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Showing posts with label cazalet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cazalet. Show all posts

Friday, 9 February 2024

Art review: Everywhere is Heaven: Stanley Spencer and Roger Wagner at the Stanley Spencer Gallery, Cookham

My latest exhibition review for Church Times is on “Everywhere is Heaven: Stanley Spencer and Roger Wagner” is at the Stanley Spencer Gallery:

'Ultimately, in terms of look and feel, I think that Wagner is closer to his peers, such as Mark Cazalet and Thomas Denny, with whom and others he is part of a loose grouping, than to either Spencer or Blake, although being part of a clear lineage that includes both. Transcendent trees are a significant feature of the work of Cazalet, Denny, and Wagner, particularly in church contexts; and Wagner’s The Flowering Tree is a particularly wonderful example. These are Edenic trees of life, which often, as here, include reference to the tree on which Christ was crucified.

Such reference and focus may place this group of artists closer to the visions of artists such as Samuel Palmer and David Jones than to those of Spencer and Blake. The synergies and contrasts generated by this fascinating exhibition point, perhaps, towards a further and broader exhibition to document the legacy and lineage of British visionary art from Blake onwards, and encompass those mentioned in this review, among others, including Spencer and Wagner in particular.'

Click here to read my Seen & Unseen article on this exhibition and the tradition of visionary artists whose works shed light on the material and spiritual worlds. The friendship between Mark Cazalet, Thomas Denny, Richard Kenton Webb, Nicholas Mynheer, and Roger Wagner is explored here. My writings on Richard Kenton Webb can be read here and here.

Other of my pieces for Church Times can be found here. My writing for ArtWay can be found here. My pieces for Artlyst are here, those for Seen & Unseen are here, and those for Art+Christianity are here.

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Roger Wagner - I Saw The Seraphim.

Friday, 24 September 2021

Global Images of Christ

A landmark exhibition of over 40 works of art, sculpture, and images from artists such as Mark Cazalet, Peter Eugene Ball, and Lorna May Wadsworth will challenge our perceptions of how Jesus Christ and other people of faith are depicted.

The exhibition opens at Chester Cathedral on 25 September and runs every day until the end of October.

The diocesan Race and Ethnicity Forum has been the catalyst for the exhibition and its chair, the Revd Canon Lameck Mutete, Rector of Tattenhall, Handley, and Burwardsley parishes, says: "It is our hope that this Global Images of Christ exhibition will not only be an opportunity for us to listen, learn and be transformed but bring all God's people to an understanding that the God we worship is neither black nor white but a God of all people."

When: Everyday from 25 September to 30 October
Where: Chester Cathedral
Cost: FREE, donations welcome

A special teaching day will take place on 28 October in partnership with the Global Images of Christ, a landmark exhibition of over 40 works of art, sculpture, and images that will challenge our perceptions of how Jesus Christ and other people of faith are depicted.

The teaching day aims to help people think through the issues of race and ethnicity as they affect the Church today.

The teaching day is open to all, lay and ordained.

When: 28 October, 10 - 4pm
Where: In the Nave of Chester Cathedral
Cost: FREE

Speakers include the Revd Cham Kaur-Mann, the Revd Shemil Matthew, and the Revd Dr Calvin Samuel.

Revd Cham Kaur-Mann is the first Asian woman Minister with the Baptist Union of Great Britain. She says: "I now appreciate that my cultural heritage - the way I eat my food, the unique perspective I hold, and the lens through which I look at the world - are all a gift from God to the body of Christ. In the words of a wise friend, I remind myself, ‘God has called me, because of who I am and not in spite of who I am.’"

Revd Shemil Mathew has recently been appointed as the Vice-Dean of Emmanuel Theological College. Shemil was born and raised in Kerela, India, in the Christian church descended from the Apostle Thomas. He has wide experience of working with Anglican communion churches in Asia and Africa and has worked as a teacher in Sri Lanka. He is also the General Secretary of the Anglican Minority Ethnic Network (AMEN).

Revd Dr Calvin Samuel is a Methodist Minister serving in the Bedford, Essex and Hertfordshire District. Born in Barbados and raised in Antigua before coming to Britain to study for a BA in Theology and Pastoral Studies at Nazarene Theological College in Manchester, Calvin went on to complete an MBA at Manchester Business School before pursuing PhD research in New Testament at King’s College London.

Book your place on Chester Cathedral's website here.

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Karen Peris - Superhero.

Saturday, 9 January 2016

Southwell Minister: The Art of Mary


A major exhibition of new art on the theme of ‘Mary’ is to be shown at Southwell Minster during January 2016. Over 20 significant contemporary artists have made major new works specifically for an ambitious exhibition that will see art shown all over the cathedral, both inside and outside. Timed to coincide with the Patronal Festival of Candlemas at the Minster the exhibition will be supported by a programme of events and will be open to the public for free over the month.

The exhibition was planned by the cathedral art group, and Fr Matthew Askey says: “The Art of Mary is a rare opportunity for us to see a large collection of brand new art from many of the most significant artists working with Christian themes in Britain today. It is of national importance and is a once in a generation snapshot of these artist’s views of ideas and stories associated with Mary, the mother of Jesus, who is one of the most significant, but neglected, figures in our shared cultural story. Mary was remarkable for the time and she has many things to show us and inspire us with today. She was an unmarried teenage mother, on the run, a refugee really, and at the same time through both her vulnerability and her determined strength she embodies so many positive characteristics of motherhood and what it means to be a woman today. Mary ultimately said ‘yes!’ to life, and gave herself into the hands of God’s love, and this is something that resulted in the life of the most inspiring person who has ever lived, Jesus, and then the birth of the world-wide Church that followed. The Church has 2 billion members today world-wide, is still growing, and about 32% of the world’s population are involved in some way with its acts of charity and life-transforming message of forgiveness and love for all people. Mary is right at the root and start of this movement of love.”

Some of the artists showing new artworks at the Art of Mary exhibition include: Mark Cazalet, Chris Gollon, Susie Hamilton, Sophie Hacker, Iain McKillopNicholas MynheerCelia PaulAnna SikorskiRoger Wagner and many others.

The Art of Mary is at Southwell Minster from Sat 9th Jan – Fri 5th Feb 2016, admission is free. A full colour illustrated exhibition guide is available.

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Shirlie Roden and Adrian Snell - Look At Us Now.

Sunday, 31 May 2015

Sabbatical art pilgrimage: Latest ArtWay report

My latest Church of the Month report for ArtWay focuses on St Alban Romford. Featuring fifteen Stations of the Cross by Charles Gurrey, a Christus Rex by Peter Eugene Ball, seven stained glass windows by Patrick Reyntiens, and a chancel ceiling mural by Mark Cazalet, the church is a fine example of contemporary ecclesiastical art.

This Church of the Month report follows on from others about Aylesford Priory, Canterbury CathedralChapel of St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus and the Holy Face, HemChelmsford Cathedral, Lumen, Notre Dame du Léman, Romont, Sint Martinuskerk Latem, St Aidan of Lindisfarne and St Mary the Virgin, Downe, as well as earlier reports of visits to sites associated with Marian Bohusz-Szyszko, Marc Chagall, Jean Cocteau, Antoni Gaudi and Henri Matisse.

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Arvo Part - The Deer's Cry.

Friday, 16 May 2014

Sabbatical art pilgrimage: St Alban's Romford









St Alban,Protomartyr, Romford has been transformed from a modest suburban church into a place of beauty and excellence that can be seen as a centre for significant works of Ecclesiastical Art. Father Roderick Hingley, the Parish Priest who has led this transformation, believes the visual arts are “a great vehicle for communicating the Christian Gospel,” thinks that we are living through an exciting period in Ecclesiastical Art and, therefore, encourages others to be bold, creative and adventurous in the commissioning of original art.

Fr. Hingley’s work at St Alban began with a major re-ordering of the church from 1992-1995 which removed the cluttered and over-furnished interior that he found on arrival. This work laid a foundation on which it has been possible to build well in excess of 20 separate commissions leading to twenty-one Diocesan Advisory Committee Design Awards. Among the most significant of these are fifteen Stations of the Cross by Charles Gurrey, a Christus Rex by Peter Eugene Ball, seven stained glass windows by Patrick Reyntiens and a chancel ceiling mural by Mark Cazalet.

Gurrey’s Stations are carved in European Oak with their irregular sizes governed by each individual design. They speak with an eloquent minimalism; each piece focussing on a detail from the station and stimulating the viewers imagination to picture the fuller scene. Christ’s face remains unseen until the final resurrection station.            

The Christus Rex at St Alban is the first that Ball has carved of Christ as Supreme and Eternal High Priest. This Christ, gilded with red and gold and clothed with chasuble and stole, springs forth from the brick wall to embrace and bless the congregation below. Cazalet, on first coming into St Alban, was struck by the visual link between this golden Christ and the rich colours of Reyntien’s sanctuary stained glass. 

Reyntien's helped redefine the medium of stained glass through his collaborations with John Piper. Among their numerous ecclesiastical and secular commissions in Britain and USA were the iconic Baptistery Window at Coventry Cathedral and their 'Crown of Glass' at Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral. On his own Reyntiens has also made windows from Washington DC to Southwell Minster and his work has been an inspiration to contemporary glass art workers. It was his windows at Southwell Minister - as here, filled with angels - which encouraged Fr Hingley to approach him regarding work at St Alban's. 

Here, five angelic windows fill the sanctuary with light and movement, their colours washing over the stone altar and steps. The central three angels hold the crucifix, host and chalice while the north and south angels are less dense in colour to allow for a greater play of light on the altar and echo each other in their interplay of rose and fire imagery combined with words from Mother Julian and T.S. Eliot.

Cazalet then further linked the Angel windows with the Christus Rex through a mural covering the chancel ceiling and depicting the angels of the four elements of creation: air, fire, earth and water. Mirroring the church’s transition from the variegated blues of its baptistery window to its light-filled sanctuary, Cazalet’s mural moves from the dark blue of the winter night to the light and yellows of the summer sun. The light touch of this work extends to Cazalet’s humorous angels soaring above and engaging with the sights and sounds of Romford including its commuters, shoppers, clubbers and parishioners.

Fr. Hingley has a significant involvement in the schools of the parish and groups of schoolchildren often visit the church. Many of the commissions at St Albans have been made with children in mind, including Cazalet’s mural. Hingley’s community links have also been a major source of support in raising funds for the many commissions. In addition to the support of the schools, funds have also been raised by church members and local businesses (Hingley has been Chaplain to the local Chamber of Commerce) and through bequests and grants (including a major award from the Jerusalem Trust for the Cazalet mural).  

As a result, these commissions have given the parish a 'beyond-the-parish ministry' in that other parishes considering commissions are regularly recommended to visit St Alban's in order to see what has been achieved, be inspired, gain ideas and be put in touch with artists. Visits also come as a result of the parish participating in borough-based Open House and Art Trail events as well as school visits. As Chairman of Governors and Link-Governor for Art and Design at The Frances Bardsley School for Girls, Fr. Hingley has played a significant role in the development of the School as a centre of excellence for the Arts including the Brentwood Road Gallery and commissions at the School by Reyntiens and Cazalet. This engagement, which has led to the School joining the Chelmsford Diocesan Board of Education Affiliated Schools Scheme, enables the School, Parish and Diocese to "support each other in the spirit of Christian fellowship and service" finding "innovative ways of working together and learning from one another." One outcome is the inclusion of artworks by students which will feature in the church as part of its forthcoming Fan the Flame mission week.

At St Alban, Protomartyr, Romford, a rather dull traditional church building has been made to sing by becoming a treasure house filled with high quality and varied works of art; all in the context of a church aspiring to do all it does as well as it possibly can. Most churches which have significant commissions have accumulated their holdings over many years and through the ministry of many priests. It is a rare and special achievement to re-order and re-fit an entire church within the ministry of one parish priest and to do so with such a degree of attention to both quality and mission.

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Igor Stravinsky - Symphony Of Psalms.  

Saturday, 10 May 2014

Sabbatical Art Pilgrimage: Chelmsford Cathedral




I began my sabbatical art pilgrimage in familiar territory as Chelmsford Cathedral is 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. Despite its familiarity for me, Chelmsford Cathedral continues to surprise and entrance.

On this occasion I was one of nearly 700 worshippers from across Essex and East London communities who joined Her Majesty The Queen and HRH The Duke of Edinburgh for a service to celebrate the centenary of Chelmsford Diocese. The Rt. Revd. Stephen Cottrell, Bishop of Chelmsford, said in his sermon:

"We bring good news. We sing the song of him before whom every knee must bow, and yet whose
‘coming alongside us and moving ahead of us’ gospel means, paradoxically, that he is the one who
kneels before us, who comes, if you like, as a servant, a slave, washes our feet, offers broken
bread, wipes every tear from every eye, longs for us to know that we matter, that we are loved,
that we are precious to God. He is King of Kings and Lord of Lords, and yet, at the same time, he
is servant and shepherd. He is light in the darkest hour. Hope in the bleakest despair. A reason for

going forwards, when everyone else turns back. He is joy. He is peace. He is love itself."

Those paradoxes are imaged in the range of artwork commissioned for this church over the 100 years that it has been a Cathedral.




Peter Eugene Ball and Mark Cazalet are two names that we will encounter again on this sabbatical art pilgrimage as they are among those contemporary artists who have most frequently been 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. 



Cedd is the subject of Cazalet's engraved glass window in the St Cedd's Chapel and 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, as it is, by the sense of place found within the English Romantic landscape tradition. Cazalet's image of an Essex oak exemplifies lines written by his friend and fellow artist, Roger Wagner: "And that exulting love which made all things / Whose laughter is the ocean in a tree / That rustles like a thousand angels’ wings / Stirred by a wind no human eye can see."




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 will prove to be another recurring feature of this sabbatical art 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."


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. Similarly, in his sermon, Stephen Cottrell, spoke of "the faithful, tireless, tenacious, beautiful witness of Christian men and women continues to make a difference: in Chingford and Chelmsford, Harwich and Harlow, Becontree
and Basildon and Boxted, right across this complicated and glorious diocese."  

 
 

The number and variety of commissions which feature within this Cathedral mean that even in a packed service, such as that on May 6, 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 many of which were created by nuns from the Community of St John the Baptist at Tolleshunt Knights.

Bishop Stephen concluded his sermon with these words: "In the midst of war, in the relative security of peace, in hardship and in plenty, in village, suburb and inner city, today we thank God for the church, which is the body of Christ, the sign of God’s loving presence and God’s eternal purposes for the world." The artworks found within this Cathedral Church are also signs of that loving presence and his eternal purposes for the world.

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John Ireland - Te Deum Laudamus. 

Monday, 7 February 2011

Launch of new Art Trail for the Barking Episcopal Area


“For centuries the Arts have been an important medium through which public communication of the faith has taken place and the Church has had a lengthy and happy marriage with the Arts” (Bishop of Barking).

Work has just been finalised on a new Art Trail which has been initiated by commission4mission and hopes to raise awareness of some of the rich and diverse range of modern and contemporary arts and crafts from the last 100 years within 36 churches in the Barking Episcopal area. These significant works of art collectively represent a major contribution to the legacy of the church as an important commissioner of art; through this new art trail, it is hoped to increase interest and stimulate engagement with the visual arts in the service of contemporary Christian faith.

The deep relationship between the church and the arts continued to be fruitful throughout the Twentieth century in the Barking Episcopal Area with the contributions of significant artists such as Eric Gill, Hans Feibusch, John Hutton and John Piper. In recent years, churches have continued to commission work by many important artists such as Mark Cazalet, Jane Quail and Henry Shelton together with other emerging artists who are now coming to prominence.

The visual arts can contribute to the mission of the church by speaking eloquently of the Christian faith; providing a reason for people to visit a church; making a link between churches and local organisations and providing a focus around which local people can come together for a shared activity. For these, and other, reasons there are more than 30 churches in the Barking Episcopal Area which have significant artworks on show and which are included on the Art Trail.

A leaflet documenting the Art Trail , which has been researched and developed by commission4mission member, artist and Fine Arts lecturer, Mark Lewis, will publicise the Trail and provide information about the featured artists and churches.

The Art Trail for the Barking Episcopal Area is to be launched at St Pauls Goodmayes on Thursday 17th February at 12.00 noon by the Bishops of Chelmsford and Barking. You are invited to join them for the launch reception. Please RSVP to jonathan.evens@btinternet.com or 020 8599 2170.

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John Tavener - Song of the Angel.

Saturday, 14 November 2009

c4m webpage update (28)

This week I have begun adding summaries of the presentations given at commission4mission's recent Study Day to the c4m webpage. To date, my introduction and the presentation by Peter Judd, Cathedral Dean, have been added. Peter Judd shared stories of commissioning a range of works from artists such as John Piper, Mark Cazalet and Peter Eugene Ball.

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Bruce Cockburn - World of Wonders.

Tuesday, 17 March 2009

One of us

I've been asked what appropriate images of Christ there might be for use on a council housing estate parish in the Diocese of Carlisle. This raises issues as to why images that resonate with folk elsewhere shouldn't also resonate with those on council housing estates but is, in this case, I think simply a request for images of Christ with an urban context.

I suggested that the best place to start may be with Peter Howson. Howson has established a formidable reputation as one of his generation's leading figurative painters. Many of his paintings derive inspiration from the streets of Glasgow, where he was brought up. He is renowned for his penetrating and vigorous insight into the human condition, and his heroic portrayals of the mighty and meek.

Steven Berkoff has written that:

"Peter Howson's work tends to arrest you in your tracks; it grabs you by the throat and then leaves you feeling quite different to the way you were before. His bodies flow in a horrendous voluptuous twist of flesh, like think-coded branches of trees. They seem almost torn out of the earth itself; it's as if they were heaved from its bowels. He paints in a style that reminds you of Breughel and William Blake, using terrible mythic figures as he puts the modern world into his fables."

Examples of Howson's work can be found by clicking here and here. In a similar but possibly more ironic vein Kosta Kulundzic.

There is also a strand of contemporary art that sets Biblical stories and imagery in contemporary settings. There have been many Modern artists producing this kind of work from Stanley Spencer through Carel Weight to Betty Swanwick. Mark Cazalet is a good example of an artist working out of this tradition and using much urban imagery as he does so. Examples Can be found here, here, here, here, here and here.

Two books worth looking at in this vein are 'Angels of Soho' by Anna and Norman Adams and 'Allegories of Heaven' by Dinah Roe Kendall.

Albert Herbert was an artist with a powerful and original poetic vision. For five decades he consistently painted surprising and dream-like images—these seemingly naïve yet sophisticated paintings were the result of his life-long journey exploring 'what lies beneath the surface of the mind'. See a wonderful Passion painting here.

The website for the Asian Christian Art Association has a wide range of work grouped according to Biblical themes.

I am involved with a new arts organisation called commission4mission which aims to encourage the commissioning and placing of contemporary Christian Art in churches, as a means of fundraising for charities and as a mission opportunity for the churches involved. Henry Shelton is the founder of the organisation and examples of his work can be found here, here and here.

Temporary or public art can often work well in an urban setting as in projects with which I have been involved - see here, here, here and here. Finally, here is a contemporary resurrection image that I was involved in commissioning from Alan Stewart.

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Joan Osborne & Outta Control - One Of Us.

Saturday, 7 March 2009

commission4mission's launch

Bishop David, the Patron of commission4mission, giving his keynote speech

Fr. Hingley speaking about commissions for the interior of St Albans

Fr. Hingley showing the sandblasted glass entrance doors at St Albans

Peter Webb and Fr. Hingley lead the returning party from the exterior artworks

Fr. Hingley begins his presentation and tour

commission4mission enjoyed a successful launch today at St Alban's Romford.
Fr. Roderick Hingley, St Alban's Parish Priest, gave a tour of the artworks commissioned for the church and described how the series of commissions had helped to transform the church in terms of light, space and welcome. He spoke about the way in which commissioning contemporary artists had meant that the artworks had relevance and resonance for local people, most obviously in the Mark Cazalet cancel ceiling mural with its imagery drawn from rural and urban Havering. What the achievement at St Alban's demonstrates is not only that the commissioning of contemporary Christian Art by Parish Churches is possible but that sensitive, informed and brave commissioning enhances the mission of the church as well as its aesthetic.
I gave a brief presentation of the aim and objectives of commission4mission which also set out our initial programme:
• exhibitions at Pentecost Festival (30th May) & Chelmsford Cathedral (2nd-7th November);
• study day at Chelmsford Cathedral (7th November);
• exploration of four possible commissions with two proposals submitted;
• co-operation with the Faith & Image group;
• application submitted for catalogue funding;
• art workshop at ‘Fun in the Park’ in Barkingside (13 June);
• invitation to be part of London-wide discussions on art in religious spaces;
• invitation to exhibit in the West Ham Festival; and
• support from Bishop of Barking for commission4mission leaflets.
Finally, Bishop David gave the keynote address as Patron of commission4mission. He began by speaking about creativity as both God-given and a key aspect of what it means to be human. He described the birth and growth of a child into adulthood as the most astonishing kinetic sculpture. He outlined how he saw spirituality breaking through in much contemporary and modern art and called for Christians to be sensitive interpreters of such art. Among the examples he cited were the humanity of Anthony Gormley's work based as it is on his own body and the 'something more' of Damien Hirst's diamond encrusted skull, For The Love Of God. He ended by using a quote attributed to Rowan Williams “that artists are special people but every person is a special kind of artist.” commission4mission would need, he suggested, to be a support the special people that artists are in their creativity but also to find ways of revealing and developing the creativity of all.
Among those present at the launch were representatives of the Arts Centre Group, Faith & Image and the World Art Federation.
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Eric Bibb - Connected.

Sunday, 22 February 2009

Everyday epiphanies

Another book that I found in the RA's bookshop was Betty Swanwick: Artist and Visionary.

Swanwick described herself as "part of a small tradition of English panting that is a bit eccentric, a little odd and a little visionary." This tradition begins with William Blake and Samuel Palmer and continues through Stanley Spencer and Cecil Collins to artists such as Albert Herbert, Ken Kiff, Norman Adams, Evelyn Williams, Carel Weight, Margaret Neve, Roger Wagner, Mark Cazalet, Dinah Roe-Kendall and Greg Tricker.

In the book Paddy Rossmore writes that Swanwick had in common with many other artists in this tradition, "the pursuit of the hidden reality behind appearance or - more specifically in her case - the connection between religious phenomena and psychic (or subliminal) processes." "She talked of 'biblical goings-on' in her late work" and "painted many pictures which relate to the great religious themes and stories from the Old and New Testaments." Rossmore argues that her late work "would seem to belong to that tradition in visionary painting whose strangeness is accompanied by a facility for penetrating spiritual insight and understanding."

The work of many of the artists in this tradition seeks to reveal everyday epiphanies, heaven in ordinary life, and Swanwick was no exception writing that she felt that "many people narrow life much too much" and so in her pictures she tried "to put the real thing, the miracle of it - indefinable because everything is connected."

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The Kinks - Days.

Thursday, 8 January 2009

Launching commission4mission

Not Worthy So Much by Henry Shelton

Worth Abbey by Jonathan Evens


Bishop David with landscape

The Garden Door by Celia Ward

Pieta by Rosalind Hore
A new arts organisation formed by artists and clergy within the Chelmsford Diocese is to be launched in March 2009. commission4mission aims to encourage the commissioning and placing of contemporary Christian Art in churches, as a means of fundraising for charities and as a mission opportunity for the churches involved.

commission4mission is the brainchild of the artist Henry Shelton, a member of All Saints Goodmayes, and has Bishop David as its Patron. The organisation will be launched on Saturday 7th March with an event at St Albans Romford beginning at 2.00pm. Bishop David will give a keynote address and Fr. Roderick Hingley will give an art tour of the many recent commissions installed at St Albans. A brief AGM will be followed by refreshments and the event is open to all who wish to find out more about this exciting new venture.

The idea for commission4mission was developed after Bishop David dedicated a set of memorial etched glass windows by Henry Shelton at All Saints Goodmayes. Bishop David says:

“I think there is a big need to re-engage with the Arts. The Church has had a lengthy and happy marriage with the Arts in the past but this has eroded in recent times. I agree with Rowan Williams that the Church needs more artists and “that artists are special people but every person is a special kind of artist.” I think that there is great scope in the Church encouraging creative expression in everyone as this is a way of helping us to be fully human. Where appropriate that flowering of artistic expression can be expressed in Church as, for example, an outflow of worship. We are fellow-creators with God and need to remember that he is creator as well as redeemer.”

Henry Shelton agrees and explains that:

“the purpose of the Society will be to promote modern Christian Art in all its forms (i.e. painting, sculpture, music etc.) and by doing so to raise money for charity, particularly children’s charities. I want us to be offering quality work and craftsmanship, rather than mass-produced work, to continue the legacy of the Church as a great commissioner of art. The Church has, in fact, commissioned some of the greatest works of art ever produced.”

St Albans Romford has been chosen as the venue for the launch of commission4mission on account of more than 20 separate commissions leading to twelve Diocesan Advisory Committee Design Awards. Among the most significant of these are fifteen Stations of the Cross by Charles Gurrey, a Christus Rex by Peter Eugene Ball, seven stained glass windows by Patrick Reyntiens and a chancel ceiling mural by Mark Cazalet.

Fr. Roderick Hingley is the Parish Priest who has led the transformation of St Alban, Protomartyr, Romford from being a modest suburban church into a place of beauty and excellence that can be seen as a centre for significant works of Ecclesiastical Art. He believes the Visual Arts are “a great vehicle for communicating the Christian Gospel,” thinks that we are living through an exciting period in Ecclesiastical Art and, therefore, encourages others to be bold, creative and adventurous in the commissioning of original art.

Membership of commission4mission is open to any Christian artist (of any discipline) or supporter of Christian Art. commission4mission promotes the purchase of artworks by churches through donations given in memory of loved ones, with these people being commemorated in plaques placed (wherever possible) on or near the artwork itself. All commissions undertaken by commission4mission involve a significant proportion of the overall cost being donated to charity.

Interest in commission4mission prior to its launch has been considerable with artists joining the organisation, potential commissions being explored, and plans developed for future exhibitions and events, including a showcase exhibition and study day at Chelmsford Cathedral in November 2009.

For more information about the launch event, joining commission4mission, commissioning work or hosting an exhibition, please contact me on 020 8599 2170 or jonathan.evens@btinternet.com.

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Lone Justice - Shelter.

Wednesday, 17 December 2008

Re-engaging with the Arts

Bishop David, Patron of commission4mission

Henry Shelton with 'Do this in remembrance of me'

Rosalind Hore's 'Pieta'
Bishop David has just sent out his Advent mailing including a new publicity leaflet for commission4mission. Bishop David writes that, commission4mission "has come into being this summer as a result of conversations I have had with some artists in the Barking Area."
He adds that, "for centuries the Arts have been an important medium through which public communication of the faith has taken place." In the leaflet he says that “the Church has had a lengthy and happy marriage with the Arts in the past but needs more artists." He agrees with Rowan Williams that ‘artists are special people and every person is a special kind of artist’ and writes that there is a big need for the Church "to re-engage with the Arts."
commission4mission exists to encourage the commissioning and placing of contemporary Christian Art in churches, as a means of fundraising for charities and as a mission opportunity for churches.

commission4mission promotes the purchase of artworks by churches through donations given in memory of loved ones, with these people being commemorated in plaques placed (wherever possible) on or near the artwork itself.

Membership of commission4mission is open to any Christian artist (of any discipline) or supporter of Christian Art. commission4mission members pay an annual subscription and for this receive: a vote in organising committee elections; places on commission4mission events/ conferences; and promotion of their work to churches through commission4mission’s activities.
The fees for all artwork (of whatever type and media) sold to churches through commission4mission are determined using the following:
  • a charge for materials/expenses claimed by the artist in creation of the work;
  • an optional fee to the artist for the creation of the work;
  • a contribution towards the work of co-mission; and
  • a donation to a charity or charities.
commission4mission’s objectives are to:
  • provide opportunities for churches to obtain and commission contemporary Christian Art for church buildings;
  • provide information, ideas and examples of contemporary Christian Art and its use/display within church settings; and
  • raise funds for charities through commissions and sales of contemporary Christian Art.
As a result we are involved in:

1. Creating a database of members able to create artworks for churches.

2. Promoting an approach to the commissioning and placing of contemporary Christian Art in churches as a means of fundraising for charities.

3. Organising conferences, exhibitions, meetings, seminars, visits etc. to provide information, ideas and examples of contemporary Christian Art and its use/display within church settings.

4. Displaying member’s work through brochures, exhibitions, leaflets, websites etc.

At present Henry Shelton and I, as founding members, are building up an initial pool of members (both artists of all disciplines and those interested in supporting the arts). We are planning towards:
  • a launch event on Saturday 7th March at St Albans Romford which will include: a art tour of St Albans by Father Hingley (includes works by Mark Cazalet, Patrick Reyntiens, Peter Eugene-Ball etc.); a commission4mission AGM; a keynote speech by the Bishop of Barking; and refreshments; and
  • a showcase exhibition (2nd - 7th November) and study day (7th November) at Chelmsford Cathedral which will include input on commissions from the Dean of Chelmsford Cathedral, Chelmsford DAC, and the Bishop of Barking.
Our members currently include: David Hawkins; Rosalind Hore; Henry Shelton; and Celia Ward, among others. We will also be working together with 'Faith & Image' and their co-ordinator Mark Lewis, who is a silversmith and Arts Lecturer at London Metropolitan University. Mark and several other members of Faith & Image plan to become commission4mission members and both organisations will collaborate on events and publicity.
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U2 - Yahweh.