as sleeping, eating and breathing.’

James Turrell, Pace Gallery, until 27 March 2020
Andy Warhol, Tate Modern, until 6 September 2020

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Velvet Underground & Nico - Sunday Morning.


Sunday, 29 December 2019

Artlyst - Andy Warhol: Catholicism His Work, Faith And Legacy

My latest piece for Artlyst is about Andy Warhol and the Catholic faith as explored in a current  exhibition at the Andy Warhol Museum and future exhibitions at Tate Modern and the National Gallery:

'As Eugene McCarraher has explained, in The Enchantments of Mammon, ‘Warhol incorporated the formal aspects of Byzantine iconography into Pop Art.’ His ‘Campbell’s Soup cans and Coca-Cola bottles – mass-produced objects with no personal signature – recalled the anonymity and deliberate repetitiveness of Byzantine iconographers.’ ‘Warhol explained, “Pop Art is a way of liking things,” a celebration of those “great modern things” that comprise the humble matter of everyday life – a realm where, in Orthodox tradition, the divine always manifests itself sacramentally.’

The critics at the time failed to understand this aspect of Warhol’s work but it was clearly apparent to Sister Corita Kent on a visit in 1962 to the Ferus Gallery in LA to see Warhol’s breakthrough exhibition of Campbell’s Soup Cans. ‘Coming home,’ she said, ‘you saw everything like Andy Warhol.’ Kent found inspiration in signs and advertising for vibrant screen printed banners and posters that provided an opportunity to show the sacred in the most mundane.'

My other Artlyst pieces are:

Interviews:

Christopher Clack: Connecting The Material And Immaterial
Peter Howson Artlyst Interview
Marleen Hengelaar-Rookmaaker On The Legacy Of ArtWay
Alastair Gordon A Testament To His Faith
Katrina Moss Chaiya Art Awards Interview: Where is God in our 21st century world?
Apocalypse Now: Michael Takeo Magruder Interviewed
Jonathan Anderson: Religious Inspirations Behind Modernism
Caravan – An Interview With Rev Paul Gordon Chandler On Arts Peacebuilding
Art Awakening Humanity Alexander de Cadenet Interviewed
Michael Pendry New Installation Lights Up St Martin In The Fields
Mark Dean Projects Stations of the Cross Videos On Henry Moore Altar


Articles:

Kiki Smith: Embodied Art
Art and Christianity Awards A Positive New Millennium Legacy
Arnulf Rainer: 90th Birthday Exhibition Celebrated At Albertina Museum
A Belonging Project And Exiles Loss and Displacement
Robert Polidori: Fra Angelico Opus Operantis
Art, Faith, Church Patronage and Modernity
Contemplating the Spiritual in Contemporary Art
Mat Collishaw Challenges Faith Perspectives With Ushaw Installation
Waterloo Festival Launches At St. John’s Waterloo
John Bellany Alan Davie Spiritual Joy and Magic
RIFT Unites 17 Art and Science MA Graduates At Central St Martins
Visionary Cities: Michael Takeo Magruder – British Library
Van Gogh’s Religious Journey Around London
William Congdon Holy Sites And The Kettle’s Yard Connection
Mark Dean Premieres Pastiche Mass At Banqueting Hall Chelsea College of Arts
John Kirby: The Torment Underlying The Civilised Facade
Curating Spiritual Sensibilities In Changing Times
Ken Currie: Protest Defeat And Victory
Bosco Sodi: A Moment Of Genesis
Bill Viola And The Art Of Contemplation
Art In Churches 2018: Spiritual Combinations Explored
Sister Wendy Beckett – A Reminiscence
Guido Guidi: Per Strada Flowers Gallery London
Peter Howson: The play is over – Flowers Gallery
Camille Henrot: Scientific History And Creation Story Mash Up
Nicola Green Explores Recent And Contemporary Religious Leaders – St Martin-in-the-Fields
Art And The Consequences Of War Explored In Two Exhibitions
Helaine Blumenfeld Translating Her Vision
Sacred Noise: Explores Religion, Faith And Divinity
Bill Viola: Quiet Contemplative Video Installation St Cuthbert’s Church Edinburgh
The ground-breaking work of Sister Corita Kent
Picasso To Souza: The Crucifixion Imagery Rarely Exhibited
Michael Takeo Magruder: De / coding the Apocalypse – Panacea Museum
Giorgio Griffa: The Golden Ratio And Inexplicable Knowledge
Arabella Dorman Unveils New Installation At St James Church Piccadilly
Can Art Transform Society?
Art Awakening Humanity Conference Report
Central St Martins in the Fields Design Then And Now
The Sacramental And Liturgical Nature Of Conceptual Art
Polish Art In Britain Centenary Marked At London’s Ben Uri Gallery
Refugee Artists Learning from The Lives Of Others
The Religious Impulses Of Robert Rauschenberg
The Christian Science Connection Within The British Modern Art Movement
Artists Rebranding The Christmas Tree Tradition
Art Impacted - A Radical Response To Radicalisation
The Art of St Martin-in-the-Fields and
Was Caravaggio A Good Christian?

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Lou Reed and John Cale - Work.