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Showing posts with label sacred art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sacred art. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 September 2022

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

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

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

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

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

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

My paper utilised the following texts:

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

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

Exodus 14. 26-30

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

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

The paper I presented was as follows:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Moya Brennan - To The Water.

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.

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Good Charlotte - Beautiful Place.

Tuesday, 25 July 2017

Artlyst article: Polish Art In Britain

My latest article for Artlyst focuses on Art Out of the Bloodlands: A Century of Polish Artists in Britain at the Ben Uri Gallery. This exhibition explores the contribution made by the largest migrant community to 20th/21st Century British Art by highlighting the work of Polish artists who have worked and continue to work in Britain. Featured artists include Jankel Adler, Janina Baranowska, Marian Bohusz-Szyszko, Stanislaw Frenkiel, Feliks Topolski and Alfred Wolmark, complemented by contemporary practitioners working in London now. Many of the featured works retain symbols of Polish national identity, from Catholicism and the cavalry, to the dark forests and traditional embroidery.

In the article I say that:

"Exile and rejection are themes with deep biblical roots and as significant numbers of Polish artists, in reaction and response, have been influenced by Roman Catholicism; it comes as no surprise to find such themes among their work and featuring in this exhibition. Bohusz-Szyszko and other exiled Polish artists such as Baranowska, Frenkiel, Adam Kossowski, Henryk Gotlib, Marek Zulawski, and Aleksander Zyw were part of a consistent but under-recognised strand of artists’ employing sacred themes which runs throughout the 20th century in the UK."

My other Artlyst articles are:
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Lal & Mike Waterson - Bright Phoebus.

Monday, 22 February 2016

Walbrook Art Group talks


Last week at the Walbrook Art Group we heard excellent presentations from Stephen Baxter on photo collages and Lynda Keen on photographs of wildlife in the city.

This week's meeting will feature two more artist-led presentations. This week's speakers are Sarah White and Dharshan Thenuwara. Both are young artists and will be telling us about their work.

On Wednesday 2nd March, the speakers will be Alan Everett and myself. Alan will give a guided tour of his exhibition 'Foundations of the City', while I will give a brief overview of twentieth century Sacred Art.

All meeting are from 1.00 - 2.00pm at St Stephen Walbrook.

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Enya - Paint The Sky With Stars.

Friday, 20 November 2015

Sabbatical Art Pilgrimage: Latest ArtWay report

My latest Church of the Month report for ArtWay focuses on Église de Saint-Paul à Grange-Canal in Geneva. 'The manifesto for the renaissance of modern sacred art is written in stone, glass, and paint at Saint-Paul à Grange-Canal in the upmarket municipality of Cologny in Geneva, Switzerland. Cologny is well known for having been visited by Lord Byron, Mary Shelley, Percy Bysshe Shelley, John William Polidori, and other friends in the summer of 1816, a trip that spawned the development of the classic talesFrankenstein and “The Vampyre.”

Located at the southern end of Cologny at the dead end of the Avenue de Saint-Paul, the church isn’t something one stumbles upon; it has to be deliberately sought out—and great beauty awaits those who do.'

This Church of the Month report follows on from others about Aylesford Priory, Canterbury Cathedral, Chapel of St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus and the Holy Face, Hem, Chelmsford Cathedral, Lumen, Notre Dame du Léman, Notre-Dame de Toute Grâce, Plateau d’Assy, Romont, Sint Martinuskerk Latem, St Aidan of Lindisfarne, St Alban RomfordSt. Andrew Bobola Polish RC Church and St Mary the Virgin, Downe, as well as earlier reports of visits to sites associated with Marian Bohusz-Szyszko, Marc Chagall, Jean Cocteau, Antoni Gaudi and Henri Matisse.

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Jennifer Warnes & Leonard Cohen - Joan Of Arc.

Friday, 24 July 2015

Sabbatical art pilgrimage: Latest ArtWay report

My latest Church of the Month report for ArtWay focuses on Notre-Dame de Toute Grâce, Plateau d’Assy. 'Planned as a showcase for the value of modern church commissions, the Dominican-inspired church of Notre-Dame de Toute Grâce in Plateau d’Assy (or Assy), France, elicited diverse reactions of praise and condemnation when it was consecrated in August 1950. Many hoped it would set off a renaissance of sacred art in Europe, but others disapproved strongly of its commissioning of secular artists.'

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

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Paramore - Ain't It Fun.

Thursday, 2 October 2014

Sabbatical art pilgrimage: Report - Part 1

The commissions that I have seen during this sabbatical tell a story of a continuing engagement by the Church with contemporary art from the Post-Impressionists to the present day. This engagement has often been contentious and contested but it has nevertheless been a continuing relationship involving both mainstream artists with a Christian faith and church commissions undertaken by mainstream artists who have not professed the faith.

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.” 

Read was speaking of the UK but a similar situation occurred in mainland Europe and in both settings, while the church building programme has slowed somewhat, the commissioning of contemporary art has not, meaning we have and are witnessing something of a renaissance of commissioned art for churches and cathedrals.

Key figures in initiating and then sustaining aspects of this renaissance in its initial phases included the artists Maurice Denis and Albert Gleizes, the philosopher Jacques Maritain, and the churchmen Bishop George Bell, Dominican Friar’s Couturier and Régamey, and Canon Walter Hussey.

Significant thematic developments within this period include:

·       commissions by secular artists or artists of other faiths who have brought alternative perspectives to Christian imagery, beliefs and themes. Artists such as Ervin Bossanyi and Marc Chagall, while using Christian imagery in their stained glass commissions, also recognized the 'profound inspiration' of all the great religions, possessed a 'reverence for life' and longed for a 'new cosmopolitan world order, in which ideological, racist and cultural differences no longer mattered';
·       images of the crucifixion by, for example, Albert Servaes, Germaine Richier and Graham Sutherland which viewed Christ’s sacrifice as emblematic of human suffering in conflict and persecution. These were often controversial as they challenged sentimental images of Christ and deliberately introduced ugliness into beautiful buildings;
·        in England church commissions gave émigré artists – such as Bossanyi (stained glass), Hans Feibusch (murals) and Adam Kossowski (ceramics) - the opportunity to build new careers. In writing about Feibusch, Jutta Vinzent has noted the extent to which this was “a period of intense artistic activity in Britain” which was “stimulated to an inestimable extent by émigré artists”; and
·       a move from storytelling in stained glass by means of narrative figuration (e.g. Chagall) to the creation of spiritual space using abstract colour (as pioneered by Jean Bazaine and Alfred Manessier) has occurred, primarily in France. The concept of stained glass architecture - of a light-filled architectural unit – that we find, for example, at the Chapelle Sainte-Thérèse-de-l'Enfant-Jésus et de laSainte-Face in Hem is an attempt to create spiritual space - a sense of prayer and a glimpse of heaven – through the play of light and colour within the building. In the past churches were centres for the drama of the visual - the drama and spectacle of the liturgy combined with the visual narrative of scripture in stained glass. Now people find their visual stimulation elsewhere - through the media primarily – and, as a result, churches have become centres for the opposite of visual stimulation e.g. centres of visual contemplation, where narrative is less essential than ambience and atmosphere.

This story is not one which has been well told, either by the Church or the mainstream art world. There are many reasons for this on both sides. The Church has often not valued sufficiently the artworks it has commissioned; at times their significance has not been understood or shared, at other times the works have been controversial and may have been banned or not publicized as a result. Often the artworks have been regarded as subsidiary to the liturgy and have not been publicized in order that the focus of the faithful would not be deflected. ‘Christian Art’ has become a contested term and the Church has been unsure whether to continue to use it and, if not, how else to speak of its commissions. There has also been significant debate about the relative values of commissioning artists who are Christians and contemporary ‘masters’ who may not be Christians.

In terms of the mainstream art world, the beginning of the modern period saw art and artists firmly and finally separating from dependence on Church patronage and wishing to maintain that independence. In addition, the speed with which new movements formed within modernism meant that artists engaging with church commissions in their later career could be portrayed as no longer being cutting edge and as having declined in the quality of their work. Many of the media used for Church commissions have not been central to modernism’s movements while the ‘alternative world’ of artists for whom Church commissions are a significant part of their practice tends not to feature on the radar of the mainstream art world.

Each of the above is open to question and critique. Controversy over commissions tends to fade leading to more widespread acceptance. Controversy can also generate valuable debate. The place of icons in Orthodox Churches shows that artworks can enhance rather than detract from worship. Commissions have gone to artists who are Christians and to contemporary ‘masters’ who are not Christians throughout the modern period. There are examples of successful and less successful commissions using both approaches. A mixed economy is the only practical and realistic approach. Commissions should be judged on their own merits and not on the reputation of the artist(s) involved. Reputations change over time meaning that those who are viewed as contemporary ‘masters’ may not be considered as significant by future generations while artists who do not have national or international reputations in their day may nevertheless produce high quality and/or visionary work. The quality of work produced by artists does not necessarily diminish with age or a change of style or when Church commissions are accepted, although the reputation of an artist or the perception as to whether they are or are not cutting edge may be affected by such considerations. The story of the revival of sacred art in the twentieth century can be told as one story among many in modernism and as a means of increasing the historical accuracy within the telling of the standard story of modernism.

My concern in making this story the focus of my sabbatical has been to encourage the Church to tell and to value this story. As both a parish priest and through commission4mission, the group of artists of which I am part, I have seen the value of promoting and publicising the artworks which churches have commissioned. Through the creation of Art Trails locally and regionally, we have provided churches with a means of publicity which has led to events such as art competitions, exhibitions, festivals and talks, community art workshops, guided and sponsored walks, and Study Days. Each has brought new contacts to the churches involved and has built relationships between these churches and local artists/arts organisations.

It is my contention that to tell more fully the story of the engagement which the Church has had with modern and contemporary art could have similar impact on a wider scale and would also have the effect of providing emerging artists from within the Church and the faith with a greater range of role models and approaches for their own developing inspiration and practice. The commissions themselves often speak powerfully and movingly of the Christian faith and therefore also inform the spirituality of those who see them.

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Leonard Cohen - Born In Chains.

Thursday, 21 August 2014

Sabbatical art pilgrimage: Latest ArtWay report

My latest sabbatical art pilgrimage report for ArtWay has been published in their Church of the Month slot. This report concerns St Aidan of Lindisfarne in East Acton, which is a treasure casket of sacred art. The reports which ArtWay are publishing generally contain additional information or reflections from those which I am posting here and, as with the posts here, will gradually build up a partial history of the revival of sacred art in the twentieth century.


This report follows others on Aylesford Priory, Chelmsford CathedralLumen and Sint Martinuskerk Latem, as well as earlier reports of visits to sites associated with Marian Bohusz-Szyszko, Marc Chagall, Jean Cocteau, Antoni Gaudi and Henri Matisse.

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Water into Wine Band - Waiting For Another Day.

Friday, 1 August 2014

Sabbatical art pilgrimage: Latest ArtWay report

My latest sabbatical art pilgrimage report for ArtWay has been published in their Church of the Month slot. This report concerns SintMartinuskerk Latem in Belgium and the art colony that was there in the early part of the twentieth century. The reports which ArtWay are publishing generally contain additional information or reflections from those which I am posting here and, as with the posts here, will gradually build up a partial history of the revival of sacred art in the twentieth century.


This report follows others on Aylesford Priory, Chelmsford Cathedral and Lumen, as well as earlier reports of visits to sites associated with Marian Bohusz-Szyszko, Marc Chagall, Jean Cocteau, Antoni Gaudi and Henri Matisse.

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Duke Special - Freewheel.

Wednesday, 30 July 2014

Sabbatical art pilgrimage: ACG e-info introduction

I have recently written the introductory piece for the latest e-info mailing sent out by the Arts Centre Group. In it I summarise briefly the main learning from my sabbatical art pilgrimage:

"Over the past three months spent on sabbatical I’ve been enjoying the opportunity to visit churches in Belgium, England, France and Switzerland to see works of modern and contemporary art.

The commissions that I have seen during this sabbatical tell a story of a continuing engagement by the Church with contemporary art from the Post-Impressionists to the present day. This engagement has often been contentious and contested but it has nevertheless been a continuing relationship involving both mainstream artists with a Christian faith and church commissions undertaken by mainstream artists who have not professed the faith.

This story is not one which has been well told, either by the Church or the mainstream art world. There are many reasons for this on both sides but my concern in making this story the focus of my sabbatical has been to encourage the Church to tell and to value this story.

As both a parish priest and through commission4mission, the group of artists of which I am part, I have seen the value of promoting and publicising the artworks which churches have commissioned. Through the creation of Art Trails locally and regionally, we have provided churches with a means of publicity which has led to events such as art competitions, exhibitions, festivals and talks, community art workshops, guided and sponsored walks, and Study Days. Each has brought new contacts to the churches involved and has built relationships between these churches and local artists/arts organisations.

It is my contention that to tell more fully the story of the engagement which the Church has had with modern and contemporary art could have similar impact on a wider scale and would also have the effect of providing emerging artists from within the Church and the faith with a greater range of role models and approaches for their own developing inspiration and practice.

The commissions I have seen speak powerfully and movingly of the Christian faith and therefore also inform the spirituality of those who see them. I am seeking to tell part of this story through posts about my sabbatical visits on my blog at http://joninbetween.blogspot.co.uk/, as well as in the Church of the Month series on the ArtWay website - http://www.artway.eu/. My hope is that others will find these commissions and the continuing story of church commissions as inspirational as I have done."

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David Grant - Change.

Friday, 25 July 2014

Sabbatical art pilgrimage: Supervision

At the beginning of the week I had a second excellent sabbatical supervision session with Mark Lewis in which we reviewed the initial learning emerging from my sabbatical art pilgrimage. Following this session I was able to complete a first draft of my sabbatical report which at this stage includes reflections on:

  • the history of the revival of sacred art in the twentieth century;
  • categories of commissions and associated issues;
  • assessing quality in commissions;
  • understanding scandals caused by commissions; and
  • publicising commissions.
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Gungor - I Am Mountain.

Wednesday, 9 July 2014

Sabbatical art pilgrimage: latest ArtWay report

ArtWay have just published the latest of my sabbatical art pilgrimage visit reports in their Church of the Month slot. This report concerns Aylesford Priory and the work of Adam Kossowski. The reports which ArtWay are publishing generally contain additional information or reflections from those which I am posting here and, as with the posts here, will gradually build up a partial history of the revival of sacred art in the twentieth century.

The report on Aylesford Priory follows reports on Chelmsford Cathedral and Lumen, as well as earlier reports of visits to sites associated with Marian Bohusz-Szyszko, Marc Chagall, Jean Cocteau, Antoni Gaudi and Henri Matisse.

One of the real pleasures of the European leg of my sabbatical art pilgrimage was the opportunity to meet Marleen Hengelaar-Rookmaaker, who is editor-in-chief of ArtWay. We visited two churches together and talked art, music, popular culture and faith finding many synergies as we did so.

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Sufjan Stevens - Impossible Soul.

Sunday, 6 March 2011

Sacred Art Pilgrim

Via Stephen Scott I've recently come across Sacred Art Pilgrim, the site of John A. Kohan. Kohan writes that:

"This website charts the journey of one modern art lover who set out a few years back on a quest to recover this lost way of looking. What I have encountered on the way has intrigued, excited, and moved me not only to make art but to collect works by modern artists from around the globe who have been inspired by religious themes. It is the record of one pilgrim’s progress in rediscovering the majesty, meaning, and mystery of sacred art, something I’d like to share with art lovers on similar journeys."

"When I left fulltime work in journalism to settle on the island of Cyprus, I realized the study of sacred art was my real passion and set out on a pilgrimage, which has taken me to painted churches in Romania and the Modern Art Museum in New York City, the medieval cathedrals of France and the Coptic monasteries of the Egyptian desert, the concrete chapels of Le Corbusier and the adobe pilgrim shrines of the American Southwest ... Contrary to my expectations, there is sacred art worthy of attention from the modern era (which I date from the turn of the 19th century). It is being made, even as you read these words."

The artistic souvenirs he has gathered along the way have grown over time into the Sacred Art Pilgrim Collection, which now includes pieces by artists, known and unknown, from around the globe, working in Ethiopia and Japan, Russia and Panama, Romania and Australia. These can be viewed in the Sacred Artists and Schools of Art galleries on his site, while his own works are in The Journey in Art gallery.

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Lizz Wright - My Heart.