The Society for the Arts in Religious and Theological Studies or "SARTS" had its charter meeting at the 2002 AAR/SBL (American Academy of Religion/Society of Biblical Literature) conference. The Society was organized to provide a forum for scholars and artists interested in the intersections between theology, religion, and the arts especially in the classroom. The goal of the Society is to attract consistent participation of a core group of artists and scholars of theology and religion in order to have dialogue about the theological and religious meaning of the arts, and the artistic/aesthetic dimension of theological and religious inquiry. SARTS is located at the United Theological Seminary in Minnesota.
Wednesday, 31 March 2010
Tuesday, 30 March 2010
Religious Arts Award | DC
Posted on 07:11 by john mical
The Annual Religious Art and Architecture Design Awards program is co-sponsored by Faith & Form Magazine and the Interfaith Forum on Religion, Art and Architecture (IFRAA), a Knowledge Community of the American Institute of Architects. The Awards program was founded in 1978 with the goal of honoring the best in architecture, liturgical design, and art for religious spaces. The program offers three primary categories for awards: Religious Architecture, Liturgical/Interior Design, Sacred Landscape, and Religious Arts. To join IFRAA's mailing list [click: here]. I did.
Monday, 29 March 2010
Christian Visual Artists | MA
Posted on 07:29 by john mical
Founded in 1979, Christians in the Visual Arts exists to explore and nurture the relationship between the Christian artist in the church and in the world-at-large. Known widely as CIVA, its purpose is "to encourage Christians in the visual arts to develop their particular callings to the highest professional level possible; to learn how to deal with specific problems in the field without compromising our faith and our standard of artistic endeavor; to provide opportunities for sharing work and ideas; to foster intelligent understanding, a spirit of trust, and a cooperative relationship between those in the arts, the church, and society; and ultimately, to establish a Christian presence within the secular art world." Just eight year ago, In 2002, CIVA hired its first full-time staff and accepted Gordon College in Massachusetts' invitation to make the school its first permanent home. It has 1,300 members and conducts conferences, exhibitions and auctions.
Sunday, 28 March 2010
About: Faith & Form | DC
Posted on 07:20 by john mical
Faith & Form, as an organization and a journal developed over a 40 years period. Its roots include the Church Architecture Guild of North America founded in 1940; Guild for Church Architecture founded in 1965; and the Interfaith Forum on Religion, Art and Architecture (IFRAA, now part of AIA). Faith & Form represents clergy, lay leaders, artists, architects, and landscape designers concerned with design for worship. It is a nonprofit 501(c)3 organization incorporated in Washington, DC and a quarterly magazine, Faith & Form. The group also sponsors a yearly Religious Art and Architecture Design Awards program. To view the 2009 honorees, [click: here].
Saturday, 27 March 2010
Art Database | Online
Posted on 15:52 by john mical
The non-profit Christus Rex is dedicated to the dissemination of information on works of art preserved in churches, cathedrals and monasteries all over the world. They intend to assemble a collection of images that will constitute a visual representation of the Bible, ad maiorem gloriam Dei! (for the greater glory of God!). According to the groups website, they are in the process of "building the data base for a world wide tour of churches and monasteries, comprising in excess of 10,000 images." The group is soliciting artistic works for display. To participate, send them a color photograph and they indicate they will present online them with appropriate credits. The contact information is E-mail: christusrex_inc@hotmail.com.
Thursday, 25 March 2010
Papers: Today's Great Artists?
Posted on 06:39 by john mical
The Association of Scholars of Christianity in the History of Art is seeking papers on the lack of major religious artists of today. The deadline is Oct. 1, 2010. They are seeking 20-minute papers that examine specific examples of art from the 20th century which employ Christian subjects, symbols, and contexts in order to consider the methodological challenges that these works of art pose. The symposium will convene on February 8, 2011 at NYC's Museum of Biblical Art, the day before the annual meeting of the College Arts Association.
Wednesday, 24 March 2010
Society for R.A. | NY/PA
Posted on 15:40 by john mical
The Society for the Art, Religion and Contemporary Culture (ARC) was established in 1961 and is based in Kutztown, PA. Its archives are maintained at the Harvard Divinity Library and Nelvin Vos is the executive director. The Society meets three times each year, normally in New York City, on the first Saturday of November, February and May. It's purpose and program are based on the belief that the roles of the arts and religion are decisive. The Society believes that "Religion in isolation from the arts is starved of concrete embodiment of its insights into the fullness of human life. Art gives religion the eyes to see ourselves in all our dimensions." (Source: SARCC)
Tuesday, 23 March 2010
Modern Religious Art | Online
Posted on 15:31 by john mical
The website for Modern Religious Art reads that it "displays and encourages and the work of contemporary artists who are in some way motivated by or engaged with the religious." The project (site) also indicates that it is "not prescriptive of any particular belief system" and is open to contributions from artists who follow a particular faith as well as artists with no interest in faith including atheists, religious humanists and agnostics. It's a curious project
Monday, 22 March 2010
Freedom Art Project | CA
Posted on 15:08 by john mical
The genesis for The Freedom ART Project came in 1996. This California-based project is the calling of California born artist, Jeff LeFever. The 66 Project artworks are visual interpretations the 66 books of the Canonized Bible, with the intent of being the heart of a non denominational, non doctrinal sanctuary. Each painting for each book will contain that books full text in the original language gilded in 23 Karat gold. The size of each painting is determined by the amount of scripture contained in each book - the largest book being Psalms will be 30 feet tall by about 24 feet wide, and where John 3, will be only a few square feet.
Sunday, 21 March 2010
Immaculate Conception | DC
Posted on 15:02 by john mical
The Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C., is the pre-eminent Marian shrine of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States. Envisioned by its founder, Bishop Thomas J. Shahan (1857-1932) as a “monument to artistic truth” that would speak with “divine eloquence,” the Shrine is home to the largest collection of contemporary ecclesiastical art in the United States. Amid a rich patina of mosaics, sculptures, and artistic renderings, the more than 65 chapels and oratories reflect not only the devotional traditions of the American Church but also the rich ethnic mélange of the Universal Church. In 1990, Pope John Paul II (1920-2005) named the National Shrine a minor basilica, the 36th in the United States.
Saturday, 20 March 2010
Seraphim Book Store | IN
Posted on 14:57 by john mical
AOA NEWS
By Ernest Britton
INDIANA - Saint Seraphim of Sarov Book Store of Indianapolis reports that it is one the few area Eastern Orthodox bookstores open during weekday hours. They have been in operation since 1992 and specialize in Orthodox books, gift items, prayer ropes and anything else needed to support an Orthodox rule of prayer and world view. The website isn't much but it's a store rich in collectables. I purchased one cross to wear, one of place on the wall and a third to house precious memories.
By Ernest Britton
INDIANA - Saint Seraphim of Sarov Book Store of Indianapolis reports that it is one the few area Eastern Orthodox bookstores open during weekday hours. They have been in operation since 1992 and specialize in Orthodox books, gift items, prayer ropes and anything else needed to support an Orthodox rule of prayer and world view. The website isn't much but it's a store rich in collectables. I purchased one cross to wear, one of place on the wall and a third to house precious memories.
Art in Review: "The Bible Illuminated: R. Crumb’s Book of Genesis"
Posted on 12:25 by john mical
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Ken Johnson
NEW YORK - In a recent essay in The New York Review of Books about R. Crumb’s illustrated “Book of Genesis,” the literary critic Harold Bloom seems bemused by Mr. Crumb’s graphic style, which reminds him unpleasantly of Mad magazine. Mr. Crumb may be irreverent, but in his attention to every detail of word and image he is as devout as any medieval manuscript illuminator. Scanning the 207 drawings on gallery walls is not the best way to take in the epical narrative, but it is good to see them in the original, undiminished by the inferior reproductive quality of the $24.95 book published by W. W. Norton. The inks are blacker, the pages whiter and the artist’s touch visibly subtler. [link]
By Ken Johnson
NEW YORK - In a recent essay in The New York Review of Books about R. Crumb’s illustrated “Book of Genesis,” the literary critic Harold Bloom seems bemused by Mr. Crumb’s graphic style, which reminds him unpleasantly of Mad magazine. Mr. Crumb may be irreverent, but in his attention to every detail of word and image he is as devout as any medieval manuscript illuminator. Scanning the 207 drawings on gallery walls is not the best way to take in the epical narrative, but it is good to see them in the original, undiminished by the inferior reproductive quality of the $24.95 book published by W. W. Norton. The inks are blacker, the pages whiter and the artist’s touch visibly subtler. [link]
Michigan Church Brings Stations of the Cross to Life
Posted on 06:41 by john mical
OAKLAND PRESS
March 20, 2010
MICHIGAN - Twenty-foot wooden crosses and black linens set the stage in Farmington, Michigan. Somber music fills the air as a bloodied man hangs on a cross, calling out to God and asking forgiveness for those crucified with him. It’s a biblical scene all Christians are familiar with. Catholics hear the story, known as Christ’s passion, at Mass the week before Easter, and many hear it weekly during Lent. Yet The Living Stations of the Cross, in its ninth annual performance at Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church in Farmington, tells the story so poignantly that the audience is often moved to tears. Some 140 parishioners, including actors, singers and behind-the-scenes crew, participate in The Living Stations, a one-hour scripture-based theatrical performance that incorporates live music and images projected on a 12-by-15-foot screen. At least 1,500 people attend each performance. The Living Stations is the vision incarnate of parishioner Kelly Nieto, who 10 years ago joined the Catholic faith after being raised with no religion at all. Nieto said she had the vision during her first Good Friday mass at Our Lady of Sorrows. [link]
March 20, 2010
MICHIGAN - Twenty-foot wooden crosses and black linens set the stage in Farmington, Michigan. Somber music fills the air as a bloodied man hangs on a cross, calling out to God and asking forgiveness for those crucified with him. It’s a biblical scene all Christians are familiar with. Catholics hear the story, known as Christ’s passion, at Mass the week before Easter, and many hear it weekly during Lent. Yet The Living Stations of the Cross, in its ninth annual performance at Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church in Farmington, tells the story so poignantly that the audience is often moved to tears. Some 140 parishioners, including actors, singers and behind-the-scenes crew, participate in The Living Stations, a one-hour scripture-based theatrical performance that incorporates live music and images projected on a 12-by-15-foot screen. At least 1,500 people attend each performance. The Living Stations is the vision incarnate of parishioner Kelly Nieto, who 10 years ago joined the Catholic faith after being raised with no religion at all. Nieto said she had the vision during her first Good Friday mass at Our Lady of Sorrows. [link]
Friday, 19 March 2010
Texan's Launch Lord's Art Online Store
Posted on 14:48 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
TEXAS---Lord's Art (lordsart.com) is an online store centered around Jesus Christ. Every piece of religious art they sell is intended to glorify God and reminds buyers of how the Lord is to be the center of their lives and homes. The owners consider their Christian Art an enhancement of any Home Decor and a blessing to all who see it. The store carries Christian framed art and unframed Christian art featuring biblical themes, scripture, pictures of Jesus Christ and more. Artists represented include Christian artists Ron DiCianni, Nathan Greene, Graham Braddock, Morgan Weistling, Stephen S. Sawyer, William Hallmark and others.
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"The Sower" by Ron DiCianni |
Thursday, 18 March 2010
Many Blessings | New Jersey
Posted on 14:38 by john mical
After many years as a successful buyer for a large religious store, Verna Panaccio decided to follow her heart and opened her own store in July of 1996. Since she had never been comfortable with the large mark-ups most religious stores charged, it wasn't long before the name Many Blessings became synonymous with beautiful religious and inspirational goods at very, very reasonable prices. People of faith in the New Jersey area recognized the values "Many Blessings offered, whether they were looking for the perfect gift for a special person or just wanted a plaque or statue for the home.
Wednesday, 17 March 2010
Romanesque Style, Part lV
Posted on 13:50 by john mical
Romanesque paintings are generally done in fresco, but not having perfected this technique, retouching must be done with oils or tempera. The figures which appear are submitted to a process of abstraction which is derived from the sense of creative expression characteristic of the anonymous masters who do the paintings. As a result, this painting, whose flatness and bi-dimensionality have Byzantine origins, leads in a realistic-expressionistic path and tries, through patches of color on the faces and hands, to liven up the flat tones and disocover volumetric effects which will be more fully achieved in the Gothic period.
Tuesday, 16 March 2010
Romanesque Style, Part lll
Posted on 13:46 by john mical
Under the command of the master masons the buildings are constructed with architecture, sculpture and painting forming a single organic structure. This is what causes the painting, being subordinated to the architecture, to possess a decorative as well as theological character. In general, these pictorial decorations are religious in character but not exclusively.
Monday, 15 March 2010
Romanesque Style, Part ll
Posted on 13:42 by john mical
The Romanesque style is born as Latin begins to break down into the Romance languages; with the disappearance of linguistic unity, a new nexus will be found, thanks to art, which along with the pilgrimmages to Santiagao de Compostela and Rome, will link the European peoples. This new "universal language" will make it possible for the pilgrim or travelor to read, without need of translation, the messages expressed by a new figuration, whether it be presented in a sculptural from on the facades or capitals of the buildings, or pictorially on the walls and vaults.
Sunday, 14 March 2010
The Romanesque Style, Part l
Posted on 13:37 by john mical
Along with Western civilization, art after the fall of Rome is submerged in shadows; the universal meaning of Classical art desintegrated into a plurality of national and local styles. Thus, in Spain there is a consecutive development of the Visigothic, Asturian and Mozarabic styles. But when it seems that European art has reached complete desintegration, a series of religious, economic and social causes will motivate the creation of a new utilitarian artistic style, the Romanesque one. It will no longer be that of an empire, such as the Roman one, but of a spiritual ideal, Christianity.
Saturday, 13 March 2010
Catholic Schools Remove Cross?
Posted on 13:32 by john mical
On EWTN, Fr. Menes claimed that some Catholic universities are removing the crucifix from classroom walls so as not to offend non-Catholic students. He found this particularly odd since these students freely choose to at a Catholic vs secular university for their higher education. He challenges today's school to answer how they can lift up the Christ as they take down his crucifix? It's a good argument.
Friday, 12 March 2010
Confessions & God Exhibit
Posted on 07:49 by john mical
AOA NEWS
By Ernest Britton
INDIANA - iMOCA will exhibit Frank Warren's PostSecret: Confessions on Life, Death, and God, August 6 through September 18. The opening reception is August 6, 6-11 p.m. at iMOCA, located inside the Murphy Art Center in Fountain Square in Indianapolis. It will feature the original postcards Warren received during a community art project where people anonymously mail in their secrets. Details will come out this summer.
By Ernest Britton
INDIANA - iMOCA will exhibit Frank Warren's PostSecret: Confessions on Life, Death, and God, August 6 through September 18. The opening reception is August 6, 6-11 p.m. at iMOCA, located inside the Murphy Art Center in Fountain Square in Indianapolis. It will feature the original postcards Warren received during a community art project where people anonymously mail in their secrets. Details will come out this summer.
Thursday, 11 March 2010
Clancy Prize for religious art showcases Catholic school talent
Posted on 08:40 by john mical
AUSTRALIAN CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY
March 10, 2010
AUSTRALIA--Gavin Lacanillo, a former St Mary’s Cathedral College student, was this month named the 2010 winner of The Clancy Prize Religious Art Exhibition at Australian Catholic University’s (ACU) Strathfield Campus. The exhibition at the University’s McGlade Gallery is in its 11th year and is run collaboratively by the Catholic Education Office (CEO) Sydney and ACU. It gives high school students the opportunity to explore religious themes through visual art. This year’s exhibition, based on the theme ‘You are the salt of the earth… you are the light of the world’ (Matt 5:13-14), showcases 76 art works from 34 Catholic secondary schools in the Archdiocese of Sydney. Gavin’s four-part entry on canvas, entitled Scratching the Surface, was made using a mix of acrylic, glass and pencils. The 17-year-old said the self-portraits were created to “peel back the layers and expose a true self”. [link]
March 10, 2010
AUSTRALIA--Gavin Lacanillo, a former St Mary’s Cathedral College student, was this month named the 2010 winner of The Clancy Prize Religious Art Exhibition at Australian Catholic University’s (ACU) Strathfield Campus. The exhibition at the University’s McGlade Gallery is in its 11th year and is run collaboratively by the Catholic Education Office (CEO) Sydney and ACU. It gives high school students the opportunity to explore religious themes through visual art. This year’s exhibition, based on the theme ‘You are the salt of the earth… you are the light of the world’ (Matt 5:13-14), showcases 76 art works from 34 Catholic secondary schools in the Archdiocese of Sydney. Gavin’s four-part entry on canvas, entitled Scratching the Surface, was made using a mix of acrylic, glass and pencils. The 17-year-old said the self-portraits were created to “peel back the layers and expose a true self”. [link]
Wednesday, 10 March 2010
Conversing About Religious Art
Posted on 10:09 by john mical
To encourage engaging conversations about religious art; have a look at these 10 ideas and share them with your family members, church members, and friends. Perhaps we can collectively shift American culture and engage more people, simply by improving our approach to the dialogue. As we become courageous in asking questions, listening and in exploring, we will find that our own ability to talk about religious art increases.
- Explore a painting. Search for art in gallery openings that respond to religious influence. Do it with a partner and get agreement to explore it intensely. Do it together and notice the engagement between you sparkle.
- Ask someone to teach you. Hear about someone who knows something you would like to learn? Reach out and ask them to show you how, or teach you. Be attentive, curious, and encouraging as they share with you some new knowledge.
- Listen deeply. Engage another in conversation about a work of religious artistic controversey by giving 100% focused, present, and deep listening. When someone feels heard their value, worth and engagement rises.
- Allow silence. When the person you are speaking with pauses, allow the silence to hang suspended and continue to hold a focus with them. Don't interrupt. They will take a breath, realize you are truly engaged and continue sharing their thoughts.
- Coach Others.If someone expresses a weakness or concern about appreciating religious art, ask if you can coach them. Use gentle, powerful, and thoughtful questions to engage them in conversation, listen well, and suspend your own judgement helping them to find their own answers.
- Share a moment from a film. To illustrate, or spark conversation in a new way, reflect on the messages in popular culture, especially commercial films. Re-tell the story and encourage communication to stem from the movie stimulating different thoughts and engaging different parts of the brain.
- Ponder a quote. Quotes are words spoken and remembered. They often inspire and make us think. Create a question from the quote about art and engage in conversation with others about the meaning and application to your life. You may find it surprising to see the shift in your thinking and the level of your engagement.
- Integrate it into someone’s passion. When you know someone has a passion try to engage them in dialogue about religious art through the lens of that passion, an obsession with "free", an compulsive shoe shopper, or money manger and share it with them. Engage them in conversation on their passion and sense the energy and vitality.
- Converse with artists. Artists provide a window to a new way of seeing the world but because of their education and training, it is not without baggage. Many for instance have been taught not to pursue religion in their art. Learning what artists see brings an engaging energy to old topics. Find ways to connect to the artists in your community and ask them to engage you in their conversations about their own faith journey.
- Define Artist. Artist as a word has no recognized definition. Create a definition with others, explore what Art looks like, find examples of Artists from history including Michelangelo and Byzantine icons; and engage in Artist-filled conversations.
Tuesday, 9 March 2010
Artist: Edvard Munch | Norway
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
The mission of this blog is to "arrest and engage through contemporary religious art." That's a mission statement very consistent with the philosophy of Norwegian artist Edvard Munch (1863-1944). Best known for his hallucinagenic The Scream; and to a lesser degree for his religious work, Madonna. Munch believe that art should be more than "pretty pictures" hanging on a living room wall. He wanted to shake people up with his art and awaken something kept locked away, deep inside. He wanted to create art that spoke to "one's innermost heart." That is why he is celebrated as one of the leaders in the genre of Expressionism. He packed into his lithographs, etching and woodcuts powerful emotions that stirr the observer as much today as they did in the early 1900s.
A Moravian Disagreement
Posted on 05:01 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Ernest Disney-Britton
Moravian (z-tree)
- 10-foot wooden cross
- Motto: together we make a difference
- Dramatic story-telling of how a community of diverse Christians came to a counts estate (Herrunhut) on August 13, 1729 aka "Unity of the Bretheren"
- St. Augustine wrote "In essential unity and non essential liberty in all things love."
- Since 1450 we still gather despire our disagreements
Saturday, 6 March 2010
Ramon Espinosa's "Pilgrims"
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
AOL - Voodoo pilgrims bathe in a waterfall believed to have purifying powers during an annual celebration in Saut d' Eau, HaitI. The annual pilgrimage to Saut d'Eau venerates the site where believers say the Virgin Mary, whom many here revere as the goddess of love, Ezili Danto , once appeared. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)
Friday, 5 March 2010
Transfiguration | Orleans, MA
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Dedicated in June 2000, this magnificent edifice is a contemporary expression of an ancient basilican form drawing from an architectural heritage shared by Protestants, Catholics and Orthodox. The iconographic arts & architectural program for the Church of the Transfiguration complements the liturgy to express visually the history of human salvation.
- Listen to WGBH [Audio]
- Read Architects [description]
Thursday, 4 March 2010
Warhol's Catholic Churches
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Andy Warhol was a practicing Byzantine Rite Catholic. His family in Pittsburgh, the Warhola family worshipped regularly at St. John Chrysostom Byzantine Catholic Church. It's still there at 506 Saline Street. In his final decade (1980s), he attended at St. Vincents Ferrer Roman Catholic Church and many of his later works contain almost-hidden religious themes or subjects. The priest there said of his "Religious Beliefs" that the artist went there almost daily, "although he never took communion or made confession, and sat or knelt in the pews at the back." The priest assumed he was afraid of being recognized; Warhol said he was self-conscious about being seen in a Roman Catholic church crossing himself " in the Orthodox way".
Wednesday, 3 March 2010
Vatican Art on Display | MO
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
The Missouri History Museum in St. Louis will be the only Midwestern stop in a traveling exhibition of rarely seen art and artifacts from the Vatican Museum. "Vatican Splendors: A Journey through Faith and Art" opens May 15.
Tuesday, 2 March 2010
2-Men & Art Share Stage
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
John Logan’s two-man Broadway show, "Red" revolves around an episode in Abstract Artist Mark Rothko’s life in the late 1950s, when the architects Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Philip Johnson commissioned him to paint murals for the Four Seasons, the fashionable new restaurant in the Seagram Building. (Read NYT Review)
Monday, 1 March 2010
Book: "Artist Realities" (2006)
Posted on 02:00 by john mical
YALE PRESS - One of the most important artists of the twentieth century, Mark Rothko (1903–1970) created a new and impassioned form of abstract painting over the course of his career. Rothko also wrote a number of essays and critical reviews during his lifetime, adding his thoughtful, intelligent, and opinionated voice to the debates of the contemporary art world.
Although the artist never published a book of his varied and complex views, his heirs indicate that he occasionally spoke of the existence of such a manuscript to friends and colleagues. Stored in a New York City warehouse since the artist’s death more than thirty years ago, this extraordinary manuscript, titled The Artist’s Reality, is now being published for the first time. (Read All)
Although the artist never published a book of his varied and complex views, his heirs indicate that he occasionally spoke of the existence of such a manuscript to friends and colleagues. Stored in a New York City warehouse since the artist’s death more than thirty years ago, this extraordinary manuscript, titled The Artist’s Reality, is now being published for the first time. (Read All)
Sunday, 28 February 2010
Riverside Church | NYC
Posted on 18:00 by john mical
Located on the Upper West Side, on the edge of Harlem communities, The Riverside Church in the City of New York is modeled after the 13th Century gothic cathedral in Chartres, France. Its gothic tower stands as a beacon to bring people with very different perspectives together.
Friday, 26 February 2010
Artist: Vincent Van Gogh
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
One of the most religiously inspired, and some say tortured, artists of the impressionist era is Vincent Van Gogh (1853-1890). Before turning exclusively to a career as an artist, he tried and failed at being an art dealer and a minister. Knowing that professional chronology offers new insights into his painting, "Starry Night" (1889) where the lights in the small French town and stars above are aglow, but the lights in the chapel are dark.
Thursday, 25 February 2010
Metropolitan Museum of Art Collections
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
The heart of every museum is its collection. In most museums, only a fraction of the collection is ever even on display which allows for a constant change for returning visitors. The Metropolitan Museum of Art has 2 million works of art in its collection. Those who maintain its collection are called "curators" and their most important role is to determine what to buy and what to sell (accession and deacession).
Wednesday, 24 February 2010
Catholic Mexican Art
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Two major artforms are the most representative of religious art in Mexico: retablos and ex-votos. Retablos are small, multi-paneled oil paintings on wood usually depicting either Jesus Christ or his mother Mary. They are usually placed behind the altar (hence the name). Ex-votos are paintings on tin of Saints including a testimonial of the miracle conducted and the date.
Tuesday, 23 February 2010
Monday, 22 February 2010
Byzantine Art (c. 324-1453)
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Byzantine art developed once the Roman emperor Constantine I relocated the Roman capital to the old city of Byzantium and rebuilt it as Constantinople. While the art form is based on the Early Christian use of pagan symbolism (shepards and sun-god), it is more stylized and bejeweled. Byzantine mosaics, icons and statues were meant to exhibit the wealth of power of the Roman Empire.
Saturday, 20 February 2010
Vatican Museums
Posted on 12:28 by john mical
The 52 galleries of the Vatican Museum's attract over 4 million visitors a year, covering over 2,000 years of religious art history. It was begun in the early 16th century by Pope Julius ll and this year portions of the collection are expected to travel to the USA. I'll keep my eyes and ears open.
Friday, 19 February 2010
Jesus MCC | Indy
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Ernest Disney-Britton
INDIANA---Once you reach the far rear corner of the stark Jesus Metropolitan Community Church in Indianapolis for Tony Melendez's three-piece installation, there is a pronounced sense of arrival. With twinkling brush strokes, Melendez has created shimmering portraits of biblical couples like David & Jonathon that allow the viewer to step inside his translucent dream.
By Ernest Disney-Britton
INDIANA---Once you reach the far rear corner of the stark Jesus Metropolitan Community Church in Indianapolis for Tony Melendez's three-piece installation, there is a pronounced sense of arrival. With twinkling brush strokes, Melendez has created shimmering portraits of biblical couples like David & Jonathon that allow the viewer to step inside his translucent dream.
Thursday, 18 February 2010
Illuminated Psalms by Jewish Artist
Posted on 03:24 by john mical
PBS - View a gallery of selected details from an anthology of 36 psalms, “I Will Wake the Dawn: Illuminated Psalms,” by Hebrew manuscript artist Debra Band (Jewish Publication Society, 2007). In her introduction to the illuminations she writes: “Just as psalms occupy a central role in Jewish liturgy and many home and life-cycle rituals, so are they valued in the other Abrahamic religions. Islam holds the Psalms of David, known in that tradition as Zabur, among its sacred texts, although it does not incorporate them into liturgy. Psalms have formed the core of Christian prayer since its inception. (Read All)
Wednesday, 17 February 2010
"The Last Supper" by Leonardo da Vinci
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Tahlib
Perhaps the most famous of religious painting, Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper (1495-1497) is a "mural" versus a "fresco", the common approach of the time. It is also noteworthy for its one-point perspective. The painting is 30-feet wide and is located in a modest monastery in Milan which had big ambitions.
By Tahlib
Perhaps the most famous of religious painting, Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper (1495-1497) is a "mural" versus a "fresco", the common approach of the time. It is also noteworthy for its one-point perspective. The painting is 30-feet wide and is located in a modest monastery in Milan which had big ambitions.
Tuesday, 16 February 2010
Ash Wednesday: Beginning a 40 Day Lent Journey
Posted on 23:20 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Tahlib
And so it begins today, Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent, 40 days of fasting & prayer in preparation for Easter. It is rooted in the special biblical significance assigned to the number "40" as a marker for preparation. "Moses stayed there with the Lord for 40 days and 40 nights, without eating any food or drinking any water" to get the 10 Commandments (Exodus 34:28). Elijah walked "40 days and 40 nights" to the mountain of the Lord, Mount Horeb (another name for Sinai) (I Kgs 19:8). Most importantly, Jesus fasted and prayed for "40 days and 40 nights" in the desert before He began His public ministry (Mt 4:2); and he also spent 40 days being seen by the disciples after the resurrection. (Acts 1:3).
Fasting rules are very simple: On Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, believers fast (having only one full meal a day and smaller snacks to keep up one's strength) and abstain from meat; on the other Fridays of Lent, believers abstain from meat. People are still encouraged "to give up something" for Lent as a sacrifice. The rest of Lent can get complicated because of the technicality that Sundays be treated as "Little Easter" (little feast days), and days of solemnities like St. Joseph's Day (March 19) and the Annunciation (March 25), when one is exempt and can partake of whatever has been offered up for Lent. I've tried that and found it takes away more than it gives, to me, spiritually, so my Lent rule is that "when I give something up for the Lord, I tough it out, and don't act like a Pharisee looking for breaks on Sundays." Although the practices of Lent have evolved over the centuries, the focus remains the same: to repent of sin, to renew our faith and to prepare to celebrate joyfully the mysteries of our salvation.
By Tahlib
And so it begins today, Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent, 40 days of fasting & prayer in preparation for Easter. It is rooted in the special biblical significance assigned to the number "40" as a marker for preparation. "Moses stayed there with the Lord for 40 days and 40 nights, without eating any food or drinking any water" to get the 10 Commandments (Exodus 34:28). Elijah walked "40 days and 40 nights" to the mountain of the Lord, Mount Horeb (another name for Sinai) (I Kgs 19:8). Most importantly, Jesus fasted and prayed for "40 days and 40 nights" in the desert before He began His public ministry (Mt 4:2); and he also spent 40 days being seen by the disciples after the resurrection. (Acts 1:3).
Fasting rules are very simple: On Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, believers fast (having only one full meal a day and smaller snacks to keep up one's strength) and abstain from meat; on the other Fridays of Lent, believers abstain from meat. People are still encouraged "to give up something" for Lent as a sacrifice. The rest of Lent can get complicated because of the technicality that Sundays be treated as "Little Easter" (little feast days), and days of solemnities like St. Joseph's Day (March 19) and the Annunciation (March 25), when one is exempt and can partake of whatever has been offered up for Lent. I've tried that and found it takes away more than it gives, to me, spiritually, so my Lent rule is that "when I give something up for the Lord, I tough it out, and don't act like a Pharisee looking for breaks on Sundays." Although the practices of Lent have evolved over the centuries, the focus remains the same: to repent of sin, to renew our faith and to prepare to celebrate joyfully the mysteries of our salvation.
The Cloisters | NY
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
The Cloisters of NYC is a complex built from and modeled after medieval monasteries. The visionary and monetary source behind the enterprise was Ohio native John D. Rockefeller. Owned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, its collection of over 5,000 is focused on medieval art ranging from 9th century tapestries to 15th century stained glass, and other works of art. Located in the northern end of Manhattan, it's well worth the short trip when in the city.
Monday, 15 February 2010
Nazca Lines |Peru
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
As far back as 200 BCE, artists in Peru were creating gigantic religious land etchings of animals (lizards, birds, etc) in the dessert. Located about 200 miles south of Lima, Peru they can only be viewed air.
Sunday, 14 February 2010
Scientists of Religion | Cincinnati
Posted on 10:18 by john mical
Above the pulpit at the Center for Spiritual Living in Cincinnati is a large painting of a "V". The happy congregants all looked normal but when the pastor, a self-described "religious scientist" got up, she talked of Star Wars and Star Trek. It was Sunday morning service but at any moment I was sure someone would say, "Beam me up Scotty."
Scientists of Religion | Cincinnati
Posted on 10:18 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Ernest Disney-Britton
OHIO---Above the pulpit at the Center for Spiritual Living in Cincinnati is a large painting of a "V". The happy congregants all looked normal but when the pastor, a self-described "religious scientist" got up, she talked of Star Wars and Star Trek. It was Sunday morning service but at any moment I was sure someone would say, "Beam me up Scotty."
By Ernest Disney-Britton
OHIO---Above the pulpit at the Center for Spiritual Living in Cincinnati is a large painting of a "V". The happy congregants all looked normal but when the pastor, a self-described "religious scientist" got up, she talked of Star Wars and Star Trek. It was Sunday morning service but at any moment I was sure someone would say, "Beam me up Scotty."
Saturday, 13 February 2010
Quoting Moliere
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
"Things are only worth what you make them worth."
- MOLIERE
Friday, 12 February 2010
Medieval Art (c. 100-1453)
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Sandwiched between the period of Roman art and the Renaissance, the Medieval period (of roughly 1,000 years) is the time period where the artistry of the arabic tribes, islam, celtic, Germanic and Roman art melded into one (two) new western style(s): Romanesque and Gothic.
Thursday, 11 February 2010
Artist: Sandro Botticelli
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Considered by many as one of the greatest of religious artists in the Renaissance period, his patrons included the powerful Medici family of Florence. In 1481, Pope Sixtus IV invited Botticelli to paint frescoes on the wall of the Sistine Chapel.
Notable work: "Adoration of the Magi" (1475)
Tuesday, 9 February 2010
Vatican v. Protestant Thinkers
Posted on 13:00 by john mical
RELIGION DISPATCHES - There seem to be two very different Vaticans these days. On one side is The Church and on the other side we have the Vatican Library and the Vatican Museums. Museums, and the libraries that birthed them, are modern institutions, after all. (Read All)
Saturday, 6 February 2010
Artist: Jerry Traufler | Iowa
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
ROADSIDE AMERICA
IOWA - One of the most impressive and inspiring offerings of Trinity Heights is the life-sized, beautifully carved and true to life sculpture of da Vinci’s The Last Supper. Painstakingly fashioned for seven years by world-class sculptor Jerry Traufler of Le Mars, Iowa–a devout Christian who travels extensively to visit religious shrines and has himself created a masterpiece–Traufler’s The Last Supper is a magnificent rendition of the Lord’s last meal and a work unmatched anywhere. Using hometown folks and family members as models, Mr. Traufler has created a unique and awe-inspiring work of religious art—and one of a very few life-sized depictions of The Last Supper in the entire world. One cannot look at his work and fail to conclude that the Holy Spirit worked powerfully through the hands of this devout man, who was kind enough to donate his masterpiece to Trinity Heights. The sculpture vividly brings to life The Last Supper in a way that words or pictures cannot. Viewing Jesus and the Twelve reclining at table in the eerie quiet of the dimly lit wood-domed room that houses Traufler’s work, the visitor feels as if he or she is actually present in the Upper Room on the night He was betrayed. Were The Last Supper the only attraction in Trinity Heights, it alone would be worth the visit. [link]
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The Last Supper by Jerry Traufler |
Friday, 5 February 2010
New Book: Passion in Venice
Posted on 08:23 by john mical
"Passion in Venice: Crivelli to Tintoretto and Veronese" (Feb. 2011) - A new illustrated volume exploring one of the central themes of Christian Art: Christ as the Man of Sorrows. It accompanies the exhibition at MOBIA February 15 2011 - June 12 2011.
Wednesday, 3 February 2010
Mark Rothko | National Gallery
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
National Gallery of Art conducted an in-depth study of the career of Mark Rothko, including a discussion of mid-twentieth century abstract expressionism.
Hamper Sitting
Posted on 04:42 by john mical
This is now in writing on the Internet: "Hampers are built sturdy enough for sitting." I hope you're happy now.
Tuesday, 2 February 2010
Holy-day Art for Candelmas | Art by Stephan Lochner
Posted on 02:51 by john mical
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"Presentation of Christ in the Temple" (1447) by Stephan Lochner (b. Germany 1400) |
Monday, 1 February 2010
Quote: Oscar Wilde
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
“One should either be a work of art
or wear a work of art.”
or wear a work of art.”
- OSCAR WILDE
Sunday, 31 January 2010
Quoting Confucius
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
"Everything has its beauty, but not everyone sees it."
- CONFUCIOUS
Saturday, 30 January 2010
Baroque Art (c.1600-1700)
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Baroque art, with its heavy senseof theatrics was a powerful weapon of the Roman Catholic Church in its Counter Reformation war. Carvaggio, Rembrant, Peter Paul Rueben and Diego Valazquez were some of giants used in this war of rich, stage-like aesthetics. It was a time of great wealth in the western work, for the church and for individuals.
Friday, 29 January 2010
What is the Renaissance?
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Like the subtitle of this blog, "Renaissance" means "re-birth" and the Italian Renaissance (1400-1600) marked a renewed interest in the classical values of ancient Rome and Greece. It marked a return from flat stylized works of the Middle Ages (and still maintained by the Orthodox) to a naturalism. Important artists of this period included Botticelli, da Vinci. Michelangelo and Raphael.
Thursday, 28 January 2010
Quoting Thoreau
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
"The world is but a canvas to the imagination"
- HENRY DAVID THOREAU
Wednesday, 27 January 2010
Sistine Chapel Ceiling | Italy
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Widely considered to be one of the artistic wonders of the world, Michelangelo's "The Creation of Adam" (1512) was not a labor of love. Painted on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, it took his 4-years laying on his back on top a scaffold to complete, all at almost 70-feet in the air but it wasn't the physical strain that pained Michelangelo. It was that this was a forced commission by Pope Julius ll (the pope who established the vatican museums).
Tuesday, 26 January 2010
Quoting Michelangelo
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
"Every beauty which is seen here by
persons of perception resembles more than anything else
that celestial source from which we all come."
persons of perception resembles more than anything else
that celestial source from which we all come."
- MICHELANGELO (Re: Creation of Adam)
Monday, 25 January 2010
Art Institute of Chicago
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
With a collection larger than NYC's Museum of Modern Art, but smaller than NYC's Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago's 300,000 piece collection is best known for its impressionist and post-impressionist paintings.
Sunday, 24 January 2010
Antoni Gaudi's Cathedral, La Sagrada Familia | Spain
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By TAHLIB
SPAIN---A contemporary of Vincent Van Gogh, Spanish architect Antoni Gaudi began his church in 1882 and it is still uncompleted (projected 2033). The mammoth church (Sagrada Familia) is a towering gothic expression that melds with art nouveau and surrealism. Gaudi was consumed by the project and was buried inside in 1926.
By TAHLIB
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La Sagrada Familia by Antoni Gaudí, 1882 - present, Barcelona |
Saturday, 23 January 2010
Quoting Plato
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
"But what if man had eyes to see true beauty--the divine beauty,
I mean, pure and clear and unalloyed, not clogged with the pollutions of
mortality and all the colors and vanities of human life..?
- PLATO, Symposium
Friday, 22 January 2010
Artist: Michelangelo (1475-1564)
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Michelangelo Buonarroti was an explosive personality and unlikeable genius. He preferred sculpture, as in his greatest work, "David" (c. 1504) but may be better known for his two paintings, "The Last Judgement" and "The Creation of Adam" which are both at the Vatican's Sistine Chapel.
Thursday, 21 January 2010
Quoting Aristotle
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
"...generally art partly completes what nature
cannot bring to a finish, and partly immitates her."
- ARISTOTLE, Ethics, Book ll
Wednesday, 20 January 2010
Quoting Augustine
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
"...to us is promised a vision of beauty --
the beauty of whose imitation all other beautiful things
are beautiful, and by comparison with which all
other things unsightly."
- AUGUSTINE, De Ordine
Tuesday, 19 January 2010
Vatican Museums | Italy
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
The 52 galleries of the Vatican Museum's in Rome, Italy attract over 4 million visitors a year and they cover over 2,000 years of religious art history. It was begun in the early 16th century by Pope Julius ll. It is rumored that portions of the collection will travel to the US this year. I will keep my eyes and ears open.
Monday, 18 January 2010
The Boney Church | Praque
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
A small chapel located beneath the Roman Catholic All Saints Church in Praque is made of human bones. Yes, it's made out of the remains of people--40,000 of which contributed to the construction of the chapel's architecture and furnishings. Created back in 1870, its formal name is Sedlec's All Saint Ossuary but its nickname is "The Bone Church."
Sunday, 17 January 2010
Quoting Kant
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
"Beautiful art must look like nature,
although we are conscious of it as art."
- KANT, Critique of Judgement
Saturday, 16 January 2010
A&O Meetup: Transforming Methodist Church into Landmark Offices in Indianapolis
Posted on 09:32 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Ernest Disney-Britton
INDIANA - After a $10 million rehabilitation, a 1922 Indianapolis United Methodist Church will become home to the state's preservation group. The building, vacant since 2008 but considered a gem because of its Romanesque Revival-style has been using a grant of $150,000 to stabilizd the building's foundation. The church building will be renamed, "Indiana Landmarks Center."
Total Cost: $10 million
Donors: $7 million by William and Gayle Cook, Bloomington
Church Name: Central Avenue United Methodist Church
Location: 12th Street and Central Avenue, Indianapolis
By Ernest Disney-Britton
INDIANA - After a $10 million rehabilitation, a 1922 Indianapolis United Methodist Church will become home to the state's preservation group. The building, vacant since 2008 but considered a gem because of its Romanesque Revival-style has been using a grant of $150,000 to stabilizd the building's foundation. The church building will be renamed, "Indiana Landmarks Center."
...the building will feature the 500-seat Cook Grand Theater in the former sanctuary, with a domed ceiling and stained glass windows; Cook Hall, a historic wood-paneled hall with a stage and balcony-level breakout rooms; and office space. Indiana Landmarks plans to move its state headquarters to the new location from 340 W. Michigan St. after it has raised the funds to renovate the office wing, built in 1922 and attached to the church.PROJECT FACTS:
To read the entire story, see: [link]
Total Cost: $10 million
Donors: $7 million by William and Gayle Cook, Bloomington
Church Name: Central Avenue United Methodist Church
Location: 12th Street and Central Avenue, Indianapolis
Thursday, 14 January 2010
Religious Art for the NonBeliever
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Joe Carter's post in First Things on "Religious Art for the Non-Believer" alerted me to Aaron Rosen's piece in The Humanist. Rosen is an author and art critique with a special interest in jewish art. I beleive he is also a secularist but that's just a guess based on this post.
He begins his piece with:
He begins his piece with:
Next time you’re taking a Sunday stroll into the Sainsbury Wing of the National Gallery, be sure to cast your eye upward. As you ascend the grand staircase to the main floor, you’ll find your gaze drawn into the heavens, where it’s returned by no less a security guard than the enthroned Christ, encircled by his ministering angels. (Read All)
Wednesday, 13 January 2010
Passing Strange
Posted on 20:56 by john mical
I am sad and wonderful tonight. The musical, "Passing Strange" was amazing. It made me weep, laugh, sway and sing in astonishment. It could have been anyones life, but it was mine, as it was millions of other people. The line that grabbed both me and mom was the same, "Life is a mistake that can only be corrected by art. It was amazing.
Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T
Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T
Tuesday, 12 January 2010
Book: "Seeing Rothko" (2005)
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
"I am interested only in expressing basic human emotions—tragedy, ecstasy, doom," Mark Rothko (1903-1970) said of his paintings. "If you are moved only by their color relationships, then you miss the point." (Read All)
Monday, 11 January 2010
Andy Warhol Quotes
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
"Don't pay any attention to what they write about you.
Just measure it in inches."
~ ANDY WARHOL
Just measure it in inches."
~ ANDY WARHOL
"Everyone will be famous for 15 minutes."
~ ANDY WARHOL
~ ANDY WARHOL
"I never think that people die. They just go to department stores."
~ ANDY WARHOL
~ ANDY WARHOL
"When I got my first television set,
I stopped caring so much about having close relationships."
~ ANDY WARHOL
I stopped caring so much about having close relationships."
~ ANDY WARHOL
Sunday, 10 January 2010
Crossing in l-70
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
From vampire movies to the Roman Catholic Church, I've always been excited to see the "Cross". So, imagine my excitement traveling along I-70, when a huge 20-story cross appeared on the Green Acres horizon! Sadly, they won't let me take it home to Hooterville; and Greg won't let me build a 198-ft tall replica in our front yard; so I've begun collecting much smaller versions. I have only have a few so far. If you have a Cross to spare, send it my way!
Crossing in l-70
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Ernest Disney-Britton
INDIANA---From vampire movies to the Roman Catholic Church, I've always been excited to see the "Cross". So, imagine my excitement traveling along I-70, when a huge 20-story cross appeared on the Green Acres horizon! Sadly, they won't let me take it home to Hooterville; and Greg won't let me build a 198-ft tall replica in our front yard; so I've begun collecting much smaller versions. I have only have a few so far. If you have a Cross to spare, send it my way!
By Ernest Disney-Britton
INDIANA---From vampire movies to the Roman Catholic Church, I've always been excited to see the "Cross". So, imagine my excitement traveling along I-70, when a huge 20-story cross appeared on the Green Acres horizon! Sadly, they won't let me take it home to Hooterville; and Greg won't let me build a 198-ft tall replica in our front yard; so I've begun collecting much smaller versions. I have only have a few so far. If you have a Cross to spare, send it my way!
Saturday, 9 January 2010
Harold Finster's Paradise Garden at the High Museum of Art
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Ernest O. Britton
GEORGIA--- Although many people became familiar with the Reverend Howard Finster through his 40,000 late-20th century paintings, the centerpiece of his work was Paradise Garden. This outdoor museum was built to celebrate all the inventions of mankind, but dedicated to the glory of God. His oeuvre is best considered as an installation and performance piece, of which the paintings are the extant artifacts. Thanks to my niece Tambra Smoot, I found out that Atlanta's High Museum is the repository for a huge portion of the Finster collection.
By Ernest O. Britton
GEORGIA--- Although many people became familiar with the Reverend Howard Finster through his 40,000 late-20th century paintings, the centerpiece of his work was Paradise Garden. This outdoor museum was built to celebrate all the inventions of mankind, but dedicated to the glory of God. His oeuvre is best considered as an installation and performance piece, of which the paintings are the extant artifacts. Thanks to my niece Tambra Smoot, I found out that Atlanta's High Museum is the repository for a huge portion of the Finster collection.
Friday, 8 January 2010
Sacred Spaces: St. John the Evangelist | Indianapolis, IN
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
I finally stumbled upon a home for weekday noon mass, St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church is within a block of Indy's downtown shopping center. There's even a line for confession, and it's starting now. Since there's only Sunday mass in Green Acres, I'm finally free of Mother Angelica's EWTN! Yesterday, I worshiped at SS Peter and Paul Cathedral. They have some impressive sacred art, and I made some new friends.
St. John the Evangelist | Indy
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Ernest Disney-Britton
INDIANA---I finally stumbled upon a home for weekday noon mass, St. John the Evangelist Catholic Churchis within a block of Indy's downtown shopping center. There's even a line for confession, and it's starting now. Since there's only Sunday mass in Green Acres, I'm finally free of Mother Angelica's EWTN! Yesterday, I worshiped at SS Peter and Paul Cathedral. They have some impressive sacred art, and I made some new friends.
By Ernest Disney-Britton
INDIANA---I finally stumbled upon a home for weekday noon mass, St. John the Evangelist Catholic Churchis within a block of Indy's downtown shopping center. There's even a line for confession, and it's starting now. Since there's only Sunday mass in Green Acres, I'm finally free of Mother Angelica's EWTN! Yesterday, I worshiped at SS Peter and Paul Cathedral. They have some impressive sacred art, and I made some new friends.
Thursday, 7 January 2010
Book: "Rothko" (2005)
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
In their stunning simplicity, the famous colored rectangle paintings by Mark Rothko suggest, evoke, and endlessly enthrall. This richly illustrated book reproduces in full color one hundred of Rothko’s paintings, prints, and drawings. The volume features four commentaries by art experts who explore various formal aspects of Rothko’s work, interviews with contemporary artists who reflect on Rothko’s legacy to post-New York School abstraction, and a chronology of the Russian-born artist’s life from 1903 to 1970. (Read All)
Tuesday, 5 January 2010
St. Mary's Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption | Kentucky
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Covington, KY artist Frank Duveneck completed murals the murals on the east wall of his hometown's Blessed Sacrament Chapel in May 1910. The triptych depicts the mysteries of the Eucharist. We were there for Easter.
St. Mary's Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption | Kentucky
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Ernest Disney-Britton
KENTUCKY---Covington, KY artist Frank Duveneck completed murals the murals on the east wall of his hometown's Blessed Sacrament Chapel in May 1910. The triptych depicts the mysteries of the Eucharist. We were there for Easter.
By Ernest Disney-Britton
KENTUCKY---Covington, KY artist Frank Duveneck completed murals the murals on the east wall of his hometown's Blessed Sacrament Chapel in May 1910. The triptych depicts the mysteries of the Eucharist. We were there for Easter.
Friday, 1 January 2010
New Year's Resolution, January 1, 2010
Posted on 10:28 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Ernest @DisneyBritton
My resolution is to finish my book on the Freedom Center years, and to find the right financial model for Alpha Omega Arts that leads to opening an art gallery. [Resolutions!]
By Ernest @DisneyBritton
My resolution is to finish my book on the Freedom Center years, and to find the right financial model for Alpha Omega Arts that leads to opening an art gallery. [Resolutions!]
Artist: Diego Velázquez | Spain
Posted on 09:00 by john mical
Spanish artist, Diego Velázquez (1599-1660) is best known for his portraits including his masterpiece of Pope Innocent X (1650), this work was was later re-appropriated by contemporarypainter Francis Bacon in a series of paintings attacking the abusive power of Popes.
SABBATH ART | WEEK IN REVIEW
Posted on 04:00 by john mical
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By TAHLIB
Adoration of the Magi
Albrecht Dürer (Italian 1471-1538)
Created 1504
Location: Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence, Italy.
For more on Blacks in Western Art, see The Image of the Black in Western Art
By TAHLIB
Adoration of the Magi
Albrecht Dürer (Italian 1471-1538)
Created 1504
Location: Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence, Italy.
For more on Blacks in Western Art, see The Image of the Black in Western Art
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