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Showing posts with label rothko. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rothko. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 October 2021

Mark Rothko: Mesmerising And Intimate Works On Paper

My latest review for Artlyst is of Mark Rothko, 1968: Clearing Away at Pace Gallery:

"Mark C. Taylor wrote in Disfiguring: Art, Architecture, Religion that, ‘All of the major abstract expressionists were deeply interested in religion and actively incorporated spiritual concerns in their work.’ In ‘The Spiritual in Twentieth-Century Art’ Roger Lipsey highlighted the work of Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, Morris Louis and Ad Reinhardt, while in ‘A Theology of Artistic Sensibilities’ John Dillenberger discussed Arshile Gorky, Barnett Newman, Adolph Gottlieb, Rothko, Pollock, Reinhardt, Willem de Kooning and Robert Motherwell. With ‘The Spiritual Dynamic in Modern Art, ’ Charlene Spretnak added Clyfford Still, Sam Francis and Hans Hofmann. We can also include William Congdon, Richard Pousette-Dart, and, through his links to Pollock, Alfonso Ossorio, to the group of Abstract Expressionists who incorporated spiritual concerns in their work.

Rodolfo Balzarotti has noted that Rothko with his Houston Chapel paintings, Newman with his Stations of the Cross, and Congdon with his paintings of biblical and gospel subjects connected with Catholic liturgy were all painting these cycles in the same time period. Their ‘choice of a context or a theme that is openly, almost provocatively religious, “confessional” even,’ he writes, ‘has precisely the function of orienting how these works are received by reiterating in the most peremptory way their moral and religious, or better still, metaphysical content.’

Among Mark Rothko’s artistic philosophies, he held that painting was a deeply psychological and spiritual experience through which basic human emotions could be communicated. He famously commented to a critic that ‘the people who weep before my pictures are having the same religious experience I had when I painted them’ and spoke of the ‘inner light’ in his paintings. His approach to painting enabled him to experiment with processes to develop a universal expression."

My other pieces for Artlyst are:

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Friday, 22 January 2021

Seeing is Receiving: The art of contemplation (5)

4. Silent

Brian Clarke says that stained glass ‘can transform the way you feel when you enter a building in a way that nothing else can!’[i]

I would concur, especially after arriving at l’Abbaye de la Fille Dieu in Romont in time for a memorable service of Vespers followed by silent contemplation in the still onset of darkness falling. Tomas Mikulas, the architect on the restoration of this Cistercian Abbey, has stated that the overall goal of the restoration was to offer both nuns and visitors an ‘atmosphere conducive to meditation and prayer.’ Mikulas suggests that it is the ‘warm and vibrant atmosphere’ created by Clarke’s windows ‘with the changing light of day’ that ‘makes a decisive contribution’ to the space and to the restoration as a whole.[ii]

There are several reasons why this was a surprising outcome in this context. Early on in his career Clarke realised that he had to ‘shake off the ecclesiastical image’ of stained glass ‘if he was going to make any impact in the medium’: ‘I looked for opportunities in all kinds of public buildings and declined opportunities in the church. I fought for that and continue to fight for that. It's a lifelong pilgrimage.’[iii] Not only that, but within the Abbey a group of nuns actively opposed Clarke’s designs on the basis that they were too colourful for a Cistercian chapel. This group was concerned that the strong presence of the windows would overpower the building and that the colour of the windows would reduce the visibility of the murals (dating from the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth centuries) which have been preserved through the restoration.

Mikulas insisted on Clarke and was supported by the Abbess, Mother Hortense Berthet, who ‘loved and encouraged’ the stained glass project. Mikulas writes that she was always far-sighted and, where others could be entrenched behind their ‘achievements and habits,’ she would always ‘promote and encourage projects and renewal.’[iv] The restoration work here, including Clarke’s windows, provides an object lesson in such projects due to the depth of understanding of the history and context developed by Mikulas; one involving listening, collaboration and perseverance in the service of a historic monument and a contemporary community of nuns. Ultimately, this has meant searching for the presence of Christ and the acceptance of others in the great Cistercian Trappist tradition.

His overall goal was the creation of a new and coherent building which was respectful of the buildings’ history while also servicing its use as a place of worship: ‘The colour of the windows is in relation to the path of the sun’s movement and to the nun’s daily liturgy and prayer – ‘starting from the mystical and blue morning in the sanctuary, to warm tones in the nave later in the day’ – and the glass chosen and developed for the windows, some hand-painted by Clarke, responds to the orientation of the building, with richly textured transparent glass in the east, south and west windows, and opaque glass in restrained colours in those that face north, which face onto cloisters and receive only weak natural light.’[v] Mother Hortense responded by saying: ‘I asked the artist before the creation of his stained glass that they carry a message of hope for those who come to share our prayer. I feel that my wish is wonderfully realized in this joyous, dynamic rise towards a future made all of light.’[vi]

At Vespers in l’Abbaye de la Fille Dieu there was a powerful sense of being caught up in a heavenly space and the great corporate song of heaven as the wondrous harmonies of unified plainsong responses combined with the mystical light of Clarke’s windows. Stained glass can transform the way we feel when we enter a building like l‘Abbaye de la Fille Dieu because, as Clarke has said, art brings ‘beauty and something of the sublime into the banality of mundane experience.’[vii]

My slowing down to look over a sustained period immersing myself in the world of this work was then aided by silence and the waning of the light. Just as Bill Viola’s videos, by their form, often encourage us to slow down, so, stained glass, paintings, sculptures and other forms of non-digital/performance art compel us, by their form, to silent contemplation.

‘Painting does not have anything to say’, writes T.J. Clark. Clark derives his obvious, though often over-looked, statement from John Ruskin: ‘I am with Ruskin in thinking that a picture is not by its very nature ideology’s mute servant, and has at its disposal kinds of intensity and disclosure, kinds of persuasiveness and simplicity, that make most feats of language by comparison seem abstract, or anxiously assertive, or a mixture of both.’[viii]

The peculiar advantages that painting’s muteness give it over the spoken or written word are, firstly, that ‘the ‘openness’ of the image can provide a space for the insubordinate, or at least the blessedly unserious’. This is of particular significance in ‘times of enforced orthodoxy (that is, most of the time)’. Secondly, it can make an imaginative wished for vision of history spellbinding, persuasive and concrete, while, at the same time, giving an awareness of the human, earthbound and matter of fact nature of that vision. This is of particular significance in times when ‘the main established metaphors and images look to be indelible, however often they are subjected to the fires of disbelief’.[ix] At the heart of Clark’s insight is the reality that in one image, without recourse to words or text, painting can create a new world which nevertheless continues to relate to this world.

Clark makes these points in a book where he writes, using many words, about images by Giotto, Bruegel, Poussin, Veronese, and Picasso. All of these have literary sources, knowledge of which many viewers bring with them to the paintings when seen. Painting’s separation from words and text is not, therefore, as complete as Clark seems to suggest. Additionally, contemporary art makes significant use of text and sound while retaining some of the qualities of which Clark writes. Despite this, the muteness of painting is, as Clark argues, worthy of remark and reflection.

George Pattison makes a similar point in reflections on Mark Rothko’s painting Black on Maroon: ‘Rothko confronts us with the question: ’But what do you say about it?’ The painting ‘tells’ us nothing: the burden of deciding how to see it is thrown back on us, the viewers – as Rothko explicitly says when he comments that he is equally open to his work being seen in a sacred or secular way. With regard to ‘what’ it means, the painting does not offer any determinate content or specific message. Instead, it opens up a field of pure possibilities, a ‘potential’ space that invites the co-creativity of the viewer.’[x]

Pattison commends slow waiting with the painting until it reveals what it is, in its essence. The muteness of the painting challenges us to do so and when we look for 15-30 seconds or read the label alongside without then looking again at the painting, it is a challenge that we duck.

The poet Ian Wedde comments on the value we accord to words suggesting that we think it perverse to be reticent. He asks whether there is a silence ‘not sullen or inarticulate, but respectful,’ a reticence ‘leaving space in which the words of others can be heard.’ He asks ‘what kind of art might such a space create’ and ‘what kind of art might create such a space?’[xi]

Richard Carter commends silence as the most spacious language available to us:

‘It is silence that offers space for our lives
Too big and complex to be contained or explained by
any words
It is the silence of God that gives a home
to all the hopes, the fears, the fragments, the layers, the
tangents, the tangles and the tearings
And in the silence God holds us, all of us, and tells us
‘You are mine.’
The light, the dark, the shadow,
the sun, the rain, the wind,
the rainbows of our lives
We seek to discover the silence of our God
at the very centre of all that we are
The living centre
that makes the fullness of our humanity possible
Silence is the only language spacious enough to include
everything.’[xii]

Carter argues that silent contemplative space is the ground of our being and, as such, has made it foundational to the sevenfold rule of life (silence, service, scripture, sacrament, sharing, sabbath, staying with) practised by the Nazareth Community at St Martin-in-the-Fields. Discovering silence is about creating space for meeting; a meeting in which we ‘let the sky in, the light in, the earth in, let prayer in’ and in which we are ‘open and naked before God, the immensity of the universe, the enormity of eternity.’ In silence we ‘rediscover our humanity and a world infused by God’:

‘We are always moving
So we don’t see
Always talking
So we don’t hear
Or we hear in snatches, or bites
But we do not listen to the heights or depths.

You are actually have to stop to see
To be still to notice
How often we walk through rather than being with
Walk past without offering time or space
Take the photo without realizing that the true camera is our
inner eye
We think we have to catch up with the world
Actually, we have to be still enough to let the world catch
up with us
And meet us in the still place
Our lives can be like fast trains rushing through a station
So fast you cannot read the signs
Only a flash of colour and blue of people and place
No time to notice
Or see the signs of God

Here and now
Stop
Be in the moment
Lest you miss it and let your mind and body race on
To further racing’[xiii]

Entering silence is a return to the ground of our being because, for all of us, seeing comes before words, as John Berger reminds us in Ways of Seeing: ‘The child looks and recognises before it can speak. But there is also another sense in which seeing comes before words. It is seeing that establishes our place in the surrounding world; we explain the world with words, but words can never undo the fact that we are surrounded by it. The relation between what we see and what we know is never settled … We never look at just one thing; we are always looking at the relation between things and ourselves. Our vision is continually active, continually holding things in a circle around itself, constituting what is present to us as we are.’[xiv]

As a result, Carter sees art as prayer:

‘I had not realised before, but art is a meditation
Because it is a deeper way of looking at the world
A way of seeing both light and shadow
Of observing the detail that escapes the glazed eye
And all the while seeing it through the context of your own
life and the context of the artist
Seeing is reciprocal
It is seeing the relationship between things and the
relationship with you
The proportion, the colour, the shape, the light, the energy,
the narrative, the life evoked
It is seeing how lines intersect and spaces open up
It is recognizing horizons
The sky above
The earth beneath
The still water in the foreground
It is seeing the tiers of life
It is standing and gazing
No longer my head in the focus but the panorama of life in
which I too am part
For I am the seer
It is breaking through the diatribe and seeing
Creation with all its seams of wonder.’[xv]

Following her conversion to Roman Catholicism in 1913, religious subject matter appeared in Gwen John's art in the form of paintings and drawings of religious figures, some historical and some contemporary. She also became an artistic observer of the religious life of the Catholic community in Meudon where she had made her home. However her depth of faith was primarily expressed through the practice of her art. She wrote of entering 'into art as one enters into religion' and the attention that she paid both to the subjects of her slowly evolving oil paintings and in the rapid sketches she made of local people in church seem to have equated with prayer for her. She viewed herself as a sensual creature unable to pray for any length of time but, inspired by the 'Little Way' of Saint Therese of Lisieux, which outlines how the smallest thing can be done in the name of God, wrote that she must be a saint in her work. What she could express in her work, she wrote, was the 'desire for a more interior life'.

In her art, John achieved a sense of quiet meditation on the beauty of everyday existence that sets her work alongside that of Jean-Baptiste-Simeon Chardin, Giorgio Morandi and Vilhelm Hammershoi. Ultimately for her, post-conversion, this sense of stillness and tranquillity derived from her prayerful attention to the holiness of each moment. She wrote of seeing ‘that God is a God of quietness’ concluding ‘and so we must be quiet’.[xvi] By this means, she truly became 'God's little artist ... a seer of strange beauties, a teller of harmonies’.

By depicting the silent interior life through rooms full of human presence but empty of human beings (domestic scenes or still life’s) or women seated alone in contemplation, she begins a ‘journey of wonder’ for us ‘and then leaves us to travel alone with our thoughts, to listen to the work and its setting rather like the words of a poem.’[xvii] Listening to the setting of the work brings us to reflection on its sources.

Explore

In 2010 for The Artist is Present, her performance piece New York’s Museum of Modern Art, Marina Abramovic sat, motionless and silent every day during museum hours for three months, directly opposite members of the public who queued to spend time in silent dialogue with the artist. This piece, which was about stillness, silent contemplation and being in the present, presented silence as a context for observation and reflection and a mode of communication.

During this piece the artist had the idea for the Marina Abramovic Institute which offers workshops designed to bring body and mind to a quiet state and events in quiet and non-hierarchical spaces with exercises designed to connect with oneself and others through observation.

Abramovic has listed her rules for artist’s regarding silence in a manifesto published as part of her memoir Walk Through Walls. See https://vimeo.com/72711715 for The Artist is Present and https://www.brainpickings.org/2016/11/30/marina-abramovic-artist-manifesto/ for the Manifesto. Another significant statement on art and silence is by Susan Sontag - http://www.susansontag.com/SusanSontag/books/stylesOfRadicalWillExerpt.shtml.

For paintings created in silence which retain the atmosphere of silence, look at the work of Celia Paul, as well as that of Gwen John. For many years Celia Paul’s mother used to climb the 80 steps to this studio in order to sit for her. She would arrive exhausted and out of breath but then would pray in silence as she sat for her daughter, the air being charged with prayer. Paul’s paintings are no less charged with prayer, as, although not conventionally religious, prayer, she says, is still in her bloodstream. A strong sense of peace emanates from her work as she juxtaposes direct observation with mysticism. The peace which emanates is hard won, as is the seclusion found within her studio amidst the complexities of the relations she paints. She paints peace, while painting in peace, despite the disruptions of guilt and grief that arise from her past; a new day, a new dawn is depicted undefined by the past.

‘Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O Lord’ is the prayer that would most readily characterise these pieces, as the emergence of light is often Paul’s subject, resolution and goal. A halo effect surrounds Paul’s features in Self Portrait with Narrow Mirror. The sun, hidden by a dominating dark central tree, streams rays of illuminating light on The BrontĂ« Parsonage lit from without among sombre blues and greys. The light in Kate in White, Spring 2018 overwhelms and overawes spilling over and enveloping the sitter. Breaking, Santa Monica provides a word and image for the peaceful light which breaks through, emerging and emanating from her canvases. God is in the light which pierces the darkening gloom within these works. My Mother and God is 167.3cm of dark canvas stretched from the still image of her sitting mother praying, with those prayers calling forth the thin band of yellow light entering the space at the apex, apotheosis and apogee of the canvas.

To explore the silence of Celia Paul’s work go to https://www.victoria-miro.com/artists/186-celia-paul/.

Wonderings

I wonder what silence means for you in your circumstances.

I wonder what you hear when there is silence.

I wonder where you encounter silence most readily.

Prayer

God of creativity and rest, what might silence be for me? Nowhere is completely silent, yet there are moments and places where noise abates and where enduring existence is heard. Lead me to such moments and places in ways that work for me where I am and who I am. Amen.

Spiritual exercise

Set aside a specific time for silence, with additional time also available for prayer afterwards. During the silence write down all that you hear in that time and all that comes into your mind. After the time of silence is complete, embrace each thing on your list as a gift and about or for that thing whether as thanksgiving or intercession.

Art activity

Visit a gallery or museum and use headphones to block out surrounding noise as you view the artworks.

Visit a church when you know there will be few people there in order to contemplate the art and architecture in relative silence.

[i] http://www.mikulas.ch/photos/2013/Fille-Dieu/2013-06_vitraux_Fille-Dieu.pdf

[ii] http://www.mikulas.ch/hortense.htm

[iii] https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/glowing-panes-brian-clarkes-stained-glass-windows-have-earned-him-global-recognition-and-the-papal-2093385.html

[iv] http://www.mikulas.ch/hortense.htm

[v] http://www.brianclarke.co.uk/work/works/item/347/5

[vi] http://www.brianclarke.co.uk/work/works/item/347/5

[vii] http://www.mikulas.ch/photos/2013/Fille-Dieu/2013-06_vitraux_Fille-Dieu.pdf

[viii] T. J. Clark, Heaven on Earth: Painting and the Life to Come, Thames & Hudson, 2018

[ix] T. J. Clark, Heaven on Earth: Painting and the Life to Come, Thames & Hudson, 2018

[x] G. Pattison, Crucifixions and Resurrections of the Image: Reflections on Art and Modernity, SCM Press, 2009, p.83

[xi] I. Wedde, ‘Where is the art that does this?’ in G. O’Brien ed., ‘Hotere: Out of the Black Window’, Godwit Publishing Ltd., 1997, p.9

[xii] R. Carter, The City is my Monastery: A contemporary Rule of Life, Canterbury Press Norwich, 2019, p.2

[xiii] R. Carter, The City is my Monastery: A contemporary Rule of Life, Canterbury Press Norwich, 2019, p.8-9

[xiv] J. Berger, Ways of Seeing, Penguin Books, 1972, p.7

[xv] R. Carter, The City is my Monastery: A contemporary Rule of Life, Canterbury Press Norwich, 2019, p.44-45

[xvi] T. Frank, Gwen John: Her Art and Spirituality - https://www.theway.org.uk/Back/461Frank.pdf

[xvii] L. Sutton in Be Still: PassionArt Trail 2016, PassionArt, 2016, p. 9

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

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Simon and Garfunkel - The Sound Of Silence.

Saturday, 14 July 2018

Apocalypse in Art: The Creative Unveiling

Apocalypse in Art: The Creative Unveiling was a conference organised in June by CenSAMM at the Panacea Museum in Bedford.

The word ‘apocalypse’ originally indicated an ‘unveiling’, and the speaker in the Book of Revelation is a ‘seer’. This is perhaps one of the reasons that this ancient text (and others like it) have generated such a ferment of creative responses in the visual arts – as well as those other non-visual strands of the arts which have their own way of engaging our mind’s eye.

The rich variety of types of artistic unveiling (visual, musical, dramatic, literary) makes an engagement with the creative arts a deeply valuable way of understanding and appreciating the idea of apocalypse, alongside more traditionally academic modes of enquiry.

This conference sought to explore our relationship to art, its practice, its study and what the arts unveil to us. As artists or as audiences of art we can be profoundly transformed by our encounters with artistic creativity; indeed, we can find ourselves using the language of revelation to describe such encounters, regardless of our individual faith, religion or beliefs. Mark Rothko is quoted as saying, “the people who weep before my pictures are having the same religious experience I had when I painted them.”
All presentations, including my own, are now on the CenSAMM website here: https://censamm.org/conferences/apocalypse-in-art/apocalypse-in-art-the-creative-unveiling-june-2018-media-archive or can be found on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLeX_GYWBJdMF_Iydw_0LBg/videos?disable_polymer=1.

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Melbourne Mass Choir - When He Returns.

Friday, 19 February 2016

Review of 'Foundations of the City'


Nicholas Cranfield reviews 'Foundations of the City' by Alan Everett, the current exhibition at St Stephen Walbrook, in today's Church Times:

"There is something Mark Rothko-like in the way that the artist has explored the contrast between the coloured shape of the cross and the stark background of unrelenting darkness ...

I particularly enjoyed Cosmic Cross, in which stars and nebula appear inside the shape of the cross, as if we are glimpsing the night sky through an open window. In the cross we see not just salvation, but the whole purpose of God’s creation, albeit darkly."

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Carson Cooman - A Cosmic Prayer.

Saturday, 22 August 2015

Airbrushed from Art History: Ben Shahn and American Expressionism

In Common Man Mythic Vision Stephen Polcari compares and contrasts the work of Ben Shahn with his postwar American art peers:

'During and after World War II, whether one was a Social realist like Ben Shahn and the WPA artists, a Regionalist like Thomas Hart Benson, an Expressionist like Rico Lebrun, Hyman Bloom, or Abraham Rattner, or an Abstract Expressionist like Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, and Willem de Kooning, most American artists engaged the principal crisis of their time: the survival of the nation and of humane civilisation.'

'Shahn ... reshaped his style with new subject matter, a more universal outlook, and a new artistic language of symbolic emotion ... his adoption of a new mythic and allegorical language was only one of the ways he contributed to a new American approach to art; particular expressive themes were another ... With works such as Sound in the Mulberry Tree, 1948, with its Hebrew lettering and biblical verse, Maimonides, 1954, which evoked the medieval Jewish sage, Third Allegory, 1955, with its shofar and prayer shawl, and The Parable, 1958, with its drowning or emerging patriarch, Shahn sought to express universal truths. Yet, these works undoubtedly reflect Shahn's new appreciation for the heritage that he had restrained in his early work. The Holocaust brought forth a renewed identification with, and need for reaffirmation of, Shahn's Jewishness ...

fellow radical painter Philip Evergood was also moved to depict the effects of the war in mythic and symbolic language. Evergood's The New Lazarus, 1927 - 54, conflates his typical Social Realist edginess with a mythic biblical image of the evils of war and death, and the hope that these horrors will be redeemed by resurrection ...

Benton Murdoch ... Spruance's Souvenir of Lidice ... depicts three men nailed to crosses - in other words, a modern Calvary. This contemporary crucifixion was inspired by the Nazi slaughter slaughter of the citizens of Lidice, Czechoslovakia ... Spruance followed his war work with a further use of this symbolic language. it is reflected in works of 1943 such as Riders of the Apocalypse with its air war; PietĂ  - From the Sea showing Christ as a dead seaman; and Epiphany, in which the stars of social reconstruction imagery ... appear in a new context ...

With America's entry into the war, Benton altered his approach, now using biblical imagery to address America's political needs. In 1942, he produced a suite of paintings called the Year of Peril ... the series narrated the war in terms of biblical images and themes ...

The expressionist Abraham Rattner ... painted the subject of lamentation several times. In his Lamentation, 1944, and PietĂ s, 1945 and 1949, Rattner created a compact emblem of sorrow ... Although the war is not explicitly represented, it was implicitly understood in the frequent depictions of the crucifixion by Rattner and other artists ...

Lamentation was the formative idea of the Entombment paintings, the largest series in the early work of the Abstract Expressionist Mark Rothko ...

Rico Lebrun employed bestial imagery when he represented the dumb soldiers surrounding Christ as horned and armored animals in The Crucifixion, 1950 ...

Although a Jew from the Baltic like Shahn, the expressionist Bloom was a Boston artist and much more devoted than Shahn to visionary, nightmarish imagery, born of the study of DĂĽrer's allegories, and to the work of Rouault (like Rattner and Spruance), Bresdin and Soutine ...

During the 1940s and 1950s, many artists were engaged in representing their personal responses to history ... Shahn joined these artists in coming to terms with history through allegory, myth and tradition.'

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Joanne Hogg -  I Heard The Voice Of Jesus Say.

Thursday, 27 March 2014

Why Do So Many Jewish Artists Like Creating Works for Churches?

Jews have created a startling number of works for churches in the modern era.  Some of the most prominent artists include Jacques Lipchitz, Marc Chagall, Jacob Epstein, Mark Rothko, Louise Nevelson, and Anthony Caro.  In fact, Rothko even declared he would only create work for a church, never a synagogue!  While these artists negotiated their Jewish identities differently, against distinctive Christian backdrops, the tensions that emerged from such engagements yielded fecund results, both artistically and theologically.

In his talk for the Art and Sacred Places AGM, Dr. Aaron Rosen will survey some of the most intriguing Jewish church commissions, including the Nevelson chapel in New York City, the subject of his forthcoming edited book, Religion and Art in the Heart of Modern Manhattan (Ashgate, 2015).  He will also draw on insights from his monograph Imagining Jewish Art (Legenda, 2009) and another forthcoming book, Spirituality in 21st Century Art (Thames and Hudson, 2015).  Dr. Rosen is the Lecturer in Sacred Traditions and the Arts at King’s College London, and formerly taught at Yale, Oxford, and Columbia after receiving his PhD from Cambridge.

Date:  Wednesday 9th April 2014 from 18.00 to 20.00:  Room K0.18 (South Range 3), Building A, Strand Campus, Kings College London, WC2R 2LS.

Dr Rosen's talk will be immediately preceded by the Art and Sacred Places' Annual General Meeting.

The programme for the evening is:
18.00 - 18.15  Annual General Meeting
18.20 - 18.30  Introduction to Dr Aaron Rosen
18.30 - 19.00 Talk by Dr Aaron Rosen
19.00 - 19.30  Questions and Discussion
19.30 - 20.00  Refreshments

All are Welcome. There will be a small charge of £2.50 for members and £5 for non-members.


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Ravel - Kaddish for Cello and strings.

Saturday, 1 June 2013

Thinking something that goes beyond this senseless existence

Emma Crichton Miller has an interesting piece on art and spirituality at aeon magazine. She suggests that "we continue to seek in art ... a correspondence with [our] oceanic feelings" and "a soothing of our hunger for transcendence" but the salvation art offers is now "without substance or destination."

The miracle found in art, she suggests on the basis of a statement by Mark Rothko, is creative resolution while there is perhaps "no more to be said about painting’s seductive offering than [Gerhard] Richter’s tentative statement to the American curator and critic, Robert Storr: ‘A painting can help us think something that goes beyond this senseless existence’.

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Jon Foreman - Broken From The Start.

Saturday, 8 May 2010

Airbrushed from Art History (17)

The roots of abstract art lie in attempts to better express the essence of the spiritual in art and, from a Christian perspective, such art has predominantly been understood from two opposite poles. Richard Davey expresses one pole well when he writes, in Stations: the new sacred art, that:

“For many artists in the 20th century abstract forms have become the most appropriate way through which faith can be expressed. Artists such as Kandinsky, Rothko, Natkin and Webb have utilised the emotional and expressive qualities of colour and line which offer a profound equivalent for the experience of God. Colour, line, texture and form create a unique visual narrative that is not dependent on words and intellectual concepts. Instead they connect directly with the viewer, generating an emotional response to the work.”

Conversely, however, abstract art can also be understood as saying that God cannot be definitively captured in any representational image. God is beyond representation and is always more than the images that are used to describe aspects of God’s reality. In this sense, abstract art has affinities with the ‘via negativa’ which constantly reminds us that God is not as we have experienced or perceived him to be. As a result, abstract can be equated with absence - the absence of representation equalling the absence of God – making abstract art the art ‘par excellence’ of a modernity which declared the ‘death of God.’

Theologian John Dillenberger, and his art historian wife Jane, were particular advocates of abstraction, knowing abstract expressionists such as Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko personally. They came to maturity in the mid-twentieth century, under the strong influence of Paul Tillich’s existentialist theology, and saw in abstract expressionism an inherently spiritual search — which had the virtue of leaving behind the exhausted religious iconography of Western art.

Wassily Kandinsky’s equation of abstract art with spirituality was signalled by the publication of his book Concerning the Spiritual in Art in the year that he painted his first fully abstract work. Concerning the Spiritual in Art argued that abstraction was the best means available to artists for depicting an unseen realm.

Yet in reaching this conclusion Kandinsky had to journey from representational art to abstract art. He began his career painting representational works and gradually removed all representation from his paintings until they were fully abstract. Therefore his way into abstraction was from representation and there is a story told about Kandinsky which illustrates this transition, although the story itself may be apocryphal. In this story Kandinsky entered his studio to be confronted by a glowing and emotive combination of colours and lines without any obvious subject. He saw what appeared to be a fully abstract painting and was struck by the intensity of emotion that it evoked. On closer inspection however he realised that the painting was in fact one of his landscapes which had been turned upside down.

So, Kandinsky’s first fully abstract works derived from representational images and it is possible to get a sense of how this occurred by comparing two paintings depicting soldiers; his representational St George and the Dragon and his semi-abstract Cossacks. We can get a sense of how he proceeded if we look at the representational image with blurred vision (perhaps because we have removed our glasses). Immediately, we lose our sense of what the figures in the image represent because we cannot see sufficient detail to recognise them but we can still see generalised patches of colour and the shape and direction of objects within the picture. It was this that Kandinsky painted. As he himself said: "I applied streaks and blobs of colors onto the canvas with a palette knife and I made them sing with all the intensity I could..."

Kandinsky sought to express in his initial abstract Compositions his belief in a coming catastrophe with spiritual consequences and because he began with a figurative image of disturbance, such as the Deluge, he was able to retain that same sense of disturbance in the combination of colour and form that he painted. Looking at his Composition VI, which we know derives from an image of the Deluge, we cannot, by looking at the painting, state that we can see a representation of the flood but we can talk in terms of a sense or feeling of conflict and impending doom that pervades the swirl of shapes and colours which form the painting. As in this instance abstract art often communicates most powerfully at the level of our emotions conveying to us a sense of a state of being – conflict or doom, peace or grace – without specifying a specific source for this sense or feeling or emotion.

Kandinsky then, despite his more esoteric spiritual beliefs and investigations, initially created abstract art by abstracting from apocalyptic biblical images. Composition V is an abstraction on the theme of the resurrection of the dead where it is possible to see glimpses of angels blowing their trumpets and the towers of a walled city. More than these vestiges of representational imagery however, the work conveys a sense of infinity as the context for resurrection.
Kandinsky used abstraction to express a sense of coming disorder but, if we look at the work of some Cubist artists we can see the opposite; use of abstraction as a spiritual search for a sense of order and harmony.

Many artists in the early part of the twentieth century were searching for the universal rules that underpinned works of art. The deconstruction of representational art that occurred through movements such as Impressionism, Expressionism, Cubism and so on was, in part, the attempt to discover these fundamental rules. While Expressionism and Fauvism were movements focusing primarily on effects of colour, Cubism was a movement that experimented with form. Cubism worked with the fundamental forms of cubes and circles, lines and curves and several Cubist artists came to locate in Christian Art the rules that they thought governed the use of these fundamental forms in art. One such artist is Albert Gleizes who positioned his shapes on the canvas in relation to the height and width of the canvas and then rotated them to create a spiralling movement within the painting that keeps the eye constantly moving from shape to shape.

His sense that the mathematical means for determining the positioning of forms within the frame of the canvas derived from that developed within Christendom during the ‘Dark Ages’ in Western Europe can be seen in the way that he uses these methods to create an image of, for example, Christ in Glory. These paintings are firstly harmonious spiralling combinations of line and colour which secondly indicate a sense of figures equating to traditional images of God. These emerge from the combination of forms and are revealed as eternally united by the continual rotation of shapes within the picture frame.

Similarly, in the catalogue of the From Russia exhibition, Yevgenia Petrova writes, of Kasimir Malevich that, “the quest for one of the 20th century’s most innovative creators for new themes and a new artistic language had its source in the realm of his religious notions.” In The Avant-Garde Icon Andrew Spira seeks to demonstrate how icons underpin the development of nineteenth and twentieth-century Russian art.

During this time new ideas grounded in a radical revolutionary secularism were providing a strong challenge to the values of a society steeped in religious, faith-based traditions. Great artists such as Malevich and Larionov offered an ambivalent response to their religious heritage. Whilst they rebelled against its stifling conservation and credulity, they were also profoundly influenced by its nationalist, populist, aesthetic appeal and, ultimately, its spirituality. Malevich in particular aimed to raise the status of contemporary art to that of icons. He pared his imagery and colour down to black on white, shape on background. He spoke of his Black Cross as an icon of the new time and hung it across the corners of a room in the space traditionally reserved for an icon in a home. His black shapes represent the weight and substance of humanity in the weightlessness and void of the universe.

Spira's argument is not that the Russian avant-garde from the Wanderers to the Suprematists (and Malevich, in particular) were Christians or that they painted icons but that their appreciation of icons, their creation and their meaning, affected the aspects of the development of their work, their artistic practice and their philosophical understanding of the meaning and value of their art. Spira notes that:"although evidence of [the] receptivity [of avant-garde artists] to icons is more hidden than evidence of their rejection of the Church and its trappings, it is arguable that the tradition of icon painting was integral to the shaping of their work. As with children who rebel against their parents but turn out to resemble them, the art of the avant-garde often showed striking similarities to icons in looks, mannerisms and even in deeper sympathies."

In his book God in the Gallery, Daniel Siedell argues that iconography has been an influence of the development of Modern Art citing Kandinsky, Malevich and Mark Rothko as his key examples. The contemporary icongrapher, Aidan Hart, has made the same claim citing Constantin Brancusi, Henri Matisse, Vincent Van Gogh and Cecil Collins, among others, in addition to those cited by Siedell.

Hart's argument has three main aspects. Firstly, positive comments made by these artists regarding key aspects of iconography. Secondly, the adoption in Modern Art of many of the main stylistic techniques of icongraphy such as flatness, inverse perspective, multi-point perspective, isometry, radience etc. Thirdly, the use of abstraction as a language to express objective metaphysical truth, the essence of things. Brancusi is Hart's key witness for his Rumanian Orthodox upbringing and practice and for his aphorisms on the role of the artist such as, "The artist should know how to dig out the being that is within matter and be the tool that brings out its cosmic essence into an actual visible essence."

Similarly, Mark C. Taylor wrote at the beginning of his Disfiguring: Art, Architecture, Religion:
"All of the major abstract expressionists were deeply interested in religion and actively incorporated spiritual concerns in their work. Moreover, such involvement with religion is not limited to postwar American art. From the beginning of modern art in Europe, its practitioners have relentlessly probed religious issues. Though not always immediately obvious, the questions religion raises lurk on or near the surface of even the most abstract canvases produced during the modern era.

One of the most puzzling paradoxes of twentieth-century cultural interpretation is that, while theologians, philosophers of religion, and art critics deny or surpress the religious significance of the visual arts, many of the leading modern artists insist that their work cannot be understood apart from religious questions and spiritual issues."

The Abstract Expressionists worked with contrasts of light and dark and were less concerned with form and more concerned with colour. Barnett Newman created glowing zips of colour and Mark Rothko windows or doors of light. In both there is a sense of light beyond, of an opening into the light of the divine. In both, however, something darker can also be found. Pamela Schaeffer has written:

“I found it especially fascinating to ponder some of the purer abstract works - such as the rich, dark, imageless canvases of Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko - in relation to the apophatic tradition in Christian mysticism. Masters of that tradition, sometimes called the via negativa, choose words like nothingness, darkness and obscurity to symbolize God, the wholly other Absolute who is unknowable by means of the intellect but approachable through love."

Rothko’s later paintings have often been understood as depictions of the absence of God and the darkness of the world; an impression reinforced by Rothko’s suicide on the day that the Tate received those paintings. Newman’s and Rothko’s somber, borderless canvases suggest deep silence and infinite void, yet somehow, too, evoke a sense of presence and mystery. Newman made no attempt to hide his spiritual interests. In 1943 he wrote, "The painter is concerned . . . with the presentation into the world of mystery. His imagination is therefore attempting to dig into metaphysical secrets. To that extent, his art is concerned with the sublime. It is a religious art which through symbols will catch the basic truth of life."

Roberto Balzarotti noted, in a lecture for the William G. Congdon Foundation, “the fact that in the same period (the 1960s) three eminent proponents of Abstract Expressionism – Mark Rothko, Barnett Newman and William Congdon – were working on painting cycles on a subject specifically Christian [i.e. the Rothko Chapel in Houston, TX, by Mark Rothko; the Stations of the Cross by Barnett Newman; and William Congdon’s painting], which was a truly unique circumstance, even more so given that they reached this common end following paths and motives that were absolutely different, and in any case completely independent from each other.”

Balzarotti also notes that Congdon was the only one who “adhered to a specific faith, Roman Catholic Christianity.” Congdon was a contemporary of Willem de Kooning and Jackson Pollock who painted in the style of the action painters and abstract expressionists while living and exhibiting in New York but then faded from view as he went abroad. After traveling the globe on a spiritual quest, he settled in Assisi, where he had a conversion experience and became a Roman Catholic. His most impressive paintings following his conversion are a series of over 150 crucifixes, which became more and more abstract over the years. He lived in an abandoned Benedictine monastery, while painting with bold strokes of colour and scale.

In An American Artist in Italy Rodolfo Balzarotti notes that Congdon compared his work to:
“that of his ‘brothers’ in Action Painting, painters like Pollock or Rothko. “I was born a painter in that same tremor, or thrill, of self-abandonment to the things simultaneously see and captured as the medium of painting itself, in which every appearance was already transfigured in the unpredictable miraculous birth of the image … the image, in the last analysis, of myself … there was a coincidence of rage, of having to erase a world in order to rip out of one’s innards as though giving birth the image of a new life.”

This led, Balzarotti notes, to “a phase of crisis and bewilderment, which seems to alienate him completely from the world that had been his until then.” After this phase, “Congdon began working intensely, accompanying his painting with a stringent reflection on what he was doing. His isolation, far from constituting a closing off, enabled him to let his language as an Action Painter evolve independently of what was happening on the public art scene in the 1970s and 1980s, increasingly conditioned by the phenomenon of the market, fashion, and the ephemeral.”

Jean Bazaine was a Catholic whose reading of Bergson was implicit in his abstract imagery of plunging, swirling forms. Bazaine was closely connected with the 'personalist' philosopher Emmanuel Mounier and his review Esprit which was at the forefront of debates between Catholicism, Marxism and a nascent existentialism before the Second World War.

Natalie Adamson writes that although his own painting would only make the transition from figuration to a fully “non-figurative” style between 1941 and 1944, Bazaine used his exhibition reviews for two significant press forums that were defined by their progressive Catholic outlook (the monthly journal Esprit and the weekly newspaper Temps prĂ©sent) as a means of contributing towards the reinvigoration of the sterile, anachronistic formulas of art sacrĂ© in offering new, possibly non-realist, modes of representing spiritual experience.

It is as an inspired creator of works enriching the entire history of modern religious art, writes James Kirkup, that Bazaine will best be remembered, by believers and non-believers alike: the windows in the church at Asay (1943-47) in Savoie, the facade mosaics (1951) and windows (1954) of the church at Audincourt in the Jura (1954), the church of Villeparisis (1961) and a reception centre at Noisy le Grand (1955). Bazaine's vivid, dynamic works irradiating the sombre ambulatory and apsidal chapels of St Severin Paris are, according to Kirkup, one of the most wonderful series of stained-glass windows in France. These windows represent the seven sacraments of the Church, portrayed as essential forms from nature in all its glory and symbolising Water, Fire and Light, sacred emblems of Divine Grace. An appropriate biblical verse is inscribed beneath each.

Bazaine organised the clandestine, semi-abstract exhibition 'Twenty Young Painters of the French Tradition', held in defiance of the Nazis at the Galerie Braun in May 1941. This exhibition included The Lunatics (1938) by Alfred Manessier who became, in the 1950s, as Sarah Wilson writes, one of the most prominent painters of the School of Paris, a doyen of both 'lyrical abstraction' and the renewal of sacred art in France after the war. In the words of Werner Schmalenbach he was 'after Georges Rouault the only great painter of Christian art in our age':

“The 'Young Painters' combined the Cubist grid and Fauvist colour, the inheritance of Picasso and Bonnard, with semi-abstract, often religious themes; Charles Lapicque had pioneered the style with his Christ Crowned with Thorns as early as 1939. It was not until 1943, however, on a three-day retreat with the writer Camille Bourniquel that Manessier, then aged 32, experienced his profound religious conversion at the abbey of Notre Dame de la Trappe de Soligny (Orne).

The rigour of the Cistercian Trappist regime and the link between its services and the rhythms of days, night and the seasons were keenly felt by the increasingly ascetic artist. The monks' chant inspired perhaps his greatest early painting, Salve Regina, a work constructed with vertical slabs of singing reds, oranges and blues.

Manessier's works such as The St Matthew Passion (1948) continued to bring not only religious but liturgical and musical elements into purely abstract colour compositions. Titles invited readings of predominantly abstract works: in Barabbas (1952) a menacing purple circle approaches the sign for Christ - a crown of thorns - with explicit metaphorical intent. Both Manessier and Bazaine were influenced by a renascent Bergsonism: images of flux with diagonal axes in their work evoke floods of light and water, and are distinct from contemporary 'all-over' experiments in France and the United States.

In 1947, Manessier received a visit from Georges Rouault, who advised him to take up stained-glass design: from 1948 to 1950 Manessier worked on six windows for Saint Agathe des Breseaux, Doubs … Manessier has left his mark in stained glass in many beautiful churches in France and beyond, such as Saint-Pierre de Trinquetaille in Arles (1953), Notre-Dame de la Paix (Le Pouldu, Brittany, 1958), the Saint- Die cathedral (Vosges), and the convent of the Sisters of the Assumption, Rue Violet, Paris (1968-69), together with commissions in Basle, Fribourg, Essen, Cologne, Bremen and elsewhere.”

Bazaine and Manessier together founded the Association pour la Défense des Vitraux de France (the "Association for the Defense of France's Stained Glass").

Manessier wrote of seeking:

“a sort of transfiguration of the real which nourishes painting with a breath of the spirit. It's the passages between things which interest me. Something circulates amongst all forms of human experience ensuring a profound unity. I try to force myself to make that unity appear.”

Similarly, write Peter Serracino Inglott and Gino Gauci in Sacred Art in Malta 1890 - 1960, the “superb and profoundly conceived abstract work” of Alfred Chircop “wells up from a solidly Dominican formation and uncompromising following of the motto: contemplata aliis tradere.” To Dominic Cutajar, “Chircop's catharsis is tied to the cosmic transcendentalism popularised in Catholic intellectual circles by Teilhard de Chardin.”

Chircop’s paintings have been described as “outbursts of creative energy” which suggest “birth and growth, sprouting and blossoming.” “With their transparencies, quasi-magical overlaying of paint, outbursts of energy and light, and the impeccable workmanship through the wielding of the artist’s brush seemingly akin to lithe fingers caressing the strings of a harp,” writes Emmanuel Fiorentino in Alfred Chircop: Paintings 1999 – 2001, “they still manage to transfigure the core of their emotions away from any material grasp in order to let it ascend into the ethereal realm for which they offer intimations away from the crudeness of mortality.”

As a result, “the tenuous vision residing in his abstracts, consistently evolving throughout the greater part of his career, has come to tap the rarified stratosphere of a spiritual dimension, truly and justifiably lending them the epithet of landscapes of the spirit.”

Religious painting in Australia was quickened, writes Robert Hughes in The Art of Australia, by Eric Smith:

“Smith is a Catholic, and religious belief is the core of his art. His abstract work between 1956 and the present day records a continuous struggle to intensify religious experience through non-figurative techniques. The sacramental calm of his colour remained, but form became increasingly fragmented. The Moment Christ Died, 1958, is a slow explosion of flakes of colour, suggesting the separation of soul and body at the point of death. In Christ Is Risen, 1959, a figure emerges from an ecstatic flurry of energy; Smith’s human images seemed usually half-dissolved in light or blur of motion, and their bristling clusters of line were far removed from the solid, deliberate forms of earlier paintings,

By 1960 the breakdown of form was complete … The paintings with which Smith won the 1962 Helena Rubinstein Scholarship are, in some ways, a return to the structural concentration of his 1955 religious paintings. But their intensity is amplified by a more complex space and an increased poignancy of emotion, as in a gravely conceived Crucifixion, 1961 … Leaving aside the gold-leaf-and-angel merchants, there is no doubt that Smith is the first Australian artist to meet his religious impulses on a serious level of inquiry.”

Richard Kenton Webb is a contemporary British artist who has “a passion for the space; the essence of the place; a mirroring of emotion; and other abstract qualities of the land itself.” For him abstract art is about “a search for equivalents.” “As we investigate a place,” he writes, “there are many sensations that we register – the springiness of the turf underfoot, the roughness of the rock on your fingertips, the wind and rain or the scent of a rose in the morning. We can play down such sensations, but they are always there. So, how can we capture these ‘illegible’ impressions and record the non-rational, poetic associations that we experience as painters?” Abstraction provides the “different tempos, shapes, size, mood, colours and forms” needed to express how you feel about the view before you and go beyond the superficial or what is on the surface.

Mark Brooke has written that Kenton Webb’s paintings: "have a calm, assured sense of purpose. They are reduced to a stripped down essential. Colour with delicate variations. A word he often uses is "equivalent' to indicate the solutions open to the artist.... The carefully prepared canvas, often with lead white ground laid on in several coats, allows the paint when applied to seem translucent. The small intricate brush lines suggest the uneven, inconsistent and broken patterns of men's lives which somehow, when fused together, form a greater significant whole. Light will find its way through, if we can be still and see the colour.”

David Thistlethwaite writes: "Here are spaces to get into - real finite ones, where the early Creation is alone and quiet with its maker, and his Spoken Word beams intelligence and perspective into the uniformed waste - and pools of reflected gold hint at the beginnings of response.'

By contrast, Clay Sinclair is an artist who is fascinated with vibrant colour, symbolism and the potential to change. He has a unique way of painting ‘backwards’ on to perspex/ plexiglass which gives his paintings a stunning luminosity and purity of colour. He regularly uses text and loves to provoke with each piece he creates. The end results are stimulating and are often laced with a little humour. His inspiration primarily comes from observing the way we are and how we relate to each other and our environment. Issues of ego, relationship and society are themes that regularly appear and influence his work.

Sinclair says: “My paintings aim to be more than just wallpaper. I seek to create work that will engage, stimulate and provoke the viewer. By painting on perspex, my art is vibrant and luminous, but by frequently using text I force the art to be viewed as more than just an ascetic object.”

Leafa Janice Wilson notes the flawless finish and pure, unashamed colour of his works set within a geometric compositional structure:

“Where there is no physical texture on the surface, there is definitely an undulation created by different depths and colour temperatures that make these works operate effectively as highly textured and painterly works.

The colour throughout Sinclair’s works balances up the realism he provides us by the allusions to the recession and his seemingly apologetic approach to having to price his works. There is a certain intensity to the words permeating his works, which leads me to question if the absence of words would have made the same kind of visual impact on first glance … Sinclair’s keen eye for design and visual balance is reminiscent of beautiful urban images of city lightscapes.”

Makoto Fujimura's work combines traditional Japanese painting technique with a Western approach to abstraction. Born in Boston in 1960, Fujimura earned his B.A. at Bucknell, then went on to receive his Master of Fine Arts and Doctorate degrees from the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, where he studied the Japanese traditional technique of Nihonga. This technique uses ground minerals such as azurite, malachite and cinnabar mixed with animal hide glue applied to handmade paper. Western artists who have influenced his work include Mark Rothko and Jackson Pollock.

Kristen Frederickson, in an essay written for a 2004 exhibition of new paintings by Fujimura inspired and informed by T.S. Eliot's last poem, 'Four Quartets', wrote: "There is a component of these paintings that cannot be seen except by the naked eye: photographic representation is an inadequate translation, perhaps more for these works than most art. As the eye travels from one moment of the painting to another - from a glistening river of blue to teardrops of green, streaks of vermilion to a shimmering layer of gold leaf falling perilously across the surface - there is an element of utter abstraction and peace that belies the intense training and experience required to produce these paintings." Similarly, Fujimura has written, in 'Gravity and Grace': "We now begin to realize what we do is only temporary and indefinable. Incomplete gestures must be made, because reality beckons us to respond. Beauty, however peripheral, insists that we remain faithful to who we are, as we are."


In 'Beauty without Regret' Fujimura wrote: "The layers of azurite pigments, spread over paper as I let the granular pigments cascade. My eyes see much more than what my mind can organize. As the light becomes trapped within pigments, a "grace arena" is created, as the light is broken, and trapped in refraction. Yet, my gestures are limited, contained, and gravity pulls the pigments like a kind friend.


Every beauty suffers. A research scientist friend once told me that the autumn leaves are most beautiful on the trees by the roadside because they happen to be distressed by the salt and pollution. Every sunset is a reminder of the impending death of Nature herself. The minerals I use must be pulverized to bring out their beauty. The Japanese were right in associating beauty with death.

Art cannot be divorced from faith, for to do so is to literally close our eyes to that beauty of the dying sun setting all around us. Every beauty also suffers. Death spreads all over our lives and therefore faith must be given to see through the darkness, to see through the beauty of "the valley of the shadow of death".

Prayers are given, too, in the layers of broken, pulverized pigments. Beauty is in the brokenness, not in what we can conceive as the perfections, not in the "finished" images but in the incomplete gestures. Now, I await for my paintings to reveal themselves. Perhaps I will find myself rising through the ashes, through the beauty of such broken limitations."
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Iona - Treasure.