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Process and
Pilgrimage
Art has a
vital role to play in communicating faith and enriching the faith journey. An
image can inspire, challenge and comfort. It is visual theology. In my
teaching and lecturing work, I find that working with images, as much as
making them, leads many to fresh insights. For example, each of the many
thousands of representations of Christ upon the cross opens up a particular way
of understanding its meaning.
Some people
read the central part of the composition in Ekstasis as a Christ-like figure.
This is not entirely intentional, but more of a happy accident. The image
evolved gradually, as my work often does. I seldom start with a fixed idea
which I then seek to represent on paper. More often, I simply begin with an
intuition and motivation, from which the picture slowly emerges. In this
image, I was aware of wanting to evoke something of creation, of the Spirit
hovering, the flame of passion and energy; also of wanting to suggest the flow
and swirl of life-giving water, springing from, or being absorbed by, the earth.
It is the latter that seems like a figure with arms outstretched, perhaps in an
act of sacrifice, yet maybe an open embrace, or simply out of irrepressible
joy. Behind all these elements are spheres reminiscent of space beyond our own
world.
The colours
chosen are strong and uncomplicated. Each blends into the next in the unique
way that soft pastels have of responding to the touch of a fingertip, blurring
the edges and allowing each part of the picture to feel as though it is a part
of the whole, rather than separated by hard boundaries.
All my work
has the ultimate aim of witnessing to the reality of faith, though not all the
images are necessarily ‘religious’ in theme. Some of my imagined landscapes I
hope to be ‘charged with the Grandeur of God’. Other images are drawn from
remembered thoughts and experiences. These often seem to speak to others, maybe
bringing their own memories to mind.
I have
greatly valued my own experience of retreat. Sometimes I have gone with the
express intention of making creative work, knowing that a place free from any
associations will bring fresh ideas to the fore. At other times, I have taken
retreats simply to take time out to notice God’s work in my life. All I can
then expect is the unexpected: God has a way of always taking me by surprise.
There have been occasions when I have begun a retreat full of apprehension and
anxiety, but I have never come away with anything less than the absolute
assurance that I am loved. If I could bring a fraction of that assurance to
others through my work then I would be well satisfied.
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