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Showing posts with label wallis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wallis. Show all posts

Saturday, 31 October 2015

Gants Hill: Vortex




Vortex by Wolfgang Buttress can be found at Gants Hill and has been described as an “abstracted egg” which is designed to represent regeneration and new life. Together with Fr Benjamin Wallis (St Georges Barkingside), I undertook an art project documenting the regeneration of the area. This piece of public art was originally intended as part of the regeneration work but as a result of delays was only installed some time after the completion of the project.

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Bobby West Trio & Dwight Trible - In the Beginning God.

Tuesday, 8 March 2011

Care and share

Over the past six months at St John's Seven Kings we have been talking and thinking through how we are using who we are to serve God in the church, at work, with our family and friends, in the community and our voluntary/leisure activities. We began with a Vocations Sunday in September, continued by studying the SHAPE Course and, most recently, have had a Sunday morning series of video interviews in which members of the congregation have shared ways in which their faith is expressed through their work (paid and voluntary).

We are continuing this thinking into our Lent Course this year by using a Course called Care and Share which looks at the basics of pastoral care. The course aims to enable us to develop our skills in confidence and understanding and listening through five sessions covering: What is Pastoral care? Visiting and Listening; Making Contact; Dealing with loss; and Getting organised.

Many, perhaps all of us, provide care to someone else through work (paid and voluntary), in our family, with neighbours or friends, through our church. So, we can all benefit from reflecting on our approaches and thinking about the resources for caring which our faith provides. St John’s already has a committed group of people involved in pastoral visits, home communions, and prayer ministry. After coming to the Care and Share course, participants might want to think about whether they could be a part of that group or show care in other ways such as the prayer chain or Redbridge Voluntary Care, among others.

As in previous years, the Lent Courses are a shared activity with the other churches in the Seven Kings Fellowship of Churches. This year, Goodmayes Methodist Church, Seven Kings Methodist Church and St Peter’s Aldborough Hatch are all hosting Lent Courses and all are welcome to join one of those groups.

These churches will be studying Rich Inheritance - Jesus' legacy of love, a York Course written by Bishop Stephen Cottrell, the new Bishop of Chelmsford. Jesus didn’t write a will. He left no written instructions. He didn’t seem to have a plan. At the end, as he hung dying on the cross, almost all of his followers had abandoned him. By most worldly estimates his ministry was a failure. Nevertheless, Jesus’ message of reconciliation with God lived on. It is the central message of the Bible. With this good news his disciples changed the world. How did they do it? What else did Jesus leave behind – what is his ‘legacy of love’? This course addresses these questions.

The participants on the Rich Inheritance course CD are: Roman Catholic Archbishop of Westminster, Vincent Nichols; writer and lecturer in Biblical studies, Paula Gooder; and author and public theologian, Jim Wallis. Dr David Hope introduces the course and Methodist minister Inderjit Bhogal provides the Closing Reflection at the end of each session.

Love is at the heart of both these courses. We love because God first loved us. (1 John 4:19). Pastoral care is at the centre of the church’s mission and ministry because it has one fundamental aim - to help people know love, both to receive and to give. Pastoral care is our response to God’s unconditional love and, through it, we follow Jesus’ command to ‘love one another as I have loved you’.

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Victoria Williams - Love.

Monday, 4 October 2010

Gants Hill Art Project (10)












The regeneration work at Gants Hill is now complete and so this will be the final post in this series. Fr. Benjamin Wallis and I will continue our painting and photography sessions but not to document the Gants Hill regeneration. Some of the photographs from this series have been exhibited at St Pauls Goodmayes and will go on to the next commission4mission exhibition before possibly being shown at St Georges Barkingside.

The £7.2m Transport for London scheme has taken 18 months and the Mayor of London encouraged local people to celebrate the project’s completion with a three-day festival over the past weekend. Boris Johnson unveiled a commemorative plaque and toured the area, meeting local business people.

An open-air arts and crafts market was in Gants Hill across the three days with a range of stalls including handcrafted items, artwork, unique gifts and fashion designs. On Sunday, there was a Gants Hill relaunch with music and street entertainers. The free event had childrens’ activities including face painting, stilt walkers and much more.

The three-day celebration was organised by Redbridge Council and part funded by the Gants Hill Business Partnership.

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Mavis Staples - Wrote A Song For Everyone.

Friday, 17 September 2010

Our Community Art Exhibition (2)



I've been preparing the Windows on the world photographs that I will be exhibiting in the Our Community Art Exhibition at St Paul's Goodmayes next week. The photographs were all taken in and around Gants Hill as part of the monthly painting and photography session that I have with Benjamin Wallis, Vicar of St George's Barkingside, to document the current regeneration of Gants Hill.

I will be exhibiting these photographs in old church noticeboards which are suggestive of the former things which are being removed in order that regeneration can come but are also an indication that redundant objects can be recycled to acquire a different existence. The photographs are pinned like notices within the boards but, instead of providing factual, written information, offer the ambiguity of visual images seen through a variety of frames.

Each photograph in the Windows on the world series features a foreground object providing a frame for what can be viewed beyond. By framing what is beyond, the photograph acts as a window on a part of our world and at the same time signals the presence of the beyond, thereby also acting as a window onto the divine in a way the way similar to that achieved by icons. Exhibiting the photographs in noticeboards adds an additional window through which they are to be viewed.

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Victoria Williams - This Moment.

Monday, 10 May 2010

Gants Hill Arts Project (7)











These are the latest images that I have taken as part of the Gants Hill Arts Project. On this occasion Benjamin Wallis and I were joined by Morag Finch as part of her sabbatical photographic project. Morag got some good photos as part of our painting and photography session and her photos can be seen by clicking here.
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Mumford & Sons - Awake My Soul.


Thursday, 22 October 2009

Gants Hill Arts Project (2)











Photographs from the second month of the project that I and Fr. Benjamin Wallis are undertaking to document (through drawing, painting and photography) the regeneration work which is currently underway at Gants Hill.
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Lauryn Hill - A Change Is Gonna Come.

Wednesday, 30 September 2009

Gants Hill Art Project (1)










This post is the first in a new series undertaken in collaboration with Fr. Benjamin Wallis, Vicar of St Georges Barkingside. Our project involves photographing and painting the Gants Hill area on a roughly monthly basis during the period of its current regeneration. My photographs will be posted here and our work will also be displayed at St Georges.

There is an open invitation to others to join us and our approach involves conversations with any local people known to us or showing interest in what we are doing while out and about photographing and painting the area.

Today was our first sortie into the area and took in the contrasts of the Gants Hill roundabout and Valentines Park.
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Energy Orchard - Hard Street.