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

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Film Comment: The Phantom of the Paradise


At the grocery store I recently heard a little ten year old girl tell a woman, “When I’m twenty, I’m going to be rich.  I’m going to be an actress and a model.”  The child was quite serious, not realizing the near impossibility of her goal.  She certainly was unaware of the many compromises that people are willing to make to reach such a goal.

The Phantom of the Paradise (1974) is a highly exaggerated and stylized expression of the quest for success at any price.  The film incorporates influences, to name a few, from Faust, The Phantom of the Opera, The Cabinet of Dr, Caligari, The Picture of Dorian Gray, and Psycho.

The film concerns a music producer who has sold his soul to the devil, a drug-addled mindless rock star who is complicit in the evil contract, and a mutilated and vengeful music composer.  The film is violent and bloody and all about success at any price. “He sold his soul for rock n’ roll.”

How much are you willing to sacrifice for your goals?  Are your goals worthy goals?

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Thousands of Images of Jesus


Good Salt identifies itself as “The world’s leading source of religious imagery,”  It licenses Christian art for publishing, church ministries, advertising, and websites.  The company was founded in 2000 by Lars and Kim Justinen, who are both illustrators.

Thursday, November 22, 2012

What They Think of Us: Unblack Metal


Advisory: There may be profane and/or disturbing content in this post. 

http://www.metalunderground.com/news/details.cfm?newsid=64176


The whole purpose of black metal was to create the most dirty, unclean, antichristian sound possible. The spirit behind black metal will always be antichristian. That's where the sound comes from. You can't have good and evil mixed together and it be Christian” Death Raizer  (Note: Many black metal musicians draw a distinction between black metal music and satanism.) 

Unblack metal is music which sounds identical to black metal but which has lyrics and content which promotes Christianity.


2008, the Polish Christian Unblack musician Fire (Jarek), comments: "God created music and satan distorted it.  I want to bring people to know Christ through music that they enjoy.  My lyrics are always either from the Bible or inspired by my life testimony and experiences.  ... he delivered me from drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, and black magic!  We serve an awesome God."



You tube video



A list of Unblack Metal bands.  Several of the bands are European.  A few of the names are based on Hebrew or Greek words.
Admonish
Arch of Thorns
Armageddon Holocaust
Azmaveth
Bedeiah
Beeroth
Bleedience
Borgarzur
Cabalistic
Crimson Moonlight
Dark Endless
Demoniciduth
Diamoth
Dormant
Elgibbor
Exaudi
Fire Throne
Frosthardr
Grim
Horde
Hortor
Keber
Lo-Ruhamah
Phanerosis
Sanctifica
Shadows of Paragon
Slechtvalk
SorrowStorm
Soterion
Stronghold
Syringe
Trastorno
Vaakevandring
VIXIVI

My personal take on this: Unblack metal music is certainly on the far extreme fringes of Christianity.  I believe that the Christian musicians who produce it are sincere in their intent and that God knows men's (and women's) hearts.

Do the form and origins of this type of art make it inherently evil?  Is Christian country music acceptable?  Is Christian rap music acceptable?

A few years ago there was a woman named Kellie Everts who claimed to be a "stripper for Christ."  Could there be Christian pornography?  Where is the line?



Saturday, November 17, 2012

Film Comment: The Art of Getting By


I first saw Freddie Highmore in Five Children and It, a children’s fantasy film.  Basically he portrayed a cute little boy.  Probably, Highmore’s most well-known role is that of Charlie Bucket in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005).

As a twenty year old, Highmore still has the cute innocent look but the character he portrays in the comedy, The Art of Getting By (2011), is a decidedly different person.

George Zinavoy (Highmore) is a sweet natured, gentle, and very talented artist.  He is an obviously intellectual and capable high school senior.  He has decided to do nothing, not even in art class.  When he meets a girl (Emma Roberts) who likes him, he cannot bring himself to admit that he also likes her.

George’s problem is his philosophy, which is one version of the worldview known as Postmodernism.  We are born alone.  We die alone.  Everything else is basically nothing.  Life has no meaning because, in the end, we will all die, alone.

A great many people today, possibly nearing a majority, have a postmodern view of reality.  This is why you hear so many people saying that “you have your truth, I have my truth.”  How they choose to respond to the philosophy can lead to apathy, rage, cynicism, hedonism, manipulativeness, withdrawal, and any number of other pathological lifestyles.

The challenge for Christians is to show these people that life does have meaning and to help them see what that meaning is.  We cannot “save” them but we can present the Gospel and let the Holy Spirit do His work.


Saturday, October 20, 2012

Christian Illustrators: Karen Hargett


Christian illustrators often work in secular markets.  Karen Hargett is a Christian artist (pencils and pastels) in Buda, Texas (USA).  She is a professional working artist who does nature scenes, animals portraits, and work for commission.

Karen Hargettt lives in Buda, Texas, a rapidly growing community.  In the 2000 census, Buda had 2404 residents; in 2010 the population had grown to 7295.  Originally known as DuPre, the town became Buda late in the 19th century.

There are two possible known derivations for the name of the town.  Both sound plausible.  Perhaps both sources contributed to the name.

The Carrington Hotel in Buda is popularly known as the "Buda House"because of the "viudas" (Spanish = "widows") who worked in the kitchen.

The second explanation is that the town is named for the hometown (Buda) of Hungarian refugees who settled in the area after the failed 1848 revolution in Hungary.  Budapest, Hungary was formed from the merging of the cities of Buda and Pest. 

The city name Buda may derive from the name of its founder, Bleda (Buda), the brother of the Hunnic ruler Attila.   It may also be derived from the Slavic word "вода, voda" ("water"), a translation of the Latin name "Aquincum", which was the main Roman settlement in the region

Friday, October 19, 2012

Christians


At some time during their lives, the following people have publicly identified themselves as Christian.   Inclusion in this list does not indicate approval or disapproval of the person, of their orthodoxy or lack of it, or of their actions.  Some of those listed may surprise you.  Readers are encouraged to suggest persons who should be included on this list.  This is a recurring segment in this blog.

Duccio di Buoninsegna: (b. ca. 1255-1260, Italy – d. 1318-1319)  Painter.  He worked on commission and provided paintings for churches, cathedrals, and government buildings.  Many of his works are now lost.

Frederick Fyvie Bruce: (b. 1910, Scotland –d. 1990; aka: F. F. Bruce) Biblical scholar, university professor, specialist on the life and ministry of Paul, wrote over forty books and biblical commentaries.  In his classic work, New Testament Documents: Are They Reliable?, he showed that the New Testament documents have better historical attestation than any other ancient documents.

Allan B. Bicknell: (b. ca 1890, USA –d. 1948) University professor of French, Greek, Latin, and Spanish at Bridgewater University for forty-one years (1906-0917), opera singer.    

Asa: On 6 June 2012, a pastor identified only as Asa was arrested for proselytizing in Laos.

Joseph Elliot Giradi: (b. 1964, Illinois, USA) Major League Baseball catcher anf manager. 2006 National League Manager of the Year.

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Portrait of Jesus Damaged in Spain

An 80 year old woman in Spain was just trying to help when she "restored"a twentieth-century painting of Jesus in Borja, Spain.  She was known as a local artist but she horribly disfigured the painting, possibly totally ruining it if the paint cannot be removed.  No one believes that she intentionally destroyed the painting.

Friday, March 16, 2012

1000 Hours of Staring

The multimedia artist, Tom Friedman , has unwittingly produced what I believe to be the ultimate statement of modern Western popular culture; his artwork, “1000 Hours of Staring .”  The concept is that the work, a 32 inch square of white paper, creates “the history of an object.”  It expresses intense concentration and mental activity.

Personally, I believe that, like the films Video Fireplace  and Video Aquarium, “1000 Hours of Staring” expresses the total vacuity and emptiness of much of modern popular culture.  The modern culture pursues fame, money, fun, and “self-realization.”  The underlying constant is SELF.

The Christian realizes that the true meaning of life is the expression of the GLORY OF GOD .






Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Christian Illustrators: Stephen S. Sawyer

Stephen S. Sawyer (b. 1952, Kentucky, USA) is a commercial artist, portrait painter, and motivational speaker. His most frequent portrait subject is Jesus Christ. Many of his Jesus portraits are traditional in nature, but a few are not, such as his "Undefeated ," which presents Jesus as very muscular and handsome, 
in contrast to many Jesus portraits which emphasize His gentleness.


You may find "Undefeated" to be unsettling. The reality is that Jesus was probably not handsome, He was probably very average or even unattractive in his physical appearance. He was  
someone who no one would have expected to be the Messiah. That is how God works. "For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the LORD." Isaiah 55:8.


On the subject of His masculinity, Jesus was surely not in any 
way physically effeminate. He grew up doing carpentry, a very hard, heavy, physical craft.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Christian Illustrators: Tim Baron

This is a new recurrent feature on this blog.  I will provide links to the websites of Christian illustrators.  Today: Tim Baron .

Monday, August 29, 2011

Akiane Kramarik

You can decide about this for yourself.  I am astounded at the accomplished professional level artwork and intrigued by the story.  It may be true, I hope it is, but our faith must be based on the Bible and Jesus.

Born and raised in an atheist family, little Akiane Kramarik at age four began to have visions of Heaven.  Then she began to draw and paint what she had seen.  She's seventeen now and is still painting.  Her parents have become Christians because of what they have seen.

Here is an interview with Akiane at the age of thirteen.


And here is a gallery of her art.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Free Christian Clipart

GospelGifs is a website which features "free original Christian web and design graphics for web pages, newsletters, email, greeting cards, Twitter backgrounds, worship backgrounds, Facebook,  MySpace, PowerPoint slides, Bible studies, Sunday School art, church ministry & personal witness.  Easy to use.  No fees, no membership or registration, no email address required. " (The text within the parentheses " " is from the website.)  The artist is named Jim Sutton.


The term "clip art" refers to what was originally quite literally "clip" art.  Scissors or a blade were used to cut images out of other printed material and to paste the images into a new format (similar to the technique used for collage.) "Gif" is an abbreviation for Graphic Interchange Format, an electronic bit mapping useful for graphics and logos.  It can display up to 256 colors and some limited animation.  


Sample pages from the website:

Smiling Jesus


Page 24 of over 50 pages of Free Christian Clip Art


The Jesus Page





Friday, March 4, 2011

What Did jesus Look Like?

The Bible says nothing about the physical appearance of the man, Jesus of Nazareth.  I believe that this fact points out an important point.  The Jews were looking for a Messiah who would be an impressive military leader who would throw off Roman rule.  He might even, if successful, have become a king.

Kings, for all the history known up to that time, were massively egotistical self promoters, repeatedly building monuments and cities named for themselves. The king was always touted as a god of a man, handsome, brave, rich, powerful; his queen was the most beautiful woman in the land.  The greatest kings were known for their wealth, power, and military conquests.  How well, or how poorly, they dealt with their subjects was secondary.  This attitude toward kings has been repeated down through the centuries since the time of Christ.

Jesus was a nobody, a carpenter from an ignored small country town.  He probably looked like everyone else, like one of the modern West Bank Palestinians we regularly see on the nightly news.  While He could read and write and was obviously very intelligent (He amazed the Pharisees with His knowledge at age twelve, Luke 2:41-52), He is not mentioned as having specialized theological training or as being recognized as a Pharisee.  That He didn't stand out by his appearance is shown by the fact that the traitor, Judas Iscariot, had to point HIm out to the Roman soldiers who came to arrest Him. (Matthew 26:47-56, Mark 14:43-51, Luke 22:47-53, John 18: 1-11)

The Iconoclastic Controversy arose in the Christian community over whether or not representations of Jesus and the other persons mentioned in the Bible should be allowed within the Christian Church. The issue still causes controversy.  Of the artwork depicting Jesus, possibly the most recognizable in history (known to have been reproduced over 500,000 times) is The Head of Christ  by Warner Sallman.

Other representations of Jesus abound and reflect many different understandings of the same man.  Most appear to be honest attempts to emphasize some particular aspect of the Lord.

In Undefeated by Stephen S. Sawyer, Jesus is seen as a handsome, muscular boxer   The painting is based on Psalm 136:12.

Christ Walking on the Sea , a print by Nathaniel Currier (of Currier & Ives), emphasizes Jesus's gentleness, calmness, and kindness.  Some viewers, me included, feel that this print makes Jesus so gentle that He seems to be effeminate.  The event depicted is recorded in John 6:16-21, Mark 6:45-52, and in Matthew 14:22-33.

Sister Wendy Beckett , host of the Public broadcasting System program, "Sister Wendy's Story of Painting," in 1999 chose Jesus of the People  as the winner of the National Catholic Reporter's competition for a new image of Jesus, a peasant Jesus. 


All three of these representations of Jesus are meant in reverence. Some object to them, especially to Jesus of the People, but why?  Jesus is the Lord of every individual on Earth and His Church includes people from every race, nationality and country on the Earth.  None of these pictures above are blasphemous, unlike those detailed below, which are.  The difference is in the intent: to glorify Christ or to show contempt for Him.

Piss Christ 
Christ the Yogi 
The Truth 

Interesting discussions of what Jesus may have looked like are here  and here .  The truth is, no one knows.




Tuesday, January 18, 2011

da Vinci's "The Lord's Supper" Recreated in An Unusual Medium

A woman in Roscommon, Michigan (USA) has reproduced Leonardo da Vinci's "The Lord's Supper" in an unorthodox medium.  Read about it here .

Friday, October 22, 2010

Book Comment: The Book of Genesis Illustrated by R. Crumb

You may never have heard of Robert Crumb (b. 1943, Philadelphia), but he is an internationally respected cartoonist closely associated with the underground counter-culture of the late twentieth century.  His pen or pencil is constantly moving and people have been known to follow him to grab left behind napkins, matchbook covers, and scraps of paper on which he has compulsively doodled.  His artwork sells for thousands of dollars.

Crumb has been described as a genius, a misogynist, a devoted and loving father, the founder of the underground comix movement, a misanthrope, a philanderer, a 78 RPM record collector, the creator of Fritz the Cat, a recluse, a talented musician, a counter culture icon, an illustrator capable of near-photographic portraits and highly stylized caricatures, an obsessive man, a man so famous that a documentary about his life and work has been made as a feature film, a compulsive man, a vulgar artist sometimes accused of producing pornography, a member of the Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame (1991), and so on.  He is a very complex man.

Many were shocked, and some were highly offended, when R. Crumb decided to illustrate the Book of Genesis.   Crumb is known to not be religious in any traditional sense and, indeed, does have a history of producing images which could be interpreted as pornographic.

Crumb originally intended to do a "takeoff" of Adam and Eve but decided instead to do a literal verse by verse illustration of the entire book, as he says, "All 50 chapters." What resulted is a fascinating, massive, and controversial book illustrated in Crumb's distinctive highly detailed and intricate comic book style which I believe actually shows reverence for the book by not glossing over anything.  I mean that.  That is why the book is controversial.

Where people are naked in the Bible, they're naked in the book.  Where they have sex in the Bible, they have sex in the book.  Where there is killing, blood and guts abound.  The "begat lists" have a different face associated with each name.  The people are very plain, some are ugly, just like real people.  God is presented as a stern old man in flowing robes and with hair and beard hanging down to his feet.

Robert Crumb, in his introduction to the book says, "... I, ironically, do not believe the Bible is 'The Word of God."  I believe it is the words of men.  It is, nonetheless, a powerful text with layers of meaning that reach deep into our collective consciousness, our historical consciousness, if you will.  It seems indeed to be an inspired work..."

It may be that a man who is, at best, an agnostic, has shown more respect for a biblical text than those who squeamishly sanitize and euphemize the "hard parts." The sort of people who would be horrified to find out what "hand under thigh" (Genesis 24:2) means.

Crumb, R., The Book of Genesis Illustrated by R. Crumb (New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 2009)

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Station No. 7

It's not often that a ten year old can stir up international controversy but Jackson Potts of Houston, Texas managed to do it this Easter with his photograph "Station No. 7." It is a photograph depicting a crowd approving of a police officer beating a small boy with his night stick. The photographer was Jackson Potts, now 11, who explained the photograph's symbolism as follows: the child is jesus, who was totally innocent; the policeman represents the centurion who beat Him when He fell, the man was "just doing his job;" the crowd on onlookers represent those who stood by approvingly or those who watched and said nothing; and the little girl in the blue dress represents Jesus' followers who were appalled by what they were seeing.

The photograph was commissioned by Xnihilo Gallery, a Christian art gallery in Houston which shares its space with the Ecclesia Church, as part of it's annual Stations of the Cross Exhibit. When they saw it, the controversy erupted.

Some believed that Jackson's father did the photograph but the main objection was that many on the board were "afraid it would not protect the impressionable minds of young children." Some wanted the photograph banned but the final decision was to exhibit the photograph only on the opening night of the exhibit and to place it behind a curtain with a parental warning placard.

What???? Christians hiding Jesus being a curtain? What weenies some of us have become. Realize what the world thinks of us.

"Piss Christ" is a 1987 photograph of a small plastic crucifix floating in a glass of the photographer's urine. It was an award winner and was sponsored in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, an agency of the United States government.

"The Holy Virgin Mary," a collage by Chris Ofili (1996) uses a paiting of Mary based on primitive African art and splattered with elephant feces. It is defended as art by many critics and art professors.

Those are supposed to be OK but a reverent symbolical treatment of an event in Jesus' life is not. Children are supposed to begin mandatory sex education including the subject of "alternate lifestyles" in elementary school, but they may be frightened by the truth of what the world did to Jesus. Using the arguments of the secularists, we should expose our children to scriptural teachings, even the harsh things, as they become able to understand. If they are not yet ready, we should exercise parental responsibility just as the secularists tell us. But we should not hide or dilute the truth. The first Christians never hid from the truth and neither should we.


"A new image and new lessons," http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/hotstories/6911097.html

Busttillo, Miguel, "A (Very) Young Artist Makes Waves," The Wall Street Journal,3-4 April, 2010, p. W9.

"Dung-covered Madonna sparks controversy: Art professor Michael Davis takes a look," College Street Journal, http://www.mtholyoke,edu/offices/comm/csj/991008/madonna.html

http://Jacksonstation.blogspot.com/

Mercer, Ilana, "Dung and other offal at the gallery," http://www.ilanamercer.com/phprunner/public_article_list_view.php?editid1=269

"Piss Christ," http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piss_Christ

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Pothead Jesus

On 9 February 2010, in El Paso, Texas, United States Border Patrol agents arrested a Mexican woman for drug smuggling. She was driving across the border from Ciudad Juarez when her sports utility vehicle was stopped and searched. She told the agents that she had nothing to declare except some framed art; three pictures of Jesus Christ. That was true.

What the woman failed to realize was that the pictures of Jesus would be shown to Cesar the drug sniffing dog, who knew what marijuana smelled like. Thirty-one pounds of weed were packed into the backing and frames around the paintings.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

New Blogs to Watch

I have added the following blogs to the list of blogs I check regularly:

Dead Theologians: http://deadtheologians.blogspot.com. Discussions and insights drawn fro the writings of John Calvin, Martin Luther, St. Athanasius, St. Jerome, etc. Written by a pastor in Georgia.

Look Both Ways: Art and Faith: http://lookbothwaysartandfaith.blogspot.com. Absolutely beautiful graphic adaptions of biblical passages by Earnest Graham, an Episcopal priest.

The Bible Artist: http://www.bibleartist.com. This is a resource for artists and illustrators which features costume and figure reference photographs posted by Graham D. kennedy.

Joel plus Jenny: http://joelplusjenny.blogspot.com. A blog by a Mennonite missionary couple in Mozambique.