Wikio - Top Blogs - Religion and belief
Showing posts with label religious art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religious art. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 November 2024

The religious art of Rosemary Rutherford









Today I gave a talk, with Kathy Rouse, at St Mary with St Leonard Broomfield about the religious art of Rosemary Rutherford

In my part of the talk I explained that Rosemary Rutherford was part of a generation of innovative female artists whose work is increasingly being rediscovered and re-evaluated. These artists include Vanessa Bell, Hilda Carline, Enid Chadwick, Evelyn Dunbar, Gwen John, Laura Knight, Winifred Knights, Dod Procter, Betty Swanwick and Annie Walke. All of these artists, who challenged the conventions of their day to become respected artists, engaged with religious art or church commissions. 

At the beginning of the twentieth century there was also a movement looking for a re-association of the Artist and the Church following the break in that relationship caused by the beginnings of modernism. Laura Knight, Dod Proctor and Annie Walke were involved in a project to decorate St Hilary’s Church near Goldsithney in Cornwall, while Vanessa Bell was part of a project to decorate St Michael and All Angels at Berwick in Sussex. Added impetus was given to this movement following the Second World War as windows and churches needed repair.Artists such as Elizabeth Frink, Henry Moore, John Piper and Graham Sutherland became associated with this development.

Rosemary Rutherford was part of these artistic movements, benefiting from them and making a significant contribution to them. I used the talk as an opportunity to compare and contrast the religious art of Rutherford with others creating work in a similar period. By doing so, I aimed to identify some of the strengths of Rutherford’s contribution and some of the shared emphases of the movements of which she was part.

I ended the talk by saying that religious and biblical art was a significant part of Rosemary’s oeuvre, as would be expected of an artist who was deeply religious. Her spirituality and her inspiration as an artist were very much in harmony leading her to create profound, compelling and often original depictions of Biblical scenes and stories. Her expressive approach means that her images have both emotional impact and spiritual depth. However, her religious paintings are by no means as well known as her stained glass. They are often in private hands rather than public collections and, in some cases, as with St Paul’s Clacton, who have a marvellous collection of works, there is not the space to display them. McVitie Weston, who support this series, also have a substantive holding of Rosemary’s religious art. 

Susan Gray, writing in Church Times, viewed Rosemary Rutherford as one of Benton End’s rediscovered stars in the exhibition “Life with Art: Benton End and the East Anglian School of Painting and Drawing” at Firstsite in Colchester. That exhibition has been followed by exhibitions focusing on the careers of first Lucy Harwood and then, at Gainsborough's House, Cedric Morris and Lett Haines. A similar retrospective for Rutherford would enable more of us to rediscover the beauty, depth and originality of her work, in particular that of her religious art.

On Friday 6 December (7.00 pm) at St Andrew's Wickford, I will be giving an illustrated talk on Broomfield artists in the Basildon Deanery. Find out about artworks in Basildon and Nevendon by Thomas Bayliss Huxley-Jones and Rosemary Rutherford.

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

Paul Mealor - She Walks In Beauty.

Tuesday, 2 March 2021

The Crucifixion in American Art - Part 2

A recent post focused on artists included in The Crucifixion in American Art by Robert Henkes. This book 'features artists living and working in America from the mid-18th to the 21st century who depicted the crucifixion of Christ in their artwork.'

Abraham Rattner is one such and in his book on Rattner's art, The Spiritual Art of Abraham Rattner, Henkes mentions other American artists known for painting the Crucifixion that were not included in the later book. These are:
  • David Aronson received an education from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, under Karl Zerbe, and began teaching at Boston University in 1955 where he was invited to direct the emerging Fine Art Department. In 1962 Aronson was appointed as a tenured professor and taught up until his retirement in 1989. Aronson daringly combined religious symbolism with figurative expressionism, capturing universal human emotions through his striking representations of Biblical allegories. Some of Aronson's media includes oil pastel, bronze casting, and pencil on paper. Known worldwide as an influential Boston Expressionist, a variety of his work is represented in over forty public collections. See here.
  • Jonah Kinigstein was an artist who worked in the scorched earth tradition of such 18th- and 19th-century cartoonists as James Gillray, George Cruikshank, and Joseph Keppler, and embraced their somewhat rococo pen and ink technique as well as their penchant to exaggerate the grotesque. In the 1990s, he used to paste his cartoons to the sides of buildings in SoHo in the 1990s, eliciting a variety of responses. He was also an accomplished painter. See here and here.
  • Fred Nagler was best known for his oil paintings on religious subjects. He also did wood carvings. His works were exhibited from the 1930's at the Midtown Galleries in Manhattan. His paintings and drawings are in many private collections, at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City and at Southern Methodist, Vanderbilt and Temple Universities. Nagler was a serial prizewinner and considered by this peers a painter's painter. After graduating from the Art Students League in New York City, he focused his attention on liturgical subject matter. His paint handling style and pallet are reminiscent to the works of Marc Chagall. See here.
  • William Pachner’s "major themes in the years that followed were the crucifixion, motherhood, and the embrace. He saw these not as specific incidents but as universal expressions of the deepest human emotions. As the interpretation of these themes grew broader, Pachner’s style became more ambiguous. Figures dissolved almost beyond recognition, with only the emotional gesture remaining.” ELIHU EDELSON (March 18, 1961) See here.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

John Tavener - Darkness Into Light.

Saturday, 9 November 2019

West to Tissot: Nineteenth Century Religious Painting

In the final 20 years of his career James Tissot made three trips to the Holy Land and produced hundreds of watercolours to illustrate the Bible. Wildly popular during Tissot’s lifetime, these religious images became known as the “Tissot Bible” and have since influenced filmmakers from D. W. Griffith (Intolerance, 1916) to William Wyler (Ben-Hur, 1959), as well as Steven Spielberg and George Lucas (Raiders of the Lost Ark, 1981).

Although biblical paintings by artists such as Mihály Munkácsy, Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret and Henry Ossawa Tanner also achieved significant popularity subsequently, the “Tissot Bible” represents the peak of popularity for an approach to painting biblical scenes which first gained significant traction with the historical paintings of Benjamin West before achieving greater popularity in the Victoria era with artists such as John Martin, the Pre-Raphaelites and Gustave Doré.

Tom Ardill has noted that British artists in the early 1800s ‘believed that the national school was at a considerable disadvantage compared to other European countries owing to the historical antipathy of the Church of England towards imagery in churches.’[i] This argument ‘came to a head following the purchase by the British Institution of Benjamin West’s Christ Healing the Sick in 1811’ leading to hopes for a new era of British ecclesiastical art being raised ‘as the British Institution began purchasing, and awarding prizes for, history paintings with sacred subjects.’

Ardill states that: ‘This was not, however, to be the turning point for the patronage of ecclesiastical art in Britain, but rather a short-lived high-water mark. The first efforts of the directors to place paintings in churches were frustrated when their offer of Mary Anointing [by James Hilton] to St James’s Piccadilly was blocked by William Howley, the Bishop of London. There was no room for a painting above the altar, and Howley feared that if it were “once permitted” to place a picture elsewhere in the building “churches will probably become in time Exhibitions of Paintings rather than places of Worship.” In the following year, the directors turned their attention from scriptural to military subjects, dedicating their prize funds to commemorations of Waterloo.

From 1814, the focus for religious art shifted away from the Academy as artists, led by Benjamin West and followed by Benjamin Robert Haydon, John Bryant Lane, and others, began exhibiting ever larger scriptural paintings in independent exhibitions. Rather than being installed in churches and other public buildings, these works were toured around the country, until the novelty wore off.’

These arguments and activity did, in time, have an effect. In 1761 Thomas Wilson edited and contributed to William Hole’s important Ornaments of Churches Considered, a book about the decoration of St Margaret Westminster which helped mark a new interest in introducing visual art among Anglicans. Wilson and Hole quoted approvingly the following: ‘As ornament and instruction are all we contend for, I should prefer large historical paintings to single figures, and this the more willingly, because adoration has at no time, nor in any place, been paid to them.’ Wilson followed this direction himself with the commissioning in 1776 of a very large painted altarpiece, made by Benjamin West for the east window of the church and depicting Devout Men Taking the Body of St Stephen.

President of the Royal Academy from 1792 until his death, West received many commissions from George III and other English patrons. He worked primarily as a painter of historical and religious subjects, and as a portrait painter as patronage required. In the 1770's West subject matter began to include the religious themes that dominated his work of the late 1770's and 1780's. Most notable were his paintings on the progress of Revealed Religion for the Royal Chapel and designs for stained glass for St. Georges Chapel, both at Windsor Castle. John Dillenberger notes that, for history painters like West, ‘greater faithfulness to new archaeological knowledge’ gave a sense of ‘authentic fascination and enchantment’.[ii]

In the late 1810s and 1820s John Martin built a huge audience for his spectacular paintings of biblical catastrophes and vast landscape scenery. The large paintings that Martin showed in the major London art exhibitions in this period moved and astonished nineteenth-century viewers from all social classes making his reputation as the master of a new kind of spectacular popular art. His pictures served as a form of blockbuster entertainment, but he never achieved the official validation he desired with critics attacking what they saw as his bombastic and repetitive style of painting. Dillenberger suggests that the history painting of Martin, West, James Barry and Henry Fuseli eventually fell out of fashion as, ‘stylistically and conceptually, the artists’ imagination did not take them beyond fairly literal, dramatic if not histrionic renderings’. For a time, Dillenberger argues, West’s paintings made ‘historical paintings serve a new romantic consciousness’ and thereby gave hope of an ultimately unrealised, at that point, future for religious painting.

Susanna Avery-Quash and Jeffrey Richards have noted the way in which critics such as Anna Jameson and John Ruskin then ‘played a hugely significant role in spreading an understanding of the development of Christian art in ways acceptable to a British and largely Protestant audience.’[iii] The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, and William Holman Hunt in particular, put their recommendations for a Protestant art into practice. Holman Hunt’s version of Pre-Raphaelitism sought to combine naturalistic detail, historical accuracy, and sublime symbolism in a single embrace.

Holman Hunt’s The Light of the World gave rise to much popular devotion in the late Victorian period with engraved reproductions being widely hung in nurseries, schools and church buildings. Toward the end of his life Holman Hunt painted a larger, life-size, version, begun about 1900 and completed in 1904, which was purchased by shipowner and social reformer Charles Booth and hung in St Paul's Cathedral, London, where it was dedicated in 1908 after a 1905–07 world tour where the picture drew large crowds.

This picture tour followed wildly popular tours of Tissot’s Life of Christ illustrations, including a North American tour. Holman Hunt claimed to have influenced Tissot, including in his biography details of a meeting with Tissot during a gathering at John Everett Millais’ studio. Tissot, on being told that Hunt had just returned from Jerusalem, said that he admired Hunt’s The Finding of Christ in the Temple and his principle of work so much that he had resolved someday to go to the East and paint on the same system.

Lucy Paquette notes that Tissot’s ‘highly lucrative Bible illustrations’ were researched ‘in Palestine after a “spiritual awakening” in 1885’ and ‘published to worldwide acclaim in 1896 and 1897’. ‘This series of 365 gouache illustrations for the Life of Christ were shown to wildly enthusiastic crowds in Paris (1894 and 1895), London (1896) and New York (1898), after which they toured North America until 1900, bringing in $100,000 in entrance fees; the Brooklyn Museum then acquired them by public subscription for $60,000.’ ‘After Tissot’s death in 1902, his assistants completed his Old Testament project, which was published in 1904.’[iv]

Tissot’s spiritual awakening followed a love affair in London with the young divorcée Kathleen Newton, who became his model and muse. After her tragic premature death, he returned to Paris and spent long periods of productive retreat at his family estate in the French countryside, nurturing a growing, deep commitment to religion.

As was popular during the late 19th century, Tissot dabbled in mysticism and attended Spiritualist séances. His famous mezzotint from the Fine Arts Museums’ collection, The Apparition (1885), depicts the ghost of Kathleen Newton with a spirit guide as they reportedly appeared to Tissot during a séance. This work and the painting on which it is based—long thought to be lost or destroyed until it was rediscovered in the course of researching this project—are both on view in James Tissot: Fashion & Faith.

Tissot’s career spanned the English Channel, garnering commercial and critical success both in London and Paris. James Tissot: Fashion & Faith includes many key modern-life works from his time in London and Paris, such as The Ball on Shipboard (1874), London Visitors (ca. 1874), Holyday (also known as The Picnic; 1876), The Prodigal Son in Modern Life suite (1882), and examples from the La Femme à Paris series (1883–1885). The exhibition provides new perspectives on where and how Tissot should be considered in the 19th-century canon.

New scholarship has recently shed light on the final 20 years of his career when he made those three trips to the Holy Land and produced hundreds of watercolours to illustrate the Bible. A selection of images from this series is included in the exhibition, on loan from the Brooklyn Museum and the Jewish Museum, New York.

In embarking of this series Tissot's renewed embrace of religion would have been an important motivation. The influence of Holman Hunt may also have been a factor, but, as Petra Chu notes, ‘the artist cannot have been oblivious to the enormous success of similar projects, most notably the famous Doré Bible (1865–1866), featuring illustrations by the French illustrator Gustave Doré.’[v] ‘This illustrated bible had been produced not only in folio and various smaller-size formats, but also in many languages. Moreover, the illustrations, without text, were published in so-called Doré Gallery editions, which were enormously popular.’

Tissot's project was ‘deliberately different from Doré's,’ as he ‘countered the Romantic fantasy of Doré's imagery’ with a verism, which was ‘based on his trips to the Holy Land, where he made countless preliminary drawings and probably photographs’ believing that the Holy land was essentially ‘unchanged since the birth of Christ.’

The popularity of nineteenth century religious art led to its use in ‘popular religious visual culture, such as mass and prayer cards, illustrations of catechisms, religious calendars, and embroidery patterns’ resulting eventually in its dismissal by art critics. Chu argues that art historians have now come to realize that ‘more than an endless and mindless rehash of Italian Renaissance and Baroque models … nineteenth-century religious art is part of a broad and varied production of visual culture … that … cannot be separated from the most important theological effort of the nineteenth century, the critical investigation of the life of Jesus.’

Hélène Valance, writing in Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit, sums up the era-bound of nineteenth century religious painting when she suggests that, although archaeological exploration of the Holy Land and philological research on the holy texts had developed a “scientific” approach to the origins of Christianity, such additional information did not bring later nineteenth century believers closer to solving the ultimate mysteries of religion’ and, ‘in a society where mechanical reproduction had begun to secularize images, depicting miracles could seem incongruous.’[vi]

The best religious art of the period oscillates between verism and romanticism with both ultimately creating images expressive of mindsets set within and rarely transcending nineteenth century understandings of naturalism in religion and art.

James Tissot: Fashion & Faith, Legion of Honor, October 12, 2019 - February 9, 2020

[i] https://chronicle250.com/1813
[ii] J. Dillenberger, Benjamin West: The Context of His Life's Work, Trinity University Press, San Antonio (1977)
[iii] https://19.bbk.ac.uk/articles/10.16995/ntn.832/
[iv] Paquette, Lucy. “James Tissot and the Pre-Raphaelites.” The Hammock. https://thehammocknovel.wordpress.com/2018/06/18/james-tissot-and-the-pre-raphaelites/.
[v] http://www.19thc-artworldwide.org/spring10/james-tissot
[vi] Anna O. Marley ed., Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit, University of California Press, 2012

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

Beth Rowley - So Sublime.

Friday, 24 May 2019

Charles Filiger: Painter of the Absolute

Charles Filiger, who was associated with the Symbolist movement, spent time with Gauguin in Le Pouldu in 1989-90. They both chose to synthesize and stylize forms after experimenting with Pointillism for a short time. Filiger developed a very personal style in small paintings of Brittany landscapes and of religious subjects, informed by his love of early Italian painting. After looking at some of Gauguin’s paintings, he said to him, “You are Gauguin. You play with light. I am Filiger. I paint the Absolute.”

Filiger’s work was shown in Symbolist exhibitions beginning right after the birth of this new aesthetic, around 1890. They included the Exhibition of Impressionist and Symbolist Painters at the gallery Le Barc de Boutteville in Paris, the Salon de la Rose+Croix at the gallery Durand-Ruel, and the Salon des XX in Brussels. His work was quickly noticed by both the critics and his fellow artists, many of whom were influenced by him. He also became friends with writers associated with this new trend. In 1894, Alfred Jarry published the longest article ever devoted to an artist in Mercure de France, and Rémy de Gourmont asked him to illustrate several of his works. The art patron Antoine de la Rochefoucauld gave him financial support for several years.

After he left Le Pouldu in 1905, Filiger became something of a recluse, wandering around Brittany and living in hotels and hospices. He was finally taken in by a kind family in Plougastel-Daoulas. Although many thought he had died, he actually continued to work even in his isolation.

The gallery Malingue in Paris is currently holding an exhibition of works by Filiger, meaning that, for the first time in nearly 30 years, art lovers and all those who are curious about the artist are able to see a wide selection of his work. Nearly 80 works by Filiger are on show, along with publications illustrated by him, all of them from either private collections or museums (in France: in Albi, Quimper, Brest and Saint-Germain-en-Laye), including the magnificent The Last Judgment from the Josefowitz Collection, on loan from the Indianapolis Museum of Art.

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

The Innocence Mission - You Chase The Light.

Sunday, 30 December 2018

Airbrushed from Art History

A special double-issue of Religion and the Arts published by The Association of Scholars of Christianity in the History of Art in 2014 explored the multiple intersections between art and Christianity in Latin America arising from the varied and dynamic art of Latin America and the rich spiritual traditions of Christianity in Latin American identity. Religious themes, narratives, iconographies, and sensibilities in Latin American visual culture in a variety of media and from a range of historical periods and regions of Latin America reveal the interconnectivity of faith, race, ethnicity, and history, as well as the various methodological challenges that these works of art – and their artists – pose in the history of art. 

Such interconnections include reactions against and movements beyond religion, in addition to connections within and between faiths. Here are a small selection of such intersections prompted primarily by the surveys included in Latin American Art in the Twentieth Century:

Enrique Alfèrez was born into a world of art, although his father might not have viewed it that way. His father, Longinos Alfèrez, studied Art in Europe and returned to Mexico where he established himself as a carver of religious statues for churches and hacienda chapels. Longinos considered himself a craftsman above an artist …

It was in 1929 that Alfèrez arrived in New Orleans for the first time on his way to Mexico. The local art life in the French Quarter was so attractive to him that he never made it to Mexico that time. His first commission was to carve statues of Mary and three saints on the facade of the Church of the Holy Name of Mary in Algiers. He befriended Franz Blom, the director of the Tulane University’s Middle America Research Institute and joined him on a trip to Mexico where they made a full-scale plaster cast of the facade of the Nunnery buildings of the Mayan ruins at Uxmal in Yucatan which was displayed at the 1933 Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago. He returned to New Orleans as a permanent member of the City’s art community and during the next decade received numerous public art commissions, taught at the Arts and Crafts Club in the French Quarter and directed the Works Progress Administration’s sculpture program.”

In Ecuador, Enrique Alvarez “has gone on to receive widespread national recognition for his artistic merit. In 1998, he was the recipient of a Pollock-Krasner Foundation grant, and in 2000, was awarded first prize in the Second Latin American Exhibition of Religious Art in New York.

Jaime Andrade, an artist from Quito, Ecuador created the sculpture in mahogany.” "In 1958 [Thomas] Merton commissioned Andrade to do a statue of the Virgin Mary and child Jesus in dark wood for the novitiate library. "A statue," as he explains, "that would tell the truth about God being 'born' Incarnate in the Indians of the Andes. Christ poor and despised among the disinherited of the earth."

Flávio de Carvalho is regarded as one of the precursors of the 60’s ‘Happenings’ in the United States. In 1931, his studies of anthropology and psychoanalysis lead him to carry out the "Experiment n°2": wearing a hat he walks a Christi Corpus procession against the grain. This act is regarded as an insult and Flávio de Carvalho was almost lynched by a hysterical crowd of worshippers, finally owed his safety to the police force. His intention was to test the limits of tolerance and aggressiveness of a religious crowd.

In 1933, he founded the Modern Artists' Club (CAM). He stimulated the cultural life of of São Paulo and took part in the creation of a discussion space on different areas, bringing together artists, composers, writers and psychiatrists. Within this framework, he founded the Theatre of the Experience and directed the "Ball of the dead God", an experimental theatrical and dancing show for which he created everything : text, adornment, costumes and play of light. The actors, almost all black people, were wearing aluminum masks and executing dynamic and surrealist movements. Considered as subversive this play, very influenced by the Dadaist movement, was prohibited and the police force closes the theatre in spite of the mobilization of more than 300 intellectuals.”

Christian Chicana feminist artists used their work to challenge the patriarchal society that they live in and even the patriarchal society of Biblical times. Through their work they promote a strong, prominent feminine figure, one who does not need a man to survive. They offer a role model to women of all ages and hopefully promote a new-found interest in young people’s religion by renewing faith in a traditional religious figure.

Not only that, but the Virgin of Guadalupe is depicted as a brown women, so these artists are challenging cultural and race barriers as well.”
Antonia [Eirez] had an unshakable belief in the power of people to create. 

Everyone can draw, paint and create, she said. When we create from our core, we are like God. Even if the end result is a purple paper chicken, the creative process itself can transform your being. Antonia saw this transformation happen in people who never imagined they could create art.”

Julio Galán “is aware of the world around him and he adapts it for himself. Although his creations revolve around his personality and image, he never stops including references to the culture where he developed, particularly religious culture.

With these references that could be considered alien to the space he inhabited —the space of his dolls, disguises and make-up— he appears, and paints himself or adds symbols of his personality to appropriate some images …

The artist recreates the image of the Last Supper including himself in it, painting in a Christ child with his own face peeking out from the childish features, painting the adult Jesus Christ but dressing him in clothing like Galán’s. The artist’s face transformed in other images reveals his proximity to Catholicism and at the same time the distance he puts between that and his own doctrine.

Some of his works are inspired in ex-votos, or tin devotional folk paintings, done to thank the Virgin Mary or some saint for a miracle that saved the life of the painter or cured some disease as had been fervently prayed for, and that generally describe in a drawing or painting the scene of the miracle.”

Paul Giudicelli is a Dominican painter who “graduated from law school and taught in college. He served a public office stint as governor of his home state. In 1945, he was appointed coordinator of Humanities at Mexico's National Autonomous University and college ambassador to South America in 1946. Between 1964 and 1970, he acted as Secretary of Public Education. He launched the Dominican modern novel into a brand-new narrative method (inner monologue) and the alteration of temporary stages, as seen in his work At the Edge of Water (1947). The novel spins a yarn about the life of a hinterland rural town in the state of Jalisco, his home state. His characters, prisoners of their own religious beliefs and a sense of guilt, are shaken by the developments of the 1910 Mexican Revolution. He conveys his story using a taut and sumptuous prose and was also a member of the National College and Language Academy.”

Alfredo Guttero “displayed creative talent at an early age; starting with music but later turning to art. Following his family's wishes, he began a legal career, but left it to become a painter, under the encouragement of Ernesto de la Cárcova and Martín Malharro. In 1904, he received a grant from the Argentinian government to study in Europe and lived in Paris until 1916, where he studied with Maurice Denis and participated in the Salon. Following that, he lived in Segovia and Madrid, with brief stays in Germany, Austria and Italy and visits to virtually every other part of Western Europe, ending with a major exhibition in Genoa.

After more than two decades away from home, he returned in 1927, where he remained intensely active during the five years remaining until his death. He became the Director of the "Plastic Arts" division of the local Wagner Society and created the "Hall of Modern Painters", where he introduced the works of Miguel Carlos Victorica and Demetrio Urruchúa, among others. Together with Raquel Forner, Alfredo Bigatti and Pedro Domínguez Neira (1894-1970), he created the "Cursos Libres de Arte Plástico". In 1931, he exhibited at the "First Baltimore Pan-American Exhibition of Contemporary Paintings". Much of his time and energy was spent promoting Modern Art in opposition to the reactionary forces prevalent at that period.”

“Painting in colonial Brazil was scarce, and low quality, worth it for the iconography. Landscape was discouraged for fear that it could facilitate greed in enemy powers. With the economic progress of Bahia and Minas Gerais in the 18th century, a few painters appeared from the region, mostly in religious art, such as José Teófilo de Jesus and Mestre Ataíde.

His post-colonial vision shows the marks of slavery in modern Brazil, the contradictions and the added value. Violence is in the scenes of the Passion, because the flogged Christ of [Alberto da Veiga] Guignard is the slave on the pillory post. In a view of Ouro Preto, Guignard creates a fictional portrait of Aleijadinho, showing his work and imagining his personality to proclaim the Afrodescendent pillar of Brazilian culture. Guignard, like Lasar Segall, projected the work ethos of the black person in Brazil.” 

The work of Frida Kahlo “uses the tradition of votive art – part of her heritage was Catholic – and can be an open prayer for courage: "Tree of Hope, Keep Firm", she writes across a painting of a parched and treeless landscape. To write the past is to hold a memory. To write the present is to stand witness. To write the future is to cast a spell, and this was my prayer, to spell motherhood with three letters: a-r-t.”

The singer and composer Roberto Carlos was involved in the circulation of symbolic assets through the installation of Adoração (Worship) by the visual artist Nelson Leirner. The intersection between this universal musical icon, with strong mediatic and popular appeal and a piece of contemporary art, assigned to produce political effects, has given us the opportunity of understanding how and why the musician was chosen to signify, in the incipient symbolic assets market of the sixties, the contradictions of pop art, transplanted to the political reality of the Grupo Rex, in which Leirner was inserted. For this, the visual artist chooses, to resignify the young talented musician, a code belonging to popular Christian iconography, inserting him in a game of reference that surpassed the popular binomial current culture and erudite culture.

“Another feminist artist that creates unique and unconventional portraits of the Virgin of Guadalupe is Yolanda Lopez. Lopez is known for creating three distinct images of Mary, the most well-known called Portrait of the Artist as the Virgin of Guadalupe or Virgin Running (Q&A). This image is quite different from both the conventional Virgin, as well as Alma Lopez’s portrayal of the Virgin. In this first painting, Yolanda Lopez portrays herself as a strong, active young woman ready for anything. The Virgin has some traditional aspects such as the blue cloak with gold stars and the halo around her body, but overall, this is not the traditional, submissive, down gazing Virgin of Guadalupe. She is shown running with white tennis shoes, crushing both the Satan-like snake in her hand, and the angel beneath her, the angel used to hold her up in traditional images. Lopez is demonstrating that women do not need anyone to hold them up; they are perfectly capable of taking care of themselves.”

Miguel Ángel Ruiz Matute “studied in the National School of Fine Arts, then transferring to Mexico where he studied at the San Carlos Academy till 1951.He was participated with the architectural group of Juan OGorman in the mural decoration of the library of the City University at UNAM. He then integrated with a group that worked with the muralist, Diego Rivera in the collaboration of the mural in the Teatro de los Insurgentes. In his return to Honduras, he was given the Pablo Zelaya Sierra award in 1954. He was director of the National School of Fine Arts. In 1955, he moved to Spain, England and Italy where he combined his artistic labor with the diplomatic.

He worked with a variety of themes including religion, the historical, portraits that mystified their characteristics. His works are done in an expressionist style. During his first stages as an artist, Miguel Angel was an objective colorist. Then through his Spanish experience, he manifested himself.

Osvaldo Mesa brings viewers to Africa via Cuba in his large installations, crowded with paintings and sculptures. “Richly painted backdrops define a space in which a multitude of objects rest--painted and twine-wrapped bottles, sticks and rocks that resemble the tools of healing and divination found in the sacred spaces of traditional African mystics.

Such fetishes made the journey to Cuba with people who were brought there as slaves and combined their spirituality with aspects of Christianity to create the Santeria religion. Mesa's work is a sophisticated reworking and rediscovery of this process. Aesthetic rather than religious, it retains some of the cosmic power of its source.”

“An artist, activist, educator, and scholar, [Amalia] Mesa-Bains, who is 74, creates large installation works comprising dozens, at times hundreds, of objects: photographs of friends and family, strings of beads, scientific instruments, perfume bottles, her personal medical equipment, holy cards, her wedding veil, Mexican flags, her father’s glasses and mother’s necklace, statuettes, fabric and clothing, sugar skulls, crucifixes, calendars, stamps, candles, shards of glass, dirt, scattered woodchips, plants. At the beginning of her career, she took inspiration from home altars and Day of the Dead ofrendas, adapting them for her own artistic aims. Her installations are sacred spaces imbued with memory: of the dead, of history and all its atrocities, of innocence lost, of the mystical and mythological.”

“He created a large impact on the Brazilian avant-garde movements, especially after he participated in the 1922 Semana da Arte Moderna in São Paulo which ignited new trends in the Brazilian Modernism movement. From 1922-1930 Vicente do Rego Monteiro was associated with Léonce Rosenberg's Galérie de l'effort Moderne, showing in a variety of solo exhibitions.

He illustrated two books depicting modern art centered on the regional culture of Brazilian natives and their traditions; one in 1923: Legendes, croyances et talismans des Indiens de l'Amazone and one in 1925: Quelques Visages de Paris. In Vittel, Rego Monteiro focused on religious themes, influenced by Fernand Léger.

During early 1920’s he started developing his “relief” style where is paintings looked like sculptures. They are two-dimensional and look like they are carved into the surface. A multitude of his relief paintings were of religious themes such as “A Crucifixão” (The Crucifixion), which is one of his most famous works. "A Crucifixão" and "A Descida Da Cruz" along with several of his other religious paintings feature figures that are forlorn, mourning, and crying, the color of the paintings also being very muted; which is very different from his brightly colored ceramics of indigenous. Because of their style, most of his religious-themed works are similar to Ivan Mestrović's "melancholic deco".”

Rodolfo Morales’ “work has been described as dream-like, fertile and heavily based in folklore. It often depicts indigenous people, especially women set amongst rural buildings, churches, town squares and arcaded shops. His style is influenced by María Izquierdo (1902-1955) and French painter Marc Chagall (1887-1985).

By 1985, Morales had earned enough money to stop teaching and to return to Oaxaca where he was able to dedicate himself to both his art and to restoration. Using income from his art he founded the Rodolfo Morales Cultural Foundation devoted to restoration of buildings in his hometown of Ocotlán. In all, he funded the restoration of fifteen churches including the 16th century Convent of Santo Domingo and a 17th-century church in the town of Santa Ana Zegache, as well creating cultural spaces throughout Oaxaca's central valleys. His most important restoration project was the former convent of Ocotlan which was converted into a municipal complex.”

José Clemente Orozco "painted the theme, Cristo destruye su cruz, three times in his life, twice as murals — one of which still survives at Dartmouth College — and once on a 4’ x 3’ canvas." The image has been understood both as saying “It is finished!” to the violence that destroys and oppresses and as a denial of "the sacrificial destiny meant for him."

“Through his art, Roche Rabell showed the world our culture, the African roots, our religion as well as the relation between politics and culture in the American continent.

The painter explored aspects of the Puerto Rican identity and its environment with the same intensity that he did with himself. That is why he would also depict the most intimate aspects and vulnerabilities of human beings in multiple self-portraits. The human figure had a central position in his production.”

Diego Rivera "did not represent religious images unless they were useful as social observations ... The most that he came close to portray religious messages was at the murals in Chapingo, where his images functioned as a catechism exhorting a new generation of Mexican farm workers and agricultural planners to uphold a modern nationally, constructive, self-respecting way of life, based on the credo "exploitation of the land, not of man."" Nevertheless, it has been noted that his Detroit Industry Murals "are rife with Christian themes and utopian symbolism."

Soledad Salamé, American, born in Santiago, Chile in 1954, currently lives and works in Baltimore, Maryland.

From 1973 to 1983 Salamé lived in Venezuela. At this time she was exposed to the rainforest, a pivotal experience in her artistic development which continues to be a source of inspiration. As an interdisciplinary artist Salamé creates work that originates from extensive research of specific topics. In pursuit of intensive research, Salamé has since travelled widely in the Americas, Europe and Antarctica.”

“The concern of this artist, born in Chile and educated in Chile and Venezuela, is the environment and the political and spiritual aspects of its preservation or destruction. “

"[David Alfaro] Siqueiros painted some fifteen portraits of Christ ... on August 2, 1963, he inscribed the following quote from the most devout of Italian painters, Fra Angelico, in the back of his painting Cristo del Pueblo: "May only he who believes in Christ paint Christ." And in another occasion, during his imprisonment, he declared: "Was Jesus Christ not, like me, a victim of social dissolution, a persecuted man?" On August 9, 1963, from his cell at a crime prevention facility, Siqueiros inscribed the following words regarding the Via Crucis on the back of his painting, Mutilated Christ: "First, his enemies crucified him 2000 years ago. Then, they mutilated him from the Middle Ages on, and today, their new and true friends restore him under the political pressure of communism post-Ecumenical Council. This small work is dedicated to the latter."

“The exhibition Mundus Admirabilis e Outras Pragas, which was shown at Galeria Brito Cimino in São Paulo in November 2008, on the other hand, is an example of the more poetic, less direct critique of [Regina] Silveira’s works, which also characterises Tropel (reversed). Here the artist installed a fully decked table with a white tablecloth and the finest porcelain ready for a luxurious, celebratory dinner. But both the tablecloth and porcelain were covered with large, black insects, projected onto the surface of the serving dishes, carafes, glasses and plates. The entire dinner service was on a tablecloth cross-stitched in the style of the northeastern Brazilian state of Ceara, where the women in many towns still master this traditional, local craft.

The insects range from abnormally large cockroaches, mosquitoes and flies to grasshoppers and scorpions. The variety of insects can be seen to represent a mix of references to the Biblical plagues that devastated Egypt (grasshoppers and mosquitoes) and the “bestarium” of the Middle Ages, to the presence of insects in absurd modernist literature by authors like Franz Kafka and the Argentinean authors Jorge Luis Borges and Julio Cortazar - not to mention everyday, contemporary ‘bugs’. It was the same Mundus Admirabilis with which Silveira ‘occupied’ Centro Cultural Banco do Brasil’s free-standing cubic glass building in Brasilia in 2007, transforming it into a gigantic insect cage with the domineering presence of giant insects representing a disturbing, universal image of global plagues of all ages. With this shift from Biblical mythology to the daily dinner table, and references to the absurd tradition in European as well as Latin American literature, Mundus Admirabilis symbolizes the plague as the universal phenomenon of classical mythology, but also the very present plagues of modern society, like corruption, war, AIDS or environmental catastrophes.

The Saints’s Paradox (1994) where an impossible situation is established: A small wooden figure of a saint has been given a large distorted shadow not belonging to himself but to the statue on the monument to the brutal General Duque de Caxias in São Paulo.”

Much of Nahum B. Zenil's “works use mixed media on paper or oil on canvas. He preferred to paint on canvas until the materials compromised his health. He quickly returned to collaging on paper. He often uses his image to relieve pressures he felt as a child growing up homosexual in a small town and to comment on contemporary Mexican society. His works illustrate a duality between himself as an "other" and his relationship with the Catholic Church. Within Zenil's mixed media pieces he uses mainly himself as the subject. He pictures himself in his images with many religious figures such as the Virgin of Guadalupe. Within his images are many re-worked traditional Mexican forms like the retablo and ex-voto styles. Zenil was inspired by the works of artists such as Frida Kahlo and Jose Guadalupe Posada.

These influences can be seen in his works, Frida in My Heart and With All Respect, in which the artist actually used the image of Frida Kahlo in his paintings. According to the website glbtq archive, they state that "In a number of ways, Zenil has looked to the art of Frida Kahlo, with its strong dose of self-examination and criticism, as a beacon of inspiration. The portrait of Kahlo is sometimes incorporated into Zenil's works and he creates a lively dialogue between his own portrait and that of Kahlo, whose art has often been seen as representing the triumph of will over adversity." Zenil saw Frida art as a form of salvation, which he used to escape from his everyday life. Zenil's art allowed him to purge himself of the pressures he felt growing up gay, in a small town as a child. The pressures continued to follow him into his life in Mexico city, and as a teacher until he quit, to pursue his art full-time. Many of his works look at a variety of themes and relationships among race, religion, Mexican history, cultural designation, colonialism, male subjectivity and homosexuality."

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

Scott Stapp - The Great Divide.

Monday, 16 July 2018

Sacred Noise at Christie's

Sacred Noise explores themes of religion, faith and divinity in post-war and contemporary art through 30 works shown at Christie’s until 21 July. The exhibition seeks to chart the reinterpretation and subversion of these themes in the 20th century.

The starting point for Sacred Noise is the permission granted through Christ’s incarnation to depict the divine in human form which developed in the West in the direction of realism. The humanism of the Renaissance represented a significant move within this development. Keith Walker has written that ‘The Renaissance was the period when man and the world were re-discovered … Previously the artist was considered only a maker. God alone created. In the Renaissance man’s Godlikeness was asserted.’ Luis de MoralesEcce Homo variations showed Christ alone and at close range, blurring the boundaries between the human and the divine, then the vivid tableaux vivants of 16th-century Spanish painter Francisco de Zurbarán, gave the faithful a sense of direct access to the scenes he depicted.

While there is work included by the likes of Lucas Cranach the Elder and Sir Anthony van Dyck, the exhibition, once it has established realism as the primary mode of Christian expression in the West, is then keen to arrive at the beginning of the modern period to show how the European legacy of religious painting was reborn and redefined in post-war and contemporary art.

The argument made is that the wide range of work on display in Sacred Noise makes clear that, if divinity was long the anchor of human existence, its artistic unmooring in the 20th century has opened up endless new interpretative horizons. These interpretive horizons involve a move from realism to expressionism, abstraction and conceptual art while engaging with the sense that nothing is considered sacred — or scandalous — any more, the idea that art, science and money have come to supplant religion in the West, and the rejection of a divinity that leaves us tormented, forsaken and horrifyingly alone in a godless world.

Francis Bacon, Lucio Fontana, Andy Warhol, Damien Hirst and Maurizio Cattelan are cited and shown as being just a very few of the artists who shook the canon through their engagement with religion. However, there are issues with this selection of artists and with the argument made here through their work.

Firstly, the response of these artists is more nuanced in regard to religion than the exhibition allows. Bacon said that he could find no other subject as valid as the Crucifixion to embrace all the nuances of human feelings and behaviours that enabled him to think about all life’s horror. For Fontana, his Fine di Dio series rejected earthly images of God and symbolised instead the apophatic God, ‘infinity, the unfathomable, the end of figuration, the principle of the void.’ From the early 1980s onwards, religious imagery surfaces in Warhol’s art with his confronting of his own mortality giving way, as the exhibition catalogue states, to an interest in redemption and salvation. Biblical references also come to feature in Hirst’s art through his sense that the Bible has ‘great stories’ which ‘you can use … to fnd out what your life actually amounts to, in the end.’ Cattelan states that, as one who grew up singing in the church choir, his work is not anti-Catholic, but a way to ‘open people’s eyes to the faux sensibility of a culture where nothing is really considered either sacred or scandalous anymore.’ The work of these artists does not simply indicate the death of God among artists or society, as this exhibition, at points, wishes to suggest.

Secondly, the exhibition seems to make clear that this argument is only sustainable through its selective choice of artists. Of those 20th century artists exhibited here, only Eric Gill and Stanley Spencer are artists uniformly acknowledged as those creating from the inspiration of their faith. Yet a different selection of artists – Arthur Boyd, Marc Chagall, Maurice Denis, Makoto Fujimura, Albert Herbert, David Jones, Colin McCahon, John Piper, Georges Rouault, Gino Severini, Betty Spackman, Graham Sutherland, Paul Thek, Vincent Van Gogh, among others - could easily result in an exhibition to support the argument that the relationship between art and faith has been relatively close and positive in the modern period.

Themes of religion, faith and divinity have pervaded art throughout the centuries. The 20th-century did see the reinterpretation and subversion of those themes. Yet, the rebirth and redefinition of the European legacy of religious painting includes much that is affirming of religion, in addition to much which challenges its basic premises and history. This exhibition has more of the latter than the former. I would suggest that, at present, the story of art which has continuity with de Morales, Zurbarán and Cranach is the road less documented and therefore, because of its hidden treasures, is currently the more interesting story to tell.

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

Good Charlotte - Beautiful Place.

Monday, 13 October 2014

Manessier and Keifer: Spirituality, revelation and religious affiliation

The latest ArtWay meditation is about Alfred Manessier’s The Passion According to Matthew. Jérôme Cottin writes that ‘During World War II he went through a double conversion: to Christianity and to non-figurative art. Actually it was the first that led to the latter. Manessier came from a non-believing family. He turned to the Christian faith in September 1943, when he heard a choir of monks sing the Salve Regina in the Trappist monastery of Soligny.’  

Cottin notes that Manessier ‘belongs to the rare group of artists who were well-known internationally as well as sincere believers.’ 

Interestingly, Kathleen Soriano writes, in the catalogue for Anselm Keifer’s RA retrospective, that Keifer also had a revelation whilst at a monastery: ‘During a trip in 1966 to La Tourette, the Dominican monastery designed by Le Corbusier near Eveux, in eastern France, Keifer spent three weeks in a cell meditating on the fundamental questions of life. It was at La Tourette that he ‘discovered the spirituality of concrete’.

In contrast to Cottin, Soriano notes that ‘The search for transcendence, the connection between heaven and earth, God and man, lies at the heart of Keifer’s oeuvre, despite the fact that he would not consider himself a religious man.’

While both are, no doubt, factually correct in articulating the personal stances on faith of these two artists, it is interesting to consider why it is important to both writers to mention these specifically.

Tyler Green has written of ‘the art world’s indifference toward religion’, James Elkins of the strange place of religion in contemporary art and Dan Fox has stated that religious art ‘when it’s not kept safely confined within gilt frames in the medieval departments of major museums, is taboo.’  

Rob Colvin writes that:

‘The close relationship that art and religion maintained for several millennia has in recent decades eroded so drastically that it’s difficult to imagine fine arts and contemporary religion having anything in common. Art is, on the whole, a secular enterprise, and religion is frequently more anesthetic than aesthetic in character. The two worlds happily foster vulgar understandings of each other almost to a point of pride. Some might even suggest that adherence to one entails a rejection of, or at least critical distance from, the other.'

Benedict Read in his 1998 lecture to the Royal Society of British Sculptors noted that following the Second World War: “Churches were being repaired. New work was being installed in them. There was an expansion of church buildings with works of art in them … There is an alternative world there of the commissioning of art for specific purposes that, with no disrespect to established art historians, simply doesn't feature in our notion of cultural history in the post-war period.”

 Fox suggests that art about religion is totally kosher however; as are: “modernist dalliances with spiritualism;” the “obsessive cosmologies and prophecies” of ‘visionary’ or ‘outsider’ artists; and “a little dusting of Buddhism or Eastern philosophy.” But, “contemporary artists who openly declare affiliation to Judaeo-Christian or Islamic religions are usually regarded with the kind of suspicion reserved for Mormon polygamists and celebrity Scientologists.” David Morgan has explained this phenomonen by suggesting that, "Moving through the discourse of Modernism in art was a dominant conception of the sacred, one which distanced art from institutional religion, most importantly Christianity, in order to secure the freedom of art as an autonomous cultural force that was sacralized in its own right."

Why is the art world wary of religion? Fox gives five reasons:

1. “For most of the 20th century, art aligned itself with progressive rationalist secularity and radical subjectivity; the ideas that have fed into art come from modern philosophy, liberal or radical politics, sociology and pop culture rather than theology.”

2. “It’s also a question of finance: the money that funds art doesn’t come from churches or religious orders like it did hundreds of years ago.”

3. “Religion is broadly seen by many progressive thinkers to be a cause of intolerance and war.”

4. “The early 21st century has been characterised by a dangerous return to faith-based political conviction, be it radical Islam or neo-conservative fundamentalist Christianity, neither of which has much sympathy for cutting-edge art or ideas.”

5. “Also, religious organisations aren’t, of course, exactly known for their forward thinking attitudes to women or sexuality: the moral teachings of many religious denominations can be at odds with the ways artists want to live their lives.”

Keifer fits this thesis well and Soriano is also thinking within it when she writes that he ‘would not consider himself a religious man.’ In his 2011 Guardian article A Life in Art: Anselm Keifer Nicholas Wroe wrote:

‘Although his move to France coincided with an intensified investigation of myth and religion in his work, Kiefer is no longer a practising Catholic, but acknowledges that "even people who seem not to be spiritual still long for something; I'm sure this is the reason we have art and poetry. I think without spirituality we cannot live, and in this respect the best religion is Hinduism, which teaches that each religion can contain some little truth. Art is an attempt to get to the very centre of truth. It never can, but it can get quite close. It is the dogmatism of the church, the idea that words can express a single truth over hundreds of years, that is complete nonsense. The world changes. Language changes, everything changes. Paintings certainly change.’

Cottin, however, has studied the relationship of modern art to Christianity in the French-speaking world, writes regularly about Christianity and art, edits the website www.protestantismeetimages.com, and is ‘a Calvinist who is at pains to justify the importance of visual theology to the Protestant world.’ As a result, his focus is on those who either belong ‘to the rare group of artists who were well-known internationally as well as sincere believers’ or have produced significant examples of modern religious art. His book La mystique de l’art: Art et christianisme de 1900 à nos jours accordingly features in-depth studies of the work of individual artists such as Gauguin, Ensor, Arnulf Rainer, Picasso, Schmidt-Rottluff, Rouault, Chagall, Bacon, Jawlensky, Manessier, Nolde, Richier.

Both are correct but from different perspectives. Soriano writes of religious affiliation from within the viewpoint of the mainstream art world, while Cottin, from his perspective outside that world, focuses attention on those artists who have expressed religious affiliation within the mainstream art world. The story of religious art in the twentieth century is but one story among many in modernism. However the historical accuracy of the history of modernism can be enhanced through the telling of that tale in a way that refuses to see the predominant separation between art and institutional religion (Christianity, in particular) as being the only game in town.


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

Van Morrison - In The Garden.

Sunday, 9 March 2014

Beyond Airbrushed from Art History: Oisín Kelly and Patrick Pye

Two artists not included in Theology and Modern Irish Art by Gesa E. Thiessen but who have made significant contributions to religious art in Ireland are Oisín Kelly and Patrick Pye.

Oisín Kelly was one of the most versatile figures in Irish sculpture: "In 1949, Kelly received his first Church commission from the architect Liam McCormick. Thereafter, religious themes and motifs were a consistent element in his output. Indeed, he was arguably one of the few artists capable of producing religious artworks which had a genuine religious feeling - the result of deep but simple conviction, without rhetoric or sentimentality, though often with a touch of humour.

In 1951, Kelly became a member of the Committee of the Irish Exhibition of Living Art ... [In 1966 he] received a commission for a statue for the new Liberty Hall in Dublin. (The statue, 'Working Men' was subsequently relocated to City Hall, Cork. Another of Kelly's sculptures, 'The Children of Lir' was sited in the Garden of Remembrance, Dublin ...

In addition to religious and commemorative work, Kelly excels in studies of birds and animals - for example, his work 'Birds Alighting' - and small scale sculpture such as, 'The Dancing Sailor'. As a sculptor, he was equally comfortable with wood, stone, or metalwork like bronze and steel, and in stature he was the foremost Irish sculptor of the generation who emerged at the beginning of the Irish Exhibition of Living Art."

Patrick Pye started painting in 1943 under the sculptor Oisín Kelly. "He has completed many major commissions on religious themes, including Glenstal Abbey, Co. Limerick; Church of the Resurrection, Belfast; Convent of Mercy, Cookstown, Co. Tyrone (1965); Fossa Chapel, Killarney (1977); a triptych illustrating man's expulsion from the Garden of Eden at Bank of Ireland headquarters (1981); and Stations of the Cross for Ballycasheen Church in Killarney (1993). Recent commissions include an altarpiece, stained glass windows and roundels for a rebuilt church at Claddaghmore, Co. Armagh (1997-98); a crucifix for Our Lady of Lourdes church in Drogheda (1999); The Life of Our Lady, a six-panel painting on copper for the North Cathedral in Cork (1999); The Transfiguration, a 10-foot wallhanging for St. Mary's Oratory at NUI Maynooth (2000) and The Baptism of Christ, an oil painting for a new church at Drumbo, Belfast. The Royal Hibernian Academy exhibited Triptychs and Icons, a retrospective of his work, in 1997. Since the Millennium a large painting Theologian in his Garden has been acquired by St Thomas' University in St Paul (MN) for their Centre of Catholic Studies."

Brian McAvera argues in Patrick Pye: Life and Work that "Pye ... far from being on the periphery, is central to the Irish tradition and that he, along with a number of other English-born artists long resident in Ireland such as Camille Souter, reinvigorated the Irish tradition." McAvera also reviews Pye's influences:

"[Paul] Gauguin is ... a clear source, especially in a religious painting like Jacob Wrestling with the Angel with its flat areas of pure colour which are used non-naturalistically, whether for symbolic or expressive purposes. Gauguin, well aware of the decorative effect of colour - and Pye is a frankly decorative painter in terms of colour - also used strong outlines which, because of their patterned rhythms, often suggest the compositional structure of a stained glass window. Pye, who has been producing stained glass since the mid-1950s, and for whom luminosity is central, also structures in terms of patterned rhythms and strong outline shapes.

Gauguin, under whose influence they were formed, leads inevitably to the Nabis, and the Nabis are central to Pye and his use of colour. 'I am influenced by the Nabis. They are quite a concern of mine. I don't want to describe. I want to give a wholeness to the story. It is colour that is important. It's always directed towards the whole of our experience. Colour is what makes space. Line draws out from space. For me it's quite appropriate that Christian art should be abstracted, rather than descriptive'. That combination of the use of colour (symbolic, expressive, flat and often saturated), and abstraction rather than description, is of course precisely what marks out Gauguin's manner in his religious work, or, for that matter, other Pont-Aven artists such as Émile Bernard. It is also the hallmark of so many of the Nabis ... and the Irish artist sees a strong connection between abstracted art and Christianity, citing the tradition of Icons, El Greco and the Nabis, especially Maurice Denis, [Pierre] Bonnard and [Félix] Vallotton.

Denis, whose early work was very influenced by Gauguin, was, like Pye, a devout Catholic who wanted to re-invigorate contemporary religious painting ... his work often used pale, somewhat muted colours, but he emphasized flat patterning and was a markedly decorative painter ...

While Pye has always evinced a distinct liking for the English mystical tradition, the dominant English influence on him as a very young man was that of Neo-Romanticism. Of the nine artists featured in Malcolm Yorke's seminal study The Spirit of Place, five were mentioned by the artist: Paul Nash, John Piper, Graham Sutherland, Robert Colquhoun and Keith Vaughan. Of these Nash and Sutherland are the key figures, 'Paul Nash was quite an influence on me; the little tiny photograph in the early volume [i.e. Penguin Modern Painters] of The Dead Sea. I still love Nash's sensuous quality of painting ...'

Graham Sutherland is probably a deeper influence ... The artist, noting that Sutherland 'converted [to Catholicism] in my childhood, being of my mother's generation', did a copy of The Blasted Oak, 'made a pilgrimage' to see the Northampton Crucifixion at St Matthew's Church, and also saw the tapestry at Coventry Cathedral and the Noli Me Tangere altarpiece at Chichester ...

Of the contemporary mystical painters both Cecil Collins and David Jones, visionaries who are sometimes considered Neo-Romantics, were of interest, But Stanley Spencer, in terms of impact, is probably close to Sutherland ... the artist's visionary quality of bringing the Bible into the present ... provide a parallel to Pye's work ...

Like so many of the twentieth-century European painters he admires, such as [Marc] Chagall, [Georges] Rouault or [Henri] Matisse ... he is a colourist who has created religious works which function equally well for the religious and the non-religious alike ...

Irish art begins to establish its own identity through the confluence of Northern Irish artists like [Colin] Middleton, [Gerard] Dillon, F.E. McWilliam, William Scott and George Campbell, alongside Southern ones like Louis le Brocquy, Jack B. Yeats, Brian Bourke, Nano Reid, Camille Souter, Mary Swanzy, Norah McGuiness and Evie Hone. Pye, like Bourke, le Brocquy and all of the previously mentioned female artists, is particularly interested in Modernism, especially in the abstracting elements and in the non-naturalistic use of colour. he builds on the foundations first established by these female artists, and then reinforced by Doreen Vanston, Elizabeth Rivers and many others, and like Bourke, Souter and Reid in particular, he develops an art whose taproots delve deeply into modernism."

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

Van Morrison - Spirit.