Wikio - Top Blogs - Religion and belief
Showing posts with label curated commentaries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label curated commentaries. Show all posts

Monday, 22 June 2026

Visual Commentary on Scripture: Establishing the Heart

My Visual Commentary on Scripture exhibition 'Establishing the Heart' is the current exhibition of the week:

"The first letter to the church in Thessalonica was written to encourage the Christians there to continue to live to please God by living quietly, minding their own affairs, and working with their hands, so they might behave properly towards outsiders and be dependent on no one. These instructions differed markedly from those Jesus gave to the first disciples when he called them to leave homes and work in order to follow him in his peripatetic ministry.

Our Exhibition of the Week is called Establishing the Heart | VCS thevcs.org and is on 1 Thessalonians 2:17–4:12."

'Establishing the Heart' includes works of art by Antoine Camilleri, John Reilly and Stanley Spencer and explores how pleasing God in our everyday lives - by living quietly, minding our own affairs, and working with our hands - leads us to see life, work and art as prayer.

The VCS is a freely accessible online publication that provides theological commentary on the Bible in dialogue with works of art. It helps its users to (re)discover the Bible in new ways through the illuminating interaction of artworks, scriptural texts, and commissioned commentaries. The virtual exhibitions of the VCS aim to facilitate new possibilities of seeing and reading so that the biblical text and the selected works of art come alive in new and vivid ways.

Each section of the VCS is a virtual exhibition comprising a biblical passage, three art works, and their associated commentaries. The curators of each exhibition select artworks that they consider will open up the biblical texts for interpretation, and/or offer new perspectives on themes the texts address. The commentaries explain and interpret the relationships between the works of art and the scriptural text.

Find out more about the VCS, its exhibitions and other resources through a short series of HeartEdge workshops introducing the VCS as a whole and exploring particular exhibitions with their curators. These workshops can be viewed here, here, here and here.

The VCS has a daily email exploring the Bible through art. Through concise but vivid day-by-day encounters, Bible and Art Daily will take you on a series of journeys through the world of Scripture and the history of art. The VCS have spent the last year bringing together experts in theology and art history to carefully curate a treasury of week-long series, each exploring a particular theme, an artistic medium, or a biblical character. Find out more and subscribe here.

My first exhibition for the VCS was 'Back from the Brink' on Daniel 4: 'Immediately the word was fulfilled upon Nebuchadnezzar. He was driven from among men, and ate grass like an ox, and his body was wet with the dew of heaven till his hair grew as long as eagles’ feathers, and his nails were like birds’ claws.' (Daniel 4:33). In the exhibition I explore this chapter with William Blake's 'Nebuchadnezzar', 1795–c.1805, Arthur Boyd's 'Nebuchadnezzar's Dream of the Tree', 1969, and Peter Howson's 'The Third Step', 2001.

My second exhibition was 'A Question of Faith' and explored Hebrews 11 through the paintings of New Zealand artist Colin McCahon. McCahon is widely recognised as New Zealand’s foremost painter. Over 45 years, his work encompassed many themes, subjects and styles, from landscape to figuration to abstraction and an innovative use of painted text. His adaption of aspects of modernist painting to a specific local situation and his intense engagement with spiritual matters, mark him out as a distinctive figure in twentieth-century art.

My third exhibition was 'Fishers of People'. This exhibition uses Damien Hirst's 'Isolated Elements Swimming in the Same Direction for the Purpose of Understanding (Left) and (Right)', John Bellany's 'Kinlochbervie', and Paul Thek's 'Fishman in Excelsis Table' to discuss Matthew 4:12-22 and Mark 1:14-20. These artworks give us what is essentially a collage of the kingdom whereby we are invited to imagine the kingdom of God as a body of water in which Christians are immersed and through which they are raised.

My fourth exhibition was 'Before the Deluge', a series of climate-focused commentaries on Genesis 6 looking at 'The Flood' by Norman Adams, 'Noah in the Ark and a Church' by Albert Herbert, and 'Noah's Ark' by Sadao Watanabe.

For more on the artists included in these exhibitions click on the following links: Antoine Camilleri, John Reilly, Stanley Spencer, William Blake, Arthur Boyd, Peter Howson, Colin McCahon, Damien Hirst, John Bellany, and Paul Thek.

Curated Commentaries offer a new way to explore the VCS collection. The VCS have selected topics familiar and unexpected to help you encounter the Bible and Art. Each is explored through seven artworks and commentaries from across the site.

These allow you to discover new perspectives and ways of thinking at your own pace, with areas as varied as Christ's Wounds, Mythical Creatures, Land & Harvest, Jesus's Female Disciples, and Gold. 
This unique resource is the product of the devotion and scholarship of our hundreds of artists and authors—eye-opening, thought-provoking, and enriching. This collection will continue to grow and is invaluable for anyone engaging with, learning about, or teaching the Bible and Art.

The first of my commentaries to feature is about Albert Herbert, who put aside the art training he had originally received and set out to draw like a child, painting an inner, innocent vision that was uncorrupted by either the influence of the outside world, or learnt, adult knowledge.
When life becomes overwhelmingly difficult, some people, in some situations, find the resources to respond in remarkable ways. 

See the VCS website to explore seven artworks and commentaries that are powerful examples of this: https://thevcs.org/curated-commentaries/hardship.

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

Mark Hollis - A Life (1895 - 1915).