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Showing posts with label gender. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gender. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 February 2023

Poetry review: Fascinating and Feisty - Temporary Archive: Poems by Women of Latin America

My latest poetry review for Stride Magazine is of Temporary Archive: Poems by Women of Latin America, which: 

'provides a fascinating and feisty insight into the contemporary scene, both those within it and the great diversity of styles, themes and voices found therein. The intent of the editors is to provide a glimpse 'into the huge diversity in styles, poetics, languages and experiences that exist throughout the continent.' ...

In these poems we encounter 'the violence of politics and economics, the strains of exile, the redefinition of gender and race, the violence inflicted on minorities and their languages, the violence of history and official narratives, but also the places reserved to love, happiness and celebration in these new contexts.' The poets they have selected have a 'shared capacity to capture, respond and signify issues that affect the everyday in a globalised world from a local perspective.'

For an exploration of similar themes, see my February diary for Artlysthttps://artlyst.com/features/the-art-diary-february-2023-revd-jonathan-evens/ - and for more on Latin American writers, see here, here, and here.

To read my poems published by Stride, click herehere, here, here, and here, and to read a review written for Stride of two poetry collections, one by Mario Petrucci and the other by David Miller, click here.

Stride magazine was founded in 1982. Since then it has had various incarnations, most recently in an online edition since the late 20th century. You can visit its earlier incarnation at http://stridemagazine.co.uk.

I have read the poetry featured in Stride and, in particular, the work of its editor Rupert Loydell over many years and was very pleased that Rupert gave a poetry reading when I was at St Stephen Walbrook.

Rupert Loydell is a poet, painter, editor and publisher, and senior lecturer in English with creative writing at Falmouth University. He is interested in the relationship of visual art and language, collaborative writing, sequences and series, as well as post-confessional narrative, experimental music and creative non-fiction.

He has edited Stride magazine for over 30 years, and was managing editor of Stride Books for 28 years. His poetry books include Wildlife and Ballads of the Alone (both published by Shearsman), and The Fantasy Kid (for children).

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Denice Frohman - Accents.

Thursday, 22 September 2022

Interfaith Sacred Art Forum and Sacred Art in Collections pre-1900 Network

The National Gallery has established two networks for the exploration, research, and enjoyment of sacred art, centred around sacred art in their permanent collection.

This initiative is part of their Art and Religion designated research strand, which is supported by Howard and Roberta Ahmanson. The first network, for faith community leaders and theologians, is the Interfaith Sacred Art Forum. The second, for curators and art historians, is the Sacred Art in Collections pre-1900 Network. Each year, both networks focus on a theme and two paintings in their collection as a foundation for wide-ranging events and activities that make new connections with sacred art, interfaith dialogue, and public life.

The 2021–22 theme has been Crossing Borders and the two paintings were 'The Finding of Moses' (early 1630s) and 'The Rest on the Flight into Egypt' (c.1620), both of which were painted by Orazio Gentileschi. 'The Rest on the Flight into Egypt' has been on loan to the National Gallery from Birmingham Museums Trust for the duration of the project and emphasises the importance that they place on partnerships with regional museums.

In 2022–23, the theme is The Art of Creation and the two paintings, around which conversations and activities will be based, are: Rachel Ruysch’s 'Flowers in a Vase' (1685) and Claude Monet’s 'Flood Waters' (1896).

In my role at St Martin-in-the-Fields I was involved in the discussions leading to the establishment of these networks and was a contributor to the first London Interfaith Sacred Art Symposium. This event brought together a cohort of 12 people from Jewish, Muslim and Christian backgrounds to share sacred texts - from Rumi's poetry and the Quran to Christina Rossetti and the Talmud. Participants included Fatimah Ashrif (Randeree Charitable Trust), Deborah Kahn-Harris (Leo Baeck College), and Jarel Robinson-Brown (St Botolph's-without-Aldgate Church). Download the programme, texts and reflections, and speaker biographies [PDF].

My paper utilised the following texts:

‘Then the Lord said to Moses, “Stretch out your hand over the sea, so that the water may come back upon the Egyptians, upon their chariots and chariot drivers.” So Moses stretched out his hand over the sea, and at dawn the sea returned to its normal depth. As the Egyptians fled before it, the Lord tossed the Egyptians into the sea. The waters returned and covered the chariots and the chariot drivers, the entire army of Pharaoh that had followed them into the sea; not one of them remained. But the Israelites walked on dry ground through the sea, the waters forming a wall for them on their right and on their left.

Thus the Lord saved Israel that day from the Egyptians; and Israel saw the Egyptians dead on the seashore.’

Exodus 14. 26-30

‘And that the King was so emphatical and elaborat on this Theam against Tumults, and express'd with such a vehemence his hatred of them, will redound less perhaps then he was aware to the commendation of his Goverment… Not any thing, saith he, portends more Gods displeasure against a Nation, then when he suffers the clamours of the Vulgar to pass all bounds of Law & reverence to Authority. It portends rather his displeasure against a Tyrannous King, whose proud Throne he intends to overturn by that contemptible Vulgar; the sad cries and oppressions of whom his Royaltie regarded not. As for that supplicating People, they did no hurt either to Law or Autority, but stood for it rather in the Parlament against whom they fear'd would violate it.’

John Milton, Eikonoklastes, IV. Upon the Insolency of the Tumults.

The paper I presented was as follows:

In responding to The Finding of Moses I am seeking to use the approach to visual criticism described by Cheryl Exum in her book Art as Biblical Commentary, which includes identification of an interpretive crux. Exum says that ‘staging a meaningful conversation between the text and the canvas is often a matter of identifying an interpretative crux - a conundrum, gap, ambiguity or difficulty in the text, a stumbling block for interpretation or question that crops up repeatedly in artistic representations of it - and following its thread as it knits the text and painting together in complex and often unexpected ways.’

I want to suggest that decisions made by Orazio regarding the gender and class of those depicted provide an interpretive crux relating to the arc of the story as it bends towards liberation. The liberation found in the Moses story is that of the Exodus itself, with one of my source texts - Exodus 14. 26-30 – depicting a key moment in that story, the crossing of the Red Sea. Liberation in the setting of the painting involves the English Revolution for which John Milton’s Eikonoklastes is a key text. Both these texts see liberation, in part, as involving freedom from an oppressive monarch.

Exploring the commissioning of the painting and its effect on the decisions Orazio Gentileschi made about where the scene is set and how the characters look helps in identifying this interpretative crux. Orazio was commissioned to paint The Finding of Moses for the wife of King Charles I, Queen Henrietta Maria. The painting was almost certainly intended to celebrate the birth of their son and heir, the future Charles II. This leads to the setting which is an idyllic English landscape with gentle slopes and lush green trees. Orazio knew that the painting would be hung in the Queen’s House at Greenwich, on the banks of the Thames, where he also decorated the ceiling in the Great Hall. The setting of the painting therefore is in accord with the setting where it was to be hung.

Orazio paints Pharoah’s daughter and her attendants as though they were a Stuart Queen with her courtiers. The women’s gowns are exquisitely depicted in the style of the time and of the court, with the woman in the magnificent yellow gown embellished with jewels being Pharaoh’s daughter painted as an equivalent of Henrietta Maria.

Two aspects of the story to do with gender and class are highlighted by these decisions. The most striking and obvious element of this painting is the group of nine life-size female figures who crowd around the basket at the heart of the composition. Orazio’s decision not only reflects the significance of his patron and her courtiers but also points us to the significance of women in the story of Moses’ birth from the role of the Hebrew midwives to that of Moses’ sister and mother, and of Pharoah’s daughter herself-. Orazio’s decision to focus primarily on female figures may also prompt renewed reflection on his own story as a father who taught his daughter Artemisia to the extent that she had a career as an artist in a profession that was, at that time, predominantly male. Artemisia may have assisted him in painting the ceiling in the Great Hall at Greenwich, as she briefly joined him in London in the late 1630s. Additionally, Orazio defended Artemisia in court after her rape by Agostino Tassi, a fellow artist in Rome. The lengthy trial resulted in Tassi’s conviction and Artemisia’s departure for Florence but his defence of his daughter in this way, unusual at that time, may also have compromised his career prospects in Rome leading to his need to find employment in England.

As a result of Orazio’s focus, we see the significance of women in the biblical story and in Orazio’s personal story in ways that fit the arc of the story towards liberation from oppression – in this case patriarchal oppression - whilst also recognising the extent to which both stories still remain within patriarchal settings. In Orazio’s depiction of the scene this is made apparent by the fact that all the female characters are looking at or pointing to the one male character in the painting, who is both central to the image and to the story.

Second, our attention may turn to the contrasts within this scene which revolve around power or class dynamics. These are apparent primarily in the clothing of Miriam and her mother in contrast to that of Pharoah’s daughter and her attendants and also in the irony of the contrast between Moses born into slavery and Charles II born into royalty. Power, privilege, and wealth all reside in the royal characters depicted in this scene and yet the baby that is central to the image and the story will be the catalyst for the liberation of his enslaved people through plagues on Egyptian society and destruction of the Egyptian army. Again, the arc of the story bends towards liberation, which is somewhat ironic in the light of the fact that the image was painted to celebrate the birth of a royal baby who would see his father beheaded in a revolution and who would spend nine years in exile himself.

So, the decisions Orazio makes in depicting gender and class within this image bring a renewed focus on the arc of the story as it bends towards liberation while simultaneously highlighting the forces, both in the story and his own time, that were ranged against such liberation. For example, the focus that we see in this image on the agency of the women depicted is clearly predicated on wealth and position and not open to all, while also making the one male character central to the image. The liberation from monarchical oppression that Milton celebrated in Eikonoklastes and at which the painting also hints by equating Henrietta Maria with the Pharoah’s daughter whose world will be overturned by Moses, is then reversed by the restoration of the monarchy that followed the English Revolution. The Restoration not only brought Charles II to the throne but also enabled Henrietta Maria to reclaim The Finding of Moses as her personal property keeping it thereafter in her private apartments. This image, therefore, is a bend on the road towards a fuller liberation still to be achieved. The painting gestures towards the future crossing of boundaries in relation to gender and class without realising them fully in the present.

Orazio’s decisions around gender and class provide the kind of interpretive crux that Exum says she seeks; a conundrum, gap, ambiguity or difficulty, a stumbling block for interpretation or question that crops up repeatedly, and which, when we follow the thread knits the text and the painting together in complex and often unexpected ways. Orazio’s decisions highlight hidden aspects of the story and image that point towards the possible undermining of monarchical rule. Would this have been a deliberate strategy on the part of Orazio? We have no way of knowing, expect that the unusual support he gave to Artemesia suggests that he may have been a man living somewhat at odds with the societal assumptions made in his day and time.

Applying Exum’s approaches to visual criticism enable us to identify this interpretative crux to the story in a way that, I hope, also accords with her interest in exposing and undermining, in the interest of possible truth, interpretations that maintain and privilege the patriarchal cultural assumptions that underpin many Biblical texts. Her approach may enable us to picture Orazio as, to some degree, standing with Milton and the writer of Exodus in seeking to do the same.

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Moya Brennan - To The Water.

Friday, 29 July 2022

Church Times - Art review: Feminine Power: The Divine to the Demonic at the British Museum

My latest exhibition review for Church Times is of Feminine Power: The Divine to the Demonic at the British Museum:

'RESEARCH has demonstrated associations between religious beliefs and patriarchal attitudes. Higher religiosity is seemingly associated with stronger patriarchal beliefs. While no religion sanctions violence towards women, religions have been and are one potent source of patriarchal orientations.

If this is true, the British Museum’s exhibition “Feminine Power: The Divine to the Demonic” has a job to do in demonstrating the extent to which religions engage with feminine power — in doing so, spanning magic, mercy, wisdom, fury, and passion — and still shape how we perceive femininity and gender identity today.'

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 and those for Art+Christianity are here. See also Modern religious art: airbrushed from art history?

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Saturday, 7 May 2022

Disability and Church: Intersectionality


I'm looking forward to moderating this webinar on a vital topic with a wonderful panel. Do join us.

A Church Times/HeartEdge webinar

Intersectionality is a way of describing how social categories (e.g. disability, race, gender) combine to create overlapping systems of discrimination or disadvantage. In the latest HeartEdge Shut In, Shut Out, Shut Up series we are exploring intersectional experience of disability and neurodiversity, gender, mental health, sexuality, race and poverty.

This additional webinar, organised with the Church Times, asks, what are the key issues in the context of faith and what are our calls to the church?

Register here.

Panel
  • Lamar Hardwick (he/him) (DMin, Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary), also known as "the autism pastor," is the lead pastor at Tri-Cities Church in East Point, Georgia. He is the author of Epic Church, I Am Strong: The Life and Journey of an Autistic Pastor, and the award-winning book Disability and The Church: A Vision for Diversity and Inclusion (InterVarsity Press 2021).
  • Naomi Lawson Jacobs (they/them) is a researcher, disability advocate and trainer, who completed a PhD on the experiences of disabled Christians in 2019. Their book, At the Gates: Disability, Justice and the Churches, is out in June 2022, co-written by Emily Richardson. The book shares disabled people’s stories of marginalisation in churches, their cries for justice from the edge, and their transformative theologies for the whole church.
  • Fiona MacMillan (she/her) is a disabled and neuordivergent advocate, practitioner, speaker and writer. She chairs the Disability Advisory Group at St Martin in the Fields, is a trustee of Inclusive Church, leads the planning team for their annual disability conference and convenes the Shut In Shut Out Shut Up series for HeartEdge. Fiona is a member of the Nazareth Community and was recently elected to General Synod.
  • Rachel Mann (she/her) is an Anglican priest, writer, scholar and broadcaster. Author of 12 books, she has written theologically about her experience of hidden disability and chronic illness in the critically-acclaimed Dazzling Darkness (Wild Goose, 2012/2020) & Love’s Mysteries (Canterbury Press, 2020). She is a member of the Church of England’s Theological Advisory Board, The Faith & Order Commission.

Access information

BSL, automatic captions, livestreamed using Streamyard and available to watch live or recorded.

Shut In Shut Out Shut Up is a disabled-led space for challenging questions and honest conversations about theology, faith and church. Hymns A&M and HeartEdge recently announced an agreement to work together on future projects. This is the first in an occasional series of joint webinars.

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Martyn Joseph - He Never Said.

Monday, 1 January 2018

Artlyst article: Can art transform society?

My latest article for Artlyst explores whether art can transform society by considering two current exhibitions that seem to suggest that it can. The exhibitions are:
My article suggests that art can enable us to see the world differently, offering insights into personal experiences beyond our own but that this transformative power of art is fully unleashed when we understand the histories, stories and traditions (both recent and past) on which the artworks draw.

My other Artlyst articles are:
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Tom Morello & The Nightwatchman - Blind Willie McTell.

Sunday, 25 January 2015

Who are you?

Grayson Perry's Who Are You? exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery, linked with his Channel 4 series of the same name, raises important and interesting questions about the nature of identity. Perry writes:

'The fourteen portraits in this exhibition, displayed among the Gallery’s Collection, are not primarily concerned with what the subjects look like. They are images about the nature of identity, snapshots taken from the narratives of people’s lives. Our sense of ourselves feels constant but our identity is an ongoing performance that is changed and adapted by our experiences and circumstances. We feel like we are the same person we were years before, but we are not.

As my subjects I have chosen individuals, families or groups that somehow represent some important facets of the nature of our identity. I have attempted to portray the character of the identity journey they are facing. They have changed religion or gender, they have lost some of their physical or mental faculties, they have lost status, they belong to a group that is hoping it will be seen differently by society. All of them, I thought, show us something of the negotiations we are all involved in, unconsciously or otherwise, around who we feel we are and how we are seen.

For most of us, most of the time our identity works for us so we do not question it. But when it does not feel right, or is under threat, then we are suddenly made very aware of how central and vital our identity is.'

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The Who - Substitute.

Thursday, 24 January 2013

Vocation and qualification for religious leadership

Tonight we hosted a meeting of the East London Three Faiths Forum at St John's Seven Kings. The topic under discussion was vocation and qualification for religious leadership and we heard from Revd Ernie Guest - St Laurence's Church, Barkingside (and Warden of Ordinands for Redbridge); Rabbi David Hulbert - Bet Tikvah Synagogue, Barkingside; and Hajj Mahmoud Attiya - South Woodford Mosque, PhD student.

Rabbi David briefly outlined the development within Judaism from priests and prophets to rabbis. He highlighted Hassidism, the Enlightenment, and gender equality as key developments in understanding of the roles and responsibilities of rabbis. Rabbinic training is five years and the training institutions select those offering to train as rabbis. Rabbis have an employment contract with their synagogue.

Hajj Mahmoud Attiya spoke about the importance of gentle teaching within Islam and respect for People of the Book. He discussed his research exploring ways of transforming those who are radical preachers including the distinction between unchanging laws regarding morality and changing reflecting cultural practices. How these are defined plays a key role in whether a radical or reformist position is taken.

Ernie Guest outlined the criteria used by the Church of England for assessing the calling and vocation of those offering to train as ordinands and the process by which this discernment and selection takes place.

In the discussion which followed we explored ways in which our religious leaders are appointed, our differing approaches to the removal of leaders from post and approaches to gender issues in leadership. In relation to the latter, Dr Mohammed Essam El’Din Fahim argued that the practice of gender separation in Islam was cultural and did not reflect the practice in the time of the Prophet when men and women prayed together.

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Youssou N´dour- Li Ma Weesu.