ArtWay

Quality is the first norm for art, but its final norm is love and truth, the enriching of human life, the deepening of our vision.

Stations of the Cross in Hornsea

Stations of the Cross in Hornsea: Jonathan Evens Interviews Artist Matthew Askey
 
 
Matthew Askey came to faith as an adult, and after a time in the book trade and as an art teacher he trained for ordination at the College of the Resurrection, Mirfield. Now Chaplain at Worksop College and Ranby House, he says, “I haven’t always been a Christian. It wasn’t until later, when I was about 20, that I discovered God and religion, and just how wonderful it is! I am very happy that I eventually took the opportunity to trust and follow a path of faith; it is such an amazing thing!”
 
A professional artist and curator, he also has a life-long love of music, especially classical music and jazz, and plays the saxophone in a jazz group. Making and sharing art and music are, for him, an integral part of his prayer life and ministry. His work is “truthful in its self-examination,” exploring his current state, “visually, mentally, emotionally and spiritually”.
 
A key part of his work is the ‘Daily Selfie drawing’. These drawings “are made ‘live’ from looking into a circular bronze mirror and the resulting works are same size as the mirror”. In these works, he often wears costumes that represent a part of his spiritual journey, using contemporary language often drawn from popular culture. So, “in his ‘spider man’ series he appears as Thomas the Apostle, and in another as St Philip The Apostle as a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle”. In these ways, his work “draws upon bigger themes, such as a shared/universal experience of life and the tragi-comic state of being human”.
 
His most recent project is a set of ‘Stations of the Cross’ for St Nicholas Church, Hornsea. This is a site-specific commission of paintings that link each Station to a part of the town. At each location in the town itself there is a QR Code to link to information about each Station. His ‘Stations’ are egg-tempera on gesso panels and are traditionally made, just like Orthodox icons. The theological theme of these Stations (in addition to The Cross of course) is ‘water and blood’. The sequence begins with Jesus depicted as a fountain - the water of life - with Pilate turning his back to wash his hands in the much smaller dish beside him.
 
 
The Revd Tina Minett Stevens, Vicar of the Benefice of Hornsea, Atwick & Skipsea, has explained that: “The PCC (parochial church council) received a modest bequest and we try to use such monies to further the mission of the church rather than simply pay the bills. After discussing this at PCC, we settled on commissioning a set of Stations. We initially spoke to a local artist, but they were unable to take up the work for us in the end. So, we were left with a hope, but not sure how to proceed. I then mentioned I knew Matthew, and with the agreement of the PCC contacted him to assist us in commissioning the stations. To our great joy, he offered to do them himself. Matthew sent us his bio and some of his work, and it was agreed to work with him on the project. Matthew suggested using the icon style of painting would make the Stations accessible, but other than including the backgrounds in the order we had envisioned, we left it to Matthew.”
 
The idea of linking the Stations to local locations came about because, “We wanted our Stations to be unique and reflect our town, otherwise we would have bought some generic Stations. We wanted to reflect that the church belongs to the town, and also the heritage of the buildings that make our town special. The PCC chose the locations, and then we realised it would be possible to arrange the Stations so that it would be walkable on the ground. And so, the route was set as a clockwise walk around the town of approximately 2 miles.”
 
Tina says: “They have changed the atmosphere of the church and brought life and colour into an otherwise fairly plain stone building. They are certainly not bland, and indeed are proving to be challenging viewing: one person was confused as to why the soldiers have guns – but he recognised that the guns helped others to recognise them as soldiers; another called them ‘unusual…in the best sense of the word…and not twee’. Matthew picked up on the colours of our organ pipes and shades of blue throughout the church, which gives them a real sense of belonging.
 
 
On walking them for the first time, we began to see how they work as an aid to prayer, with the imagery drawing us into the mystery of the Cross. We hope to produce a map of the physical trail, combining both the heritage of the town and the Christian elements together. Matthew is going to produce some outlines for use with children and in our schools ministry as we help teach the children about Easter. We hope visitors to the town will come to see the Stations as the beautiful pieces of art they are, and hopefully leave having encountered something of the mystery of God as well. We hope to produce a booklet to help interpret some of the less obvious elements, rightly called ‘Easter Eggs’ in this instance.”
 
JE: How did the ‘Stations of the Cross’ commission come about?
 
MA: I was asked by Tina if I could recommend an artist to make a new set of Stations (the funding came from a parishioner’s legacy for this purpose). I had never done a set of Stations and so offered to take up the commission myself. That was about twelve months ago.
 
JE: Given that painting the Stations is a new project for you, to what extent do you think you have ventured into new territory as an artist and to what extent is there continuity with what you have done before?
 
MA: All new. Totally new visual concept for me. 100% innovation! Only the medium (egg tempera) is the same. I was fortunate to set my own brief for these Stations. The parish agreed my proposal and then I painted them. My visual inspiration was the early Novgorod school of icons - very pared-down and dependent on flat shape and colour. You’ll notice that some of the figures are not outlined in paint - this is to increase their sense of vulnerability (that’s one of my innovations). Especially Mary.
 
JE: How did the idea of setting the Stations locally with use of QR codes come to you and how did you decide which locations to use?
 
MA: I proposed the idea to link each Station to locations around the town so that the Stations could be done ‘for real’ around the town in the future, ideally ecumenically. The QR codes idea was Tina’s. The locations were chosen by a parishioner. There are two locations per Station. They are very well chosen. Station Two has a ‘folly’ tower - I immediately thought of Paul’s Cross as the folly of God. The Pieta takes place outside the Catholic Church, the crucifixion outside the cemetery.
 
 
JE: What has the initial reaction to their design and installation been?
 
MA: Very positive I believe. I had thought that some might find them a bit challenging (which I think has been the case), but as I said to Tina, Christianity should be a bit challenging. The feedback online has been overwhelmingly positive.
 
JE: What else is going on in your artistic practice at present?
 
MA: I’m now working on a series of paintings and drawings for Newcastle cathedral. From November 2024 to February 2025, I’ll have a big solo show there of new work: ‘Santa’s helpers: Being Santa’. This is drawing upon material I gathered in December 2022 when I was artist-in-residence at SantaCon London. At Newcastle as part of the exhibition I’ll also be showing some of my Santa Selfies.
 
JE: How did you find the experience of being at SantaCon and what attracted the cathedral to the work you produced as a result?
 
MA: It was the ‘saint’ angle that attracted me to SantaCon, as an example of an enthusiastic contemporary popular-cultural expression of saintliness. Newcastle is the only Church of England cathedral dedicated to St Nicholas, so I approached them with an exhibition proposal, which they have really embraced. SantaCon was a very interesting experience, inspiring really. I joined in and took thousands of photographs.
 
JE: Were there any ways in which SantaCon engaged with Saint Nicholas in its mainstream programming?
 
MA: Yes, in the sense of a special happening - celebration - and joining with others it was quite close to worship. Santas were encouraged to give sweets to children as they swarmed through London. It was like a big flash-mob that processed all the way from Canary Warf to Trafalgar Square led by a Samba band. it was very joyful. A sense of togetherness. We even all went on the tube together at one point. It was very funny.
 
JE: How is the selfie series developing and how does it tie in your personal spirituality?
 
MA: Painting is intrinsically spiritual and prayerful. It is an act of spiritual hope. I’ve been dressing up as saints for selfies (linking Biblical saints to specific super-heroes – e.g. St Thomas being Spider Man), and when I was artist-in-residence at Lincoln cathedral during 2019 I invited staff and visitors to identify with a biblical character, dress up as them and then I drew or painted their portrait.
 
JE: Do you see any points of connection between your experience of playing music and your experience of making art?
 
MA: For me music, like painting, is intrinsically spiritual. Although practice of each is very different, they do have much in common. Mainly slowing time and extending and exploring the present. Also revealing on the outside the otherwise hidden inner life of the person doing it.
 
JE: Both are very contemplative then! How much overlap do you find between art, music and prayer?
 
MA: They are all prayer for me. I’m just listening to Miles Davis with Sonny Stitt, playing the Monk classic ‘Round Midnight’ and joining in a bit on soprano saxophone. It’s a totally spiritual exercise. I’m into ‘Spiritual Jazz’.
 
JE: I've tried to explore it at points in terms of art by thinking about the elements involved in attentive looking. However, it's difficult to articulate. I haven't really tried in terms of music although I think there's something important in that music begins in silence and ends in silence as well as the sense that it is best appreciated when the listener is caught up in the emotional journey undertaken by the music.
 
MA: The music is like the time we are spending immersed in looking at a painting. It is its own language and communion. Your attentive looking thing is important, I think. It’s like when people say someone is a ‘good reader’ of a book. Everything is encounter, everything is interpretation. It’s an active participation.
 
JE: Yes, but the quality of encounter and interpretation tend to depend on the quality of attention paid.
 
MA: The viewer or listener is being honoured by being put at the same level as the painter or composer or writer, if they can’t rise to that they will get much less out of it. It’s a sort of conversation. Like prayer.
 
JE: I've recently visited the Sainsbury Centre who now talk about the art as living entities with which one can interact in a way equivalent to what’s involved when meeting a person.
 
MA: That is probably true on a certain level, isn’t it? A cultural meeting anyway. A conversation. It’s the past talking in the present. I’m thinking how important what has gone before is. Where does music or art come from? It comes from the music and art that came before it. That too is a conversation.
 
JE: Certainly, a conversation. They also put artworks in dialogue one with the other to make that point.
 
MA: Praxis. Best to interact with things in person. That must be the spiritual part. It’s the spirit, the attitude, that is shared through participation.
 
JE: I guess communication is participation
 
MA: Yes, it implies involvement and engagement. Music and art are all about that entanglement.
 
*******
 
St Nicholas Hornsea - https://hornseabenefice.org/

 


More:

28 February 2024 / Book review Abundantly More
Book review by Nigel Halliday
 
Jeremy S. Begbie: ABUNDANTLY MORE: The theological promise of the arts in a reductionist world
Read more...


01 February 2024 / James Tughan: CONTACT
BOOK REVIEW
 
In this book James Tughan asks us to consider the idea that Jesus was first an artist before He was anything else.
Read more...


13 October 2023 / David Miller Interview

“Form welcomes the formless home”

Jonathan Evens interviews David Miller on his work and the “interrelation, symbiosis and overlap” between writing and visual art

Read more...


07 August 2023 / Ethnoarts Scripture Engagement

by Scott Rayl

Ethnoarts are artistic ‘languages’ that are unique to a particular community. They can help strengthen cultural and Christian identity.

Read more...


12 June 2023 / Georges Rouault and André Girard

by Jonathan Evens

Rouault and Girard: Crucifixion and Resurrection, Penitence and Life Anew

Read more...


28 April 2023 / Josh Tiessen: Vanitas + Viriditas

28 April - 26 May, New York gallery Rehs Contemporary will present Josh Tiessen: Vanitas and Viriditas.

Read more...


10 April 2023 / Images for God the Father

by Marleen Hengelaar-Rookmaaker 

How can we ever comprehend God the Father with our small human intellects? How can we ever get to know Him and learn to live with Him?

Read more...


16 February 2023 / Ervin Bossanyi: A vision for unity and harmony

by Jonathan Evens

Bossanyi joined the large number of émigré artists arriving in Britain after WW II, many of whom were Jewish and explored spirituality within their work.

Read more...


06 January 2023 / The Creative Process

by Colin Black

Creative journeys are full of mishaps, accidents, and wrong turnings.

Read more...


01 December 2022 / ArtWay newsletter 2022

Artway will be continued by the Kirby Laing Centre for Public Theology from the beginning of 2024.

Read more...


20 October 2022 / Kuyper, the Aesthetic Sphere, and Art

After three centuries of silence about art in Reformed theological circles in the Netherlands, suddenly there was Abraham Kuyper, whose great merit it was that he once again drew attention to art.

Read more...


06 September 2022 / On the Street: The work of JR

by Betty Spackman

Through the project in Tehachapi JR wanted to "give voice to prisoners" and humanize their environment. 

Read more...


04 August 2022 / Joseph Beuys: A Spiritual German Artist

Is there a thread that connects the multifaceted work of this artist? My hypothesis is that Beuys’ spirituality is what drives his diverse work. 

Read more...


01 June 2022 / Interview with Belinda Scarlett

BELINDA SCARLETT, theatre costume and set designer and ecclesiastical textile artist

Interview by JONATHAN EVENS

Read more...


21 April 2022 / Betty Spackman: A Creature Chronicle

When I consider the heavens, the moon and the stars that you have made, what are mere mortals that you are mindful of them… Psalm 8

Read more...


08 April 2022 / Historical Models for Crosses and Crucifixes Today

All crosses and crucifixes symbolise joy and salvation. But formally there are two different types: the victorious and the suffering crucifix. 

Read more...


16 March 2022 / Three artworks by Walter Hayn

by Gert Swart

These three artworks must have turned Walter Hayn inside out, being so powerfully revealing.

Read more...


22 February 2022 / Abstract Expressionism

by Nigel Halliday

It is worth the while to remember the deep seriousness of these artists – even if their suggested answers can look sadly thin.

Read more...


07 January 2022 / Artist duo Gardner & Gardner

by Elizabeth Kwant

During COP26 artist duo Gardner & Gardner installed their work I will learn to sit with you and I will learn to listen in Glasgow Cathedral.

Read more...


09 December 2021 / ArtWay Newsletter and List of Books 2021

Marleen Hengelaar-Rookmaaker intends to phase out her participation in the day to day oversight of the ArtWay website over the course of the coming new year.

Read more...


03 November 2021 / The Seven Works of Mercy in Art

by Marleen Hengelaar-Rookmaaker

This overview will show that these artworks from different ages mirror the theological ideas and the charitable works of their times.

Read more...


06 October 2021 / Disciplining our eyes with holy images

by Victoria Emily Jones

Images tend to work a subtle magic on us, especially after years of constant exposure.

Read more...


24 August 2021 / On the Gifts of Street Art

by Jason Goroncy

These works represent an act of reclaiming public space for citizens rather than merely consumers.

Read more...


27 July 2021 / Russia’s 1st Biennale of Christ-centered Art

An opportunity of dialogue between the church and contemporary art

by Viktor Barashkov

Read more...


30 June 2021 / Jacques and Raïssa Maritain among the Artists

by David Lyle Jeffrey

About the influence of Jacques and Raïssa Maritain on Rouault, Chagall and Arcabas.

Read more...


13 May 2021 / GOD IS...

Chaiya Art Awards 2021 Exhibition: “God Is . . .”

by Victoria Emily Jones

Read more...


21 April 2021 / Photographing Religious Practice

by Jonathan Evens

The increasing prevalence of photographic series and books exploring aspects of religious practice gives witness to the return of religion in the arts.

Read more...


23 March 2021 / Constanza López Schlichting: Via Crucis

Perhaps what may be different from other Stations of the Cross is that it responds to a totally free expression and each station is a painting in itself. 

Read more...


10 February 2021 / Gert Swart: Four Cruciforms

In a post-Christian era, contemporary Christian artists have to find new ways of evoking the power of the cross. 

Read more...


08 January 2021 / Reflecting on a Gauguin Masterpiece

by Alan Wilson

An artist's reflection on Impressionism, Cezanne, Van Gogh and especially Gauguin's Vision after the Sermon.

Read more...


11 December 2020 / ArtWay Newsletter 2020

What makes the ArtWay platform so special is its worldwide scope thanks to its multilingual character. There are ArtWay visitors in all countries on this planet. 

Read more...


27 October 2020 / Art Pilgrimage

A Research Project on Art Stations of the Cross

by Lieke Wijnia

Read more...


18 September 2020 / Interview with Peter Koenig

by Jonathan Evens

Koenig's practice demonstrates that the way to avoid blandness in religious art is immersion in Scripture.

Read more...


17 August 2020 / BOOK REVIEW BY HEINRICH BALZ

How Other Cultures See the Bible

Christian Weber, Wie andere Kulturen die Bibel sehen. Ein Praxisbuch mit 70 Kunstwerken aus 33 Ländern.

Read more...


17 July 2020 / The Calling Window by Sophie Hacker

by Jonathan Evens  

In 2018 British artist Sophie Hacker was approached to design a window for Romsey Abbey to celebrate the bicentenary of the birth of Florence Nightingale.

Read more...


12 June 2020 / A little leaven leavens the whole lump

From South Africa

Ydi Carstens reports on the group show ‘Unleavened’ which was opened in Stellenbosch shortly before the Covid-19 lock-down. 

Read more...


14 May 2020 / Jazz, Blues, and Spirituals

Republished: 

Hans Rookmaaker, Jazz, Blues, and Spirituals. The Origins and Spirituality of Black Music in the United States. 

Reviewed by Jonathan Evens

Read more...


17 April 2020 / Andy Warhol: Catholicism, Work, Faith And Legacy

by Jonathan Evens 

While Warhol’s engagement with faith was complex it touched something which was fundamental, not superficial.

Read more...


25 March 2020 / Sacred Geometry in Christian Art

by Sophie Hacker

This blog unravels aspects of sacred geometry and how it has inspired art and architecture for millennia. 

Read more...


22 February 2020 / Between East and West

By Kaori Homma

Being in this limbo between day and night makes me question, “Where does the east end and the west start?”

Read more...


15 February 2020 / Imagination at Play

by Marianne Lettieri

To deny ourselves time to laugh, be with family and friends, and fuel our passions, we get caught in what Cameron calls the “treadmill of virtuous production.”

Read more...


07 December 2019 / ArtWay Newsletter 2019

An update by our editor-in-chief 
and
the ArtWay List of Books 2019

Read more...


16 November 2019 / Scottish Miracles and Parables Exhibition

Alan Wilson: "Can there be a renewal of Christian tradition in Scottish art, where ambitious artists create from a heartfelt faith, committed to their Lord and saviour as well as their craft?"

Read more...


23 September 2019 / Dal Schindell Tribute

While Dal’s ads and sense of humour became the stuff of legends, it was his influence on the arts at Regent College in Vancouver, Canada that may be his biggest legacy. 

Read more...


04 September 2019 / The Aesthetics of John Calvin

Calvin stated that 'the faithful see sparks of God's glory, as it were, glittering in every created thing. The world was no doubt made, that it might be the theater of divine glory.'

Read more...


31 July 2019 / The Legend of the Artist

by Beat Rink

The image of the 'divine' artist becomes so dominant that artists take their orientation from it and lead their lives accordingly.

Read more...


02 July 2019 / Quotes by Tim Keller

Many “Christian art” productions are in reality just ways of pulling artists out of the world and into the Christian subculture.

Read more...


08 June 2019 / The Chaiya Art Awards

by Jonathan Evens

The Chaiya Art Awards 2018 proved hugely popular, with over 450 entries and more than 2,700 exhibition visitors.

Read more...


29 May 2019 / Art Stations of the Cross: Reflections

by Lieke Wynia

In its engagement with both Biblical and contemporary forms of suffering, the exhibition addressed complex topical issues without losing a sense of hope out of sight.

Read more...


03 May 2019 / Marianne Lettieri: Relics Reborn

Items that show the patina of time and reveal the wear and tear of human interaction are carriers of personal and collective history. 

Read more...


27 April 2019 / Franciscan and Dominican Arts of Devotion

by John Skillen 

This manner of prayer stirs up devotion, the soul stirring the body, and the body stirring the soul.

Read more...


13 March 2019 / Makoto Fujimura and the Culture Care Movement

by Victoria Emily Jones

Culture care is a generative approach to culture that brings bouquets of flowers into a culture bereft of beauty.

Read more...


08 January 2019 / Building a Portfolio of People

by Marianne Lettieri

Besides hard work in the studio, networking may be the single most important skill for a sustainable art practice.

Read more...


01 December 2018 / ArtWay Newsletter December 2018

ArtWay has Special Plans for 2019!

After London, Washington D.C. and New York the city of Amsterdam in the Netherlands is now the anticipated location for a prominent art exhibition with the title Art Stations of the Cross.

Read more...


11 October 2018 / The Life, Art and Legacy of Charles Eamer Kempe

Book Review by Jonathan Evens

The significance and spirituality of the work is made clear in ways which counteract the stereotype of mass production of a static style.

Read more...


13 September 2018 / A Visit to the Studio of Georges Rouault

by Jim Alimena

Everything we saw and learned reinforced my picture of a great man of faith and a great artist. 

Read more...


09 August 2018 / With Opened Eyes: Representational Art

by Ydi Coetsee

How do we respond to the ‘lost innocence’ of representational art? 

Read more...


13 July 2018 / True Spirituality in the Arts

by Edith Reitsema

Living in Christ should lead us away from living with a segregated view of life, having a sacred-secular split. 

Read more...


17 May 2018 / Beholding Christ in African American Art

Book review by Victoria Emily Jones

One of the hallmarks of Beholding Christ is the diversity of styles, media, and denominational affiliations represented.

Read more...


23 April 2018 / Short Introduction to Hans Rookmaaker

by Marleen Hengelaar-Rookmaaker

On the occasion of the establishment of the Rookmaaker Jazz Scholarship at Covenant College, Chattanooga, Tennessee, 12 March 2018

Read more...


04 April 2018 / International Art Residency in India

Art for Change, a New Delhi based arts organization with a vision to see art shape society with beauty and truth, will be running its 6th annual International Artist Residency in November 2018.

Read more...


15 March 2018 / The Stations of the Cross at Blackburn Cathedral

by Penny Warden  

Perhaps the central challenge for the artist in imaging the body of Christ is the problem of representing the dual natures of the doctrine of the incarnation.

Read more...


23 February 2018 / Between the Shadow and the Light

By Rachel Hostetter Smith

In June 2013 a group of twenty North American and African artists from six African countries met for two weeks of intensive engagement with South Africa.

Read more...


30 January 2018 / Sacred Geometry in Christian Art

by Sophie Hacker

This blog unravels aspects of sacred geometry and how it has inspired art and architecture for millennia. 

Read more...


01 January 2018 / Jonathan Evens writes about Central Saint Martins

Why would Central Saint Martins, a world-famous arts and design college and part of University of the Arts London, choose to show work by its graduates in a church?

Read more...


06 December 2017 / ArtWay Newsletter December, 2017

ArtWay's Chairman Wim Eikelboom: "The visual arts cultivate a fresh and renewed view of deeply entrenched values. That is why ArtWay is happy to provide an online platform for art old and new."

Read more...


14 November 2017 / The Moral Imagination: Art and Peacebuilding

In the context of conflict transformation the key purpose of creative expression is to provide a venue for people to tell their stories, and for their stories to be heard.

Read more...


24 October 2017 / Bruce Herman: Ut pictura poesis?

For the last couple hundred of years the arts have largely been in "experimentation mode"—moving away from the humble business of craft and service toward ideas, issues, and theory.

Read more...


04 October 2017 / David Jeffrey: Art and Understanding Scripture

The purpose of In the Beauty of Holiness: Art and the Bible in Western Culture is to help deepen the reader’s understanding of the magnificence of the Bible as a source for European art.

Read more...


08 September 2017 / David Taylor: The Aesthetics of John Calvin

Calvin stated that 'the faithful see sparks of God's glory, as it were, glittering in every created thing. The world was no doubt made, that it might be the theater of divine glory.'

Read more...


23 August 2017 / ​Reconstructed by Anikó Ouweneel

A much talked-about exposition in the NoordBrabants Museum in The Netherlands showed works by modern and contemporary Dutch artists inspired by traditional Catholic statues of Christ and the saints. 

Read more...


04 July 2017 / Pilgrimage to Venice – The Venice Biennale 2017

When I start to look at the art works, I notice a strange rift between this pleasant environment and the angst and political engagement present in the works of the artists. 

Read more...


24 June 2017 / Collecting as a Calling

After many years of compiling a collection of religious art, I have come to realize that collecting is a calling. I feel strongly that our collection has real value and that it is a valuable ministry. 

Read more...


02 June 2017 / I Believe in Contemporary Art

By Alastair Gordon

In recent years there has been a growing interest in questions of religion in contemporary art. Is it just a passing fad or signs of renewed faith in art? 

Read more...


04 April 2017 / Stations of the Cross - Washington, DC 2017

by Aaron Rosen

We realized that the Stations needed to speak to the acute anxiety facing so many minorities in today’s America and beyond. 

Read more...


07 March 2017 / Socially Engaged Art

A discussion starter by Adrienne Dengerink Chaplin

Growing dissatisfaction with an out-of-touch, elite and market driven art world has led artists to turn to socially engaged art. 

Read more...


01 February 2017 / Theodore Prescott: Inside Sagrada Familia

The columns resemble the trunks of trees. Gaudi conceived of the whole interior as a forest, where the nave ceiling would invoke the image of an arboreal canopy.

Read more...


03 January 2017 / Steve Scott tells about his trips to Bali

In the Balinese shadow play the puppet master pulls from a repertoire of traditional tales and retells them with an emphasis on contemporary moral and spiritual lessons. 

Read more...


09 December 2016 / Newsletter ArtWay December 2016

Like an imitation of a good thing past, these days of darkness surely will not last. Jesus was here and he is coming again, to lead us to the festival of friends.

Read more...


01 November 2016 / LAbri for Beginners

What is the role of the Christian artist? Is it not to ‘re-transcendentalise’ the transcendent, to discern what is good in culture, and to subvert what is not with a prophetic voice?

Read more...


30 September 2016 / Book Review by Jonathan Evens

Jonathan Koestlé-Cate, Art and the Church: A Fractious Embrace - Ecclesiastical Encounters with Contemporary Art, Routledge, 2016.

Read more...


01 September 2016 / Review: Modern art and the life of a culture

The authors say they want to help the Christian community recognize the issues raised in modern art and to do so in ways that are charitable and irenic. But I did not find them so. Their representation of Rookmaaker seems uncharitable and at times even misleading. 

Read more...


29 July 2016 / Victoria Emily Jones on Disciplining our Eyes

There’s nothing inherently wrong with images—creating or consuming. In fact, we need them. But we also need to beware of the propensity they have to plant themselves firmly in our minds. 

Read more...


30 June 2016 / Aniko Ouweneel on What is Christian Art?

Pekka Hannula challenges the spectator to search for the source of the breath we breathe, the source of what makes life worth living, the source of our longing for the victory of redemptive harmony.

Read more...


09 June 2016 / Theodore Prescott: The Sagrada Familia

Sagrada Familia is a visual encyclopedia of Christian narrative and Catholic doctrine as Gaudi sought to embody the faith through images, symbols, and expressive forms.

Read more...


19 May 2016 / Edward Knippers: Do Clothes make the Man?

Since the body is the one common denominator for all of humankind, why do we fear to uncover it? Why is public nudity a shock or even a personal affront?

Read more...


27 April 2016 / Alexandra Harper: Culture Care

Culture Care is an invitation to create space within the local church to invest our talents, time and tithes in works that lean into the Kingdom of God as creative agents of shalom. 

Read more...


06 April 2016 / Jonathan Evens on Contemporary Commissions

The issue of commissioning secular artists versus artists of faith represents false division and unnecessary debate. The reality is that both have resulted in successes and failures.

Read more...


12 March 2016 / Betty Spackman: Creativity and Depression

When our whole being is wired to fly outside the box, life can become a very big challenge. To carve oneself into a square peg for the square holes of society, when you are a round peg, is painful to say the least.

Read more...


24 February 2016 / Jim Watkins: Augustine and the Senses

Augustine is not saying that sensual pleasure is bad, but that it is a mixed good. As his Confessions so clearly show, Augustine is painfully aware of how easily he can take something good and turn it into something bad. 

Read more...


11 February 2016 / H.R. Rookmaaker: Does Art Need Justification?

Art is not a religion, nor an activity relegated to a chosen few, nor a mere worldly, superfluous affair. None of these views of art does justice to the creativity with which God has endowed man.

Read more...


26 January 2016 / Ned Bustard: The Bible is Not Safe

Revealed is intended to provoke surprise, even shock. It shows that the Bible is a book about ordinary people, who are not only spiritual beings, but also greedy, needy, hateful, hopeful, selfish, and sexual.

Read more...


14 January 2016 / Painting by Nanias Maira from Papua New Guinea

In 2011 Wycliffe missionary Peter Brook commissioned artist Nanias Maira, who belongs to the Kwoma people group of northwestern Papua New Guinea, to paint Bible stories in the traditional style for which he is locally known. 

Read more...