A few words about conversation
December 26, 2007 at 6:03 pm | In Art, faith, life | Leave a CommentIt’s the time of year for gatherings and we have been to two in particular where the conversation was a feast. The first was at an artist’s studio where half a dozen of us had been invited to see some large works in progress, all of them meditations on the relationship between Jesus and his mother. Our talk was a journey, an “assay”—the word from which our more specifically literary term “essay” is derived—meaning a foray, a setting out in a search for understanding. None of us dominated—it was like a volleyball game in which personalities are subsumed in the common task of setting up the ball so it can be whacked over the net by whoever happens to be in the right position to do so at the moment. Our volleys included the gospel of John, T.S. Eliot’s seminal essay, “Tradition and the Individual Talent,” Rothko’s colors, John Gardner’s On Moral Fiction, the mathematician Godel—but this is just what I happen to remember; there was lots more.
The second was at a graciously appointed home in Boxford—seven of us gathered around a table feasting on salmon, risotto, salad and conversation that ranged from Queen Elizabeth’s visit to Sheridan, WY, some years ago (her emissary asked if it would be possible to remove all rifles from all pickup-truck rifle-racks in Sheriden for the duration of her visit; it was simply not possible), to our various Myers-Briggs types (Beth and Mark are complete opposites; Beth gave an interesting answer to my question of what their mornings were like). We also talked about growing up with one or more alcoholic parents, and how it forms one’s understanding of “normal.” I said I had not known until I was an adult that the bathroom towel closet was not a “normal” place to keep the vodka. True enough, but on the way home I realized I’d left out the rest of the story, which is that following a car accident and textbook near-death experience in 1974 my mother sobered up and devoted much of the rest of her life to devising programs for recovering alcoholics. She passed away April 19, 2003, on Holy Saturday, which also happened to be her 75th birthday. Here’s to you, Mom.
Orvieto 11 . 8 . 2007
November 9, 2007 at 5:14 pm | In Art, life | Leave a CommentAlways nice to have a poem show up in your inbox. This is from a professor friend who recently returned from Orvieto, Italy, home base for the Gordon in Orvieto program, which recently moved its digs from one convent to another (if you can read Italian, here’s a local account of the move: http://www.orvietosi.it/notizia.php?id=12494) :
Orvieto 11 . 8 . 2007
breath of your umbrian valley is always rising along these cliff walls
carrying the scent of charcoal fire and baking bread,
source of life here, along with oil, pasta,
and wine
pattern of olive groves and vineyards crossing themselves
in reverence, all grow in this ancient green-gray soil (offering
its life to them, never exhausted
in giving)
street-stones fan-like, outstretched to receive our feet and wheels
yield sounds that have echoed in these alleys for ages,
etched with each washing and wearing, black like
Etruscan pottery
duomo, your crown, surprises me each time I round a street expecting
more of your cadenced rooflines to frame my vision,
yet finding that jewel instead, its face pressed against the night’s
velvet sky
your people are like you, parochial yet magnanimous, small but expanding
always to include the stranger who once laid siege your walls,
seeking to steal what is freely offered to one in need
(like me)
Bruce Herman
Lights on Rte. 1
November 8, 2007 at 1:38 am | In Art, life | Leave a Comment![]()
My daughter, Mary, “scribbling” with her camera on her way home last weekend. I feel compelled to add that she was the passenger, not the driver.
Transforming Culture
October 31, 2007 at 9:13 pm | In Art, faith | Leave a CommentAm trying to come up with a convincing institutional rationale for getting sent to this conference (as described in an email I received today):
How would you like to engage with people like Jeremy Begbie, Eugene Peterson, and Andy Crouch about “a vision for the church and the arts”? The Transforming Culture symposium in Austin, TX will bring together pastors, church leaders and artists to discuss the Church’s relation to the arts and to artists. If you are interested in exploring the ways in which we can encourage a more theologically informed, biblically grounded, liturgically sensitive, artistically alive and missionally shrewd vision for the Church and the arts, then we welcome you join us April 1-3, 2008 for a lively and enriching conversation. Check out the details at http://www.transformingculture.org/. The discussion will focus on three areas:
- The arts and the corporate worship of the church (its liturgical actions and its sacred spaces).
- The arts and the pastoral care of artists (the discipleship and community formation of artists).
- The arts and the renewal of the culture (the impact against the zeitgeist, the redemption of the centers of art).
Chaplain for a week
October 26, 2007 at 9:36 am | In Art, faith | 3 Comments(Above: “let me try to pull you free,” by Anthony Falcetta, image used by permission). Below, good words from a favorite blogger, an Episcopal priest who served as chaplain for a group of artists during this year’s CIVA (Christians in Visual Arts) summer workshops, held at Gordon College in Wenham, Massachusetts.
“The emotional power and the non-rational, non-propositional aspect of the arts have just a little too much in common with spiritual experience for some people not to be threatened. (And I hasten to say that artistic experience per se is probably one of the most slippery and dangerous idols out there, because it uses so many of the same faculties as spiritual experience and the two easily overlap. I know someone who got to his deathbed having assumed art was enough to take him all the way; then he found out it couldn’t.)”
http://untiltranslucent.blogspot.com/2007/07/ive-been-sort-of-chaplain-this-week-for.html
7:15 a.m., domani a Depot
October 22, 2007 at 11:51 pm | In Art, Writing, faith | Leave a CommentTomorrow morning several artist friends and I will meet for breakfast at the Depot Diner in north Beverly, a favorite gathering spot. I will order my usual, two over easy with sourdough, hold the bacon, small OJ and a refill on the coffee, please. We will be discussing my crazy idea, a possible anthology of readings about art and vocation, for an audience of young artists brought up evangelical and (some of them) not at all sure about where and how they fit into the subculture. These young artists happen to be their students, so there’s a natural interest. We’ll talk about gathering various things they and their friends have written on the subject over the years and hardly given another thought to. I write, too, (another topic for another post), but in my work life tend to be mostly a hunter-gatherer of other people’s words. Sometimes it’s like reclaiming things thrown away in the trash. Hey, I say. This is a good thing you’ve tossed away. Can I have it?
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