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Tuesday, 30 April 2013

After Airport Debacle: Artist James Wille Faust Unveils New Works

Posted on 00:00 by the great khali
THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR
By Will Higgins
"Being Part of the Moment," by James Wille Faust
INDIANA---James Wille Faust, the acclaimed Indianapolis artist whose sculptural painting “Chrysalis” in late 2011 was replaced by a video screen at Indianapolis International Airport — to the outrage of much of the arts community — has a show opening here later this month. The works, to be on display at the Arthur M. Glick JCC, 6701 Hoover Road, will be a series of small paintings and prints and possibly some sculpture, said Martha Faust, the artist’s wife and manager. This is Faust’s first show in Indianapolis since the giant flap over his giant, three-story-high piece made expressly for the airport. “Chrysalis” was removed from the new terminal to make room for a revenue-producing video screen that shows a blend of art and advertisements. [link]
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Posted in Art Judaic, Controversey, Galleries, Indiana | No comments

Online Exhibit Challenges Stereotypes of Muslim Women

Posted on 00:00 by the great khali
VOICE OF AMERICA
By Faiza Elmasry
"Maïmouna Family (Mother of Two Cultures)" by Maimouna Guerresi
CALIFORNIA--The Arabic word “muslima” means a woman who believes in God. The online Muslima exhibition, by the International Museum of Women, highlights the individuality of Muslim women and the rich diversity of their thoughts and contributions. The exhibit's curator says one of the goals is to dispel negative stereotypes. “When we think of Muslim women, we think that they are as weak, passive women who also happen to be veiled,” said Samina Ali, an Indian-born Muslim novelist, artist and activist. [link]
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Posted in Art Islamic, California, Museums, Museums2013 | No comments

Monday, 29 April 2013

'Jesus of the People' Artist Reflects on Art and Inspiration

Posted on 23:30 by the great khali
THE HARVARD CRIMSON 
By Ann Powers
"The Holy Family" - 36" x 48", oil on canvas, 
collection of Loyola School, New York, NY
MASSACHUSETTS---Standing behind her acclaimed painting “Jesus of the People”—a depiction of Christ as a young black man—artist Janet McKenzie spoke about her art and inspiration Monday night at Memorial Church. She created the painting for the 1999 National Catholic Reporter competition that challenged artists to portray Christ for the new millennium. McKenzie said her inspiration was her nephew, who, as a young man of color, had trouble relating to her work. [link]
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Posted in Artist_JMcKenzie, ArtRace, Congregations, Massachusetts, New York, Roman Catholic, Vermont | No comments

"Ganesha" Sculpture Earns Another Laurel for Sand Artist Sudarsan Pattnaik

Posted on 04:11 by the great khali
BUSINESS STANDARD
Sudarsan Pattnaik's Ganesha sculpture in Moscow
RUSSIA---India's noted sand artist Sudarsan Pattnaik has won the "Moscow choice prize" in Russia with a 12 feet creation of the Hindu elephant god Ganesha, who he says is a symbol of world peace. "Nowadays, violence has increased in every part of the globe so I created Lord Ganesha for world peace," the Odisha artist told IANS from Moscow. The world sand art championship 2013 was held at Moscow's Kolomenskoe Museum Reserve from April 22-28. The prize distribution ceremony was held Sunday evening. [link]
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Posted in Art Hindu, Art Prizes, Asia, Europe, Philanthropy | No comments

Thiraphan Lorphaibul Puts Patriarch's Buddhist Teachings on Canvas

Posted on 03:26 by the great khali
BANGKOK POST
BANGKOK---It is said that a sense of faith and awe-inspiring grandeur motivated Michelangelo to paint the Sistine Chapel and many other famous works of religious art. Similarly, Thiraphan Lorphaibul has been inspired by religious faith from Buddhist teachings, in particular a book by His Holiness the Supreme Patriarch. The artist aims to create a collection of paintings to mark the centenary of the Supreme Patriarch's birthday on Oct 3. His paintings are meant to be a medium to make abstract Buddhist teachings more "visible" and accessible to people. The Supreme Patriarch composed a series of Buddhist teachings titled "Chitta Nakhon (City of the Mind)" for his radio broadcasts every Sunday between 1968 and 1980. The series was later compiled and published in book format. [link]



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Posted in Art Buddhist, Asia | No comments

Greek Orthodox Church Celebrates Easter by Reinstalling Iconic Religious Art

Posted on 02:38 by the great khali
MICHIGAN LIVE
By Sue White
MICHIGAN---For 32 years, St. Demetrios Greek Orthodox Church has celebrated the traditions of the old world, worshiping at an east-facing altar in a church of domes and arches and sharing its food and culture at its annual Greek Festival every June. But in its 75th anniversary year, the congregation serving many across the state reached into its roots in Saginaw. The iconography, or religious art, that once screened the altar in the renovated St. Paul Lutheran Church at Fifth and Lapeer on Saginaw’s East Side and survived a fire there in 1950 hangs again in the church at Mackinaw and McCarty. “While the western churches reflect on Christ’s sufferings, everything in the Greek Orthodox church is flavored with the resurrection,” [Fr. Cox] said, adding that they will celebrate Easter on May 5 this year, aligned with the traditional Passover. [link]
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Posted in Art Christian, Congregations, Michigan | No comments

Call for Entries: Crypto-Judaic Artwork

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
JEWISH ART NOW 
COLORADO---HaLapid: Journal of the Society for Crypto-Judaic Studies (SJCS) is seeking artistic submissions in the form of paintings, drawings, photographs, etc. to feature on the cover of its next volume. We invite artists’ submissions on a variety of themes pertaining to crypto-Judaism, crypto-Jews, and/or crypto-Jewishness. Send no more than 5 images in the form of jpeg files, along with a short bio (100-200 words) to: scjs@uccs.edu. Deadline for final submissions: July 1, 2013. [link]
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Posted in Art Judaic, Call-for-Artists, Colorado | No comments

University Students to Curate Exhibition at Museum of Islamic Art

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
GULF TIMES

QATAR---Students of the Museum and Gallery Practice Master’s Degree programme at University College London Qatar (UCL Qatar) are curating an exhibition to run at the Museum of Islamic Art (MIA) from May 1 to June 2. As part of the Qatar UK 2013 Year of Culture celebrations, the exhibition, named “Backstage”, explores the work that goes on behind the scenes in a museum. Utilising stunning examples of Iznik pottery from the Museum of Islamic Art’s collections, the exhibition conveys the work of archaeologists, conservators and curators, disciplines that are unfamiliar to many museum goers. [link]
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Posted in Art Islamic, Arts Education, Asia, Museums | No comments

Sunday, 28 April 2013

RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS 
By TAHLIB
A Jewish heaven—Paradisus Iudaeorum—is how a 17th-century Vatican diplomat once described Poland, wrote a BBC analyst in 2005. During the Holocaust, it became hell on earth. This week, previews began at the new Museum of the History of Polish Jews which will tell of 1,000 years of Jewish presence in Poland; and the centerpiece artifact is the replicated roof of a 17th-century wooden synagogue that is suspended overhead for museum viewing. April is Holocaust Remembrance Month, when painful memories to Jews and non-Jews alike are center stage. My exploration of world religions through art makes this 17th-century synagogue roof (being viewed by Rabbi Boaz Pash), my NEWS OF WEEK.

In other religious art news from across the USA, and around the world:
  • Buddhism in Art: The destruction of an ancient Buddhist site for great wealth. [More News]
  • Christianity in Art: Reinterpreting "Sacred Allegory" for the modern world. [More News]
  • Hinduism in Art: Hindus marked their holyday in honor of the monkey God. [More News]
  • Islam in Art: Americas religious divide over Islam as power for good or bad. [More News]
  • Judaism in Art: Sad tales of neighbors at US Holocaust Memorial Museum [More News]
] Are your friends A&O Believers yet? If not, please invite them today! We are believers, but also skeptics too united in the search for human understanding through Religious Art. Some join by making an annual commitment to become a member of the governing A&O Society; others join as donors supporting the A&O Scholarship & Exhibition Prize; and others as member-subscribers of this RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK. Please invite a friend to join the journey. It's for Believers, and Skeptics too.
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Posted in AOANews | No comments

Saturday, 27 April 2013

Film Critics' Failure to Engage With Terrence Malick's Moving Christian Message

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
THE WEEK
By Damon Linker
HOLLYWOOD---Both The Tree of Life (2011) and the just-released To the Wonder (2013) are deeply Christian in outlook and inspiration — and both demonstrate the religion's continued power to serve as a vital cultural and intellectual force. Mainstream critics hardly seem to have noticed. The problem is that, regardless of whether they've admired or ridiculed the films, the vast majority of mainstream critics have failed to treat them as the profoundly religious — and specifically Christian — works of art that they are. Whether or not the silence is a product of the theological illiteracy and scriptural ignorance that typically prevails among overwhelmingly secular journalists, something essential about these remarkable films has been missed. [link]
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Posted in Art Christian, Film Arts, Hollywood, Movies, Movies2013 | No comments

Touching the Voice of God by Shen Shaomin at Eli Klein Fine Art, NYC

Posted on 01:45 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Tahlib
"I Sleep on Top of Myself (Dog)," 2011
NEW YORK---Eli Klein Fine Art is hosting its second solo-exhibition for the Chinese-Australian artist, Shen Shaomin, "I Touched the Voice of God." The exhibition expresses Shen Shaomin’s deep concerns for the future of our planet. "I Sleep on Top of Myself" and "I Want to Know What Infinity Is" are works that reveal the artist’s outlook through hyperrealistic sculptures that illustrate the potential and metaphorical consequences of a world which is over-developed and despoiled. The work from  the exhibition derive their name from broken sections of China’s second manned rocket into space. As symbols of the larger greater universe, the artist’s choice reflects a belief that normal messaging has blinded us to a true understanding of the universe.

Eli Klein Fine Art: "Shen Shaomin: I Touched the Voice of God" | 462 West Broadway New York, NY 10012 | ekfineart.com, (212) 255-4388
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Posted in Art Buddhist, Art Interfaith, Art Others, Asia, Australia, Galleries, Museums2013, New York | No comments

Biblical Women Show Pain and Suffering in Olivia Johnston’s New Photographs

Posted on 01:30 by the great khali
OTTAWA CITIZEN
By Peter Simpson
"Susanna (Katelin)," from Olivia Johnston's Fallen, portraits of biblical women, at La Petite Mort Gallery in Ottawa.
CANADA---Two years after the grand exhibition of Caravaggio paintings at the National Gallery, a particularly disturbing image still lingers. The scene, captured in two of the Caravaggio paintings, was of Abraham sacrificing his son, Isaac. God commands the sacrifice and even though it doesn’t happen — an angel stops the blade before it gets to Isaac’s throat, once Abraham’s “fear” of God has been dramatically proven — I found it all to be incomprehensible. A father’s final duty is to protect his child above all, so how could Abraham slaughter his own son, even to prove himself to God? The disquiet of the scene, rendered so powerfully by Caravaggio, crept back this week while I looked at the photographs in Fallen, the exhibition by Olivia Johnston opening Friday at La Petite Mort Gallery. [link]
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Posted in Art Christian, Art Judaic, Canada, Galleries | No comments

New Leader Fights to Preserve Egypt’s Ancient Jewish Sites

Posted on 01:00 by the great khali
THE ART NEWSPAPER
By Lauren Gelfond Feldinger

EGYPT---The new elected head of Cairo’s declining Jewish community, Magda Haroun, said she will campaign to save Egypt’s Jewish synagogues and other historic sites—but according to reports, she will reject offers of help from Israel, because she wants the Egyptian government to recognise that the sites are an important part of their history. “Jewish temples are like the pyramids and the Sphinx,” she told the Egyptian newspaper Al-Ahram. “They are part of Egypt’s history that cannot be ignored.” Haroun’s election, following the death last month of 84-year-old Carmen Weinstein, is a good sign for Egyptian heritage, an Egyptian filmmaker told The Art Newspaper. [link]
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Posted in Art Judaic, Asia, Trends | No comments

Friday, 26 April 2013

Review: Not So Innocent Bystanders at U.S. Holocaust Museum

Posted on 08:17 by the great khali
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Ed Rothstein
Roman Catholic clerics give the Nazi salute at a 
Catholic youth rally in the Neukölln stadium. Courtesy of USHMM
WASHINGTON — Whatever larger themes are sounded when the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum commemorates its 20th anniversary here this weekend, whatever is said at a Monday ceremony by former President Bill Clinton or by the museum’s founding chairman, Elie Wiesel, and whatever assessments are made about its influence, accomplishments or limitations, it will take a visit to its new exhibition, “Some Were Neighbors,” to grasp one aspect of this imposing institution’s power. It reveals the demonic not in grand forces, but in the most minute details. [link]
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Posted in Art Judaic, Museums, Museums2013, Roman Catholic, Washington DC | No comments

NYC's China Institute Presents Exhibition, "Buddhist Art at the Gateway of the Silk Road"

Posted on 03:43 by the great khali
CHINA DAILY | USA 
Detail: Celestial Music, mural from Mogao Cave 288 Western Wei dynasty
(535-557), 52 x 522 cm Image courtesy of Dunhuang Academy
NEW YORK---Dunhuang, the western gateway to China, is one of the world's most esteemed art shrines and cultural heritage sites. "Dunhuang: Buddhist Art at the Gateway of the Silk Road" will address art and ritual practices of the Northern dynasties (386-581) and the Tang Dynasty (618-907). The exhibition will feature excavated art works, high relief clay figures, wooden sculptures, silk banners and molded bricks. A group of treasured Buddhist sutras from the famous Cangjingdong (The Library Cave) will illustrate the story behind Dunhuang's historic discovery. [link]

China Institute Gallery and Dunhuang Academy:  "Dunhuang: Buddhist Art at the Gateway of the Silk Road" (Ends Oct. 19). China Institute, 125 East 65th Street, New York, chinainstitute.org
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Posted in Art Buddhist, Museums, Museums2013, New York | No comments

Ancient Maya Civilization's Roots Deepen With New Discoveries

Posted on 03:31 by the great khali
USA TODAY
By Dan Vergano
A carved stone head excavated from the lowland Maya site of Ceibal, Guatemala (around 400 BCE).
GUATEMALA---Soaring pyramids, ceremonial platforms and ritual plazas, signatures of the ancient Maya, owe their origin to a broad cultural shift in Central America around 1,000 B.C., the ruins of Ceibal suggest. The ancient Maya started building their storied cities amid a construction boom in Central America as early as 1000 B.C., archaeologists reported Thursday. Anthropologists study the origins of civilizations for clues to the ties that bind us together. The Maya offer an interesting example of a society that started building cities uninfluenced by the Old World's Egyptian and Fertile Crescent civilizations. More than 6 million Maya people still live in Central America. [link]
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Posted in Art Interfaith, Art Others, South America, Trends | No comments

Uffizi Gallery to Mark Car Bomb Disaster With Special Commemoration in May

Posted on 02:59 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Tahlib
"Adoration of the Shepherds" (1620) by Gerard van Honthorst at the Uffizi Gallery
ITALY---On the 20th anniversary of the bomb disaster of Via dei Georgofili, the Uffizi Gallery will have a special opening of the Gallery free of charge. Also known as "The Massacre of via dei Georgofili (Italian: Strage di via dei Georgofili)", this disaster was a bomb explosion set by the Mafia very early in the morning of 27 May 1993 in Florence, Italy. This year, on Sunday May 26, 2013 the museum will remain open until 1:30am (last entrance at 1am May 27) in order to commemorate the precise time, 1:04 a.m. of the explosion of the car bomb explossion that took of the lives of 5 innocents along with three paintings, including an Adoration of the Shepherds (1620) by Gerard van Honthorst.
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Posted in Art Christian, Controversey, Europe, Museums | No comments

Poland to Defy European Union Ban, and Will Permit Ritual Slaughter

Posted on 01:00 by the great khali
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
By Marynia Kruk

POLAND---Poland wants to re-legalize ritual slaughter, but with limits on what the country’s prime minister called the cruelest practices, after a legal challenge to the procedure to produce kosher and halal meat last year pitted the country’s powerful agriculture export industry against animal rights activists. “For Jews, moves against shechita [Jewish ritual slaughter] even subconsciously raise resistance,” said Chief Rabbi of Poland Michael Schudrich. “But as far as I can see this has nothing to do with the pre-war experience. It impacts on Jewish life, but it’s not about Jews.” At present, the niche industry remains in legal limbo after a Constitutional Tribunal ruling last November. [link]
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Posted in Art Judaic, Controversey, Europe, Rituals, Trends | No comments

American's Divided on Impressions About Islam, Including American Muslims

Posted on 01:00 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Tahlib

MASSACHUSETTS---In the aftermath of the Boston marathon bombings, the attention of the media and the American public quickly turned toward the Islamic faith of terrorist figures Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev. A recent Barna study suggests that Americans of all ages are fairly split on how they perceive Islam, though not too surprisingly, the general trend reveals both older Americans and Republicans have a less positive impression of Muslims. Only one-third of Americans (33%) have a favorable perception of Islam, while slightly more (36%) say they have an unfavorable perception of the religion. Add to that the 31% who don’t know what they think about Islam, and you have a nation decidedly divided on how to deal with a religion that includes 1.57 billion followers worldwide.
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Posted in Art Interfaith, Art Islamic, Trends | No comments

Thursday, 25 April 2013

Polish Museum Unveils Synagogue Roof

Posted on 08:20 by the great khali
THE TIMES AND DEMOCRAT 
By Associated Press
The painted ceiling of a reconstructed wooden synagogue that dates back
centuries, photographed in Warsaw, Poland, on Tuesday March 12, 2013.
POLAND — In March, a Jewish history museum in Warsaw unveiled a reconstructed synagogue roof with an elaborately painted ceiling modeled on a 17th-century structure, presenting the first object that will go on permanent display in the highly awaited museum. The wooden roof and ceiling will be a key attraction in the Museum of the History of Polish Jews, which is due to open next year in the heart of the city’s former Jewish quarter. The ceiling is a rich panoply in milky blues and brownish reds of zodiac signs and animal symbols, along with inscriptions in Hebrew. Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, the program director of the museum’s core exhibition, said some of the animals express Messianic yearnings prevalent in Polish Jewish communities after a period of wars and destruction in the 17th century. “It’s a heavenly canopy,” Kirshenblatt-Gimblett said. “It’s celestial. It’s literally the heavens and the world to come.” [link]

Rabbi Boaz Pash from the Jewish Community of Warsaw looks up at roof




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Posted in Art Judaic, Europe, Museums, Trends | No comments

Hindus Worldwide Mark the Holyday of Hanuman Murtis - The Monkey God

Posted on 03:16 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Tahlib
Hanuman Murti at Jakhu Hills in Shimla Himachal Pradesh in India - 108 feet
INDIA---Marking the Hindu Holyday honoring the diety Hanuman, the Hindu Blog is featured images of the world's  5 Tallest Hanuman Murtis (Idols or Statues). The Festival of Hanuman Jayanti – April 25, 2013, is celebrated to commemorate the birth of Lord Hanuman. Hanuman is an ardent devotee of Lord Rama, and is worshiped for his devotion. Lord Hanuman is the symbol of strength and energy. Hanuman is able to assume any form at will, wield rocks, move mountains, dart through the air, seize the clouds and rival Garuda in swiftness of flight.

An Indian Hindu devotee dressed as a monkey in New Delhi on April 25, 2013

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Posted in Art Hindu, Asia, Holydays Art | No comments

Review: The Ballad of Saint Jay DeFeo at Whitney Museum of American Art

Posted on 02:49 by the great khali
ARTSLANT
by Natalie Hegert

“There is no such thing as inanimate matter…there is 
God or divinity in all matter and it is all living energy.” 
– JAY DEFEO
"The Rose" by Jay DeFeo (1958–66)
NEW YORK---This is a tale of unparalleled devotion. This is a tale of inspired vision. This is a tale of heaving beauty, of divine obsession, of possession, of cosmic light embodied. This is the ballad of Jay DeFeo. Jay DeFeo in the old country saw color and light, in cruciform, in carmine and ochre and earth. She traveled in the footsteps of monks, perhaps not knowing, yet with her she brought back vivid memories of primal shapes and magic circles, spirals, stars, crosses. The studio became her temple. They called her mad. It became as a living thing. It was the divine incarnate; it was Christ from God, Shakti from Shiva, the unity of death and life. [link]

Whitney Museum of American Art: "A Retrospective: Jay DeFeo," (Ends June 2, 2013) 945 Madison Avenue, 75th Street, New York, NY 10021, whitney.org OR (212) 570-3600.
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Posted in Art Christian, Museums, Museums2013, New York | No comments

Wednesday, 24 April 2013

Allegoria Sacra: Giovanni Bellini’s vs. AES+F (Sacred Allegory)

Posted on 03:00 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Tahlib

With art galleries looking to reach new collectors and to offer more affordable routes to buying works, at least one company believes that digital religious art is the answer. In fact online art dealer s[edition], is offering a 21st century digital reinterpretation of Giovanni Bellini's painting Holy Allegory for only $80.00. How do they do it? Like a bricks-and-mortar gallery they've contracted with AES+F, an artist partnership which creates  unique aesthetic famous for its hypnotic appeal, classical beauty to allow their Bellini re-interpretation, Reincarnation to be purchased online with video download plus a certificate of authenticity. Whether you prefer the original (1490-1500) in the permanent collection of the Uffizi Gallery, or this modern trilogy: heaven, purgatory and hell are all there and open to creative interpretation. AES+F in the tradition of Bellini. AES+F is a group of four Russian artists: Tatiana Arzamasova (A), Lev Evzovich (E), Evgeny Svyatsky (S), and Vladimir Fridkes (F). AES+F group focuses on photography, photo- and computer-based art, and video art, as well as using other traditional media such as drawing, painting and sculpture.

Bellini's depictions of purgatory: unchristened children, figures of the Old and New Testament and ancient mythology meet in 21st century international airport where grounded passengers are suspended between time and place. This contemporary digital version is rich with the mystery of Christianity and ancient mythology are gathered together with Saints, the Madonna, children paying, a centaur, and small children at play. There is also a naked old man reminiscent of Job brought together by
"They see Bellini’s heroes in those passengers who meet accidentally while awaiting their flights at international airports. The airport is Purgatory. The bringing together of the incompatible (in an airport, according to AES+F) raises the question of the values of our civilization. The crowd of Muslim migrants and the skinhead with a baseball bat, the disconnected ‘western’ passengers and the almost military unity of the Asian travellers, the adopted children of prosperous gay couples and the poor Muslim children with their families - Allegoria Sacra does not discuss recipes for happiness in different cultures, it points to the impossibility of an answer to that question."
"This vision of the passengers is interwoven with a new mythological reality, where a centaur appears at the centre of a romantic battle in the desert, a superliner-dragon lands on a snowy runway, cannibals and ladies dance in the jungle and angel-stewardesses, inspired by Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, help an elderly Job turn in to a mutant-baby. The metaphor of contemporary civilisation, with its relative values, becomes visible as a result of the surrealistic mix of images of new and ancient religions and stereotypes from the mass media, comics and fantasy."
"The dreams of one passenger flow in to those of another and a river completes the scene, carrying planes, mythological monsters and space stations to the horizon...The trailer for the single-channel version of Allegoria Sacra is being shown as part of the international video project ‘Commercial Break’, in a specially-designed virtual pavilion as an intervention within the framework of the 54th Venice Biennale, organised by Garage Center for Contemporary Culture and POST magazine. The premiere of the five-channel version of Allegoria Sacra will take place at Multimedia Art Museum Moscow in September 2011 as part of the 4th Moscow Biennale."
Reports say that AES+F has always been intrigued by this painting. When they started to think of a third project after "Last Riot" and "The Feast of Trimalchio," shown at the Venice Biennale in 2007 and 2009 respectively, the artists decided that a series entitled "Allegoria Sacra" would form the final part of a trilogy about the modern world (Hell, Heaven, Purgatory), and it can be yours for only $80.00 at s[edition].
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Posted in Art Christian, Galleries | No comments

‘A Chinese Threat to Afghan Buddhas’ by Brent E. Huffman, Film-maker

Posted on 02:28 by the great khali
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Brent E. Huffman
An Afghan archaeologist examined Buddha statues inside an ancient
monastery at Mes Aynak, in eastern Logar Province, in 2010.
AFGHANISTAN---In 2007, the Chinese state-owned China Metallurgical Group Corporation (M.C.C.) won the rights to mine copper at a site called Mes Aynak. Situated in volatile Logar Province, Mes Aynak is home to one of the world’s largest untapped copper deposits — worth more than $100 billion. Yet, as this Op-Doc video shows, the site also houses the astonishing remains of an ancient Buddhist city, which archaeologists are now racing to save. An international team has only until June to finish the excavations, which began in 2009. Yet perhaps 90 percent of the site remains underground and unseen. To finish the job could take decades. In all likelihood, the destruction of the Buddhist sites will begin later this year. [link]
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Posted in Art Buddhist, Asia, Conservation | No comments

A Talented Islamic Artist and Now, Accused Bomber's Wife

Posted on 02:14 by the great khali
THE INQUIRER
By Michelle R. Smith, Katie Zezimia and Jack Gillum, AP

MASSACHUSETTS---The woman who was married to the Boston Marathon bombing suspect who died is being described as sweet and dedicated to the Islamic religion to which she converted. Katherine Russell Tsarnaev's high school art teacher says she was at the top of her class in drawing and an excellent student. She converted to Islam and wears the hijab, the traditional Muslim headscarf. Katherine stayed in the couple's Cambridge apartment last year while Tamerlan traveled to Russia for about six months. [link]
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Posted in Art Islamic, Controversey, Massachusetts | No comments

The Colored "Sands" of Former Buddhist Monk Illustrate Human Impermanence

Posted on 02:01 by the great khali
MAINLINE NEWS



PENNSYLVANIA---It was a remarkable week at Villanova’s University Art Gallery. On Monday, the university welcomed Lama Losang Samten, a renowned Tibetan scholar and former Buddhist monk, as he created a “Wheel of Life” sand mandala throughout the week. Then on Friday Samten brushed the finished work away. Symbols are used in the mandala to convey the nature of the human mind and our illusion of permanence, according to Samten. The mandala circle is a cycle starting from the yin and yang in the center. Figures in the rings show the different realms of human existence and the cycles of birth, growth and death. Just like our lives, the mandala is not permanent; when the work is done it is dissolved. In this mandala, which is a unique work of art, Samten incorporated images that relate to the Villanova community. including Franciscan priests, and young figures with V's on their shirts. [link]
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Posted in Art Buddhist, Clergy, Museums2013, Pennsylvania | No comments

A&O Meetup in NYC: 'The Testament of Mary' on Broadway

Posted on 01:52 by the great khali
VARIETY
By Marilyn Stasio
BROADWAY---Where to begin? Well, there’s a live vulture on stage, and an uprooted tree suspended in mid-air, and a pool of water that appears to be bottomless. And that’s before the house lights even go down on “The Testament of Mary.” The matchless Fiona Shaw commands the stage in this solo piece adapted by Irish scribe Colm Toibin from the 2012 novella he fashioned as an interior monologue delivered by Mary, the mother of the historical Christ and, in Christian legend, the Mother of God and the Queen of Heaven. It’s safe to say you’ve never seen anything like it. [link]
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Posted in AOMeetup, AOSalons, Art Christian, Broadway, New York, Performing Arts | No comments

6 Parts of a Great Grant Application Program Description

Posted on 01:00 by the great khali
THE NONPROFIT TIMES
By The NonProfit Times

One of the most important parts of any grant proposal is the program description. Without it, the funder will not know why they should agree to give you the money requested. What goes in a program description? In his book “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Grant Writing,” Waddy Thompson explains that some funders specify the order in which they want you to present the information about your program.  [link]

Whatever the funders specific instructions, a good narrative will include the following six items:
  1. Purpose of the program. 
  2. Why you are doing this project?
  3. How you will make it happen?
  4. Who will benefit, and why is that important?
  5. How will you evaluate the program?
  6. Sum it all up.
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Posted in Grantsmanship, Philanthropy | No comments

Tuesday, 23 April 2013

Religious Arts Calendar Maker Celebrates 100 Years In Business

Posted on 01:00 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Ernest Disney-Britton

INDIANA---The leading funeral stationery manufacturer in North America, Messenger LLC is commemorating its 100(th) anniversary in business. The company was founded on March 24, 1913, by Frank M. Messenger, a deeply religious man who first introduced Sacred Art Religious Calendars before focusing the company's resources on funeral stationery products. Frank Messenger was 61 years old when he began to manufacture religious scripture-verse calendars. Messenger LLC, headquartered in Auburn, Indiana, has been in business since 1913 and has grown to be the most innovative manufacturer of funeral stationery products in North America. Among a long list of their innovations include an extensive line of funeral stationery products featuring the art of Thomas Kinkade, known as the "Painter of Light."
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Posted in Art Christian, Arts Management, Indiana | No comments

Monday, 22 April 2013

Massachusetts Couple Re-Creates a Piece of Jewish History

Posted on 19:06 by the great khali
THE BOSTON GLOBE
By Penny Schwartz
The Gwozdziec project in Warsaw.
MASSACHUSETTS---For the last 10 years, Laura and Rick Brown have been immersed in the art and architecture of Poland’s historic Gwozdziec synagogue, as well as that of many other Jewish houses of worship built during the 17th and 18th centuries. In March, the 25,000-pound, 85 percent scale replica was hoisted into place as the centerpiece of Warsaw’s new Museum of the History of Polish Jews, which will trace the 1,000-year legacy of Poland’s Jews. A film of the replication project is being made by local filmmakers Cary and Yari Wolinsky, of Trillium Studios, in collaboration with Cambridge-based John Rubin Productions. [link]
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Posted in Art Judaic, Congregations, Conservation, Crowdfunding, Europe, Massachusetts, Philanthropy | No comments

Bodhirajaramaya Temple Offers Tranquility to Sri Lankan Buddhists

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
THE NATION
By Crystal Koelmeyer
Golden era Buddhist Temple
SRI LANKA---According to records available, the period of twenty five years from 1930 to 1955 is considered the ‘Golden era’ of the temple and Buddhism in Negombo, under the leadership of M.B Sri Medhankaratissa thera. Standing opposite Harischandra Maha Viddyalaya in Negombo, ‘Bodhirajaramaya’, popularly known as the Angurukaramulla temple, is one of the few places of worship available for Buddhist folks in the city. Records on the history of the temple suggest that it has taken nearly hundred years for the overall construction activities to complete. Bodhirajaramaya is a Buddhist temple; an asset to the city and a right of the generations to come. [link]
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Posted in Art Buddhist, Congregations | No comments

Crime: Church Art Theft Impoverishing Albanian Culture

Posted on 01:00 by the great khali
DEUTSCHE WELLE
By Angelina Verbica
Damaged Onufri frescoes, such as this one in Vlash, attest to thieves' failed efforts
ALBANIA---Since the end of communism in Albania, an increasing number of priceless works of art have been stolen from Orthodox churches. Now, a theft that left historic frescoes destroyed has finally caused an uproar. any of the destroyed works were by Onufri, a famous icon painter of the 16th century anhd the best-known medieval artist in Albania. The thefts sparked broad outrage in the media, especially among archaeologists. Paradoxically, works of religious art were safer during the communist dictatorship in Albania than today - even though the exercise of religion was forbidden in the world's first atheist state, and churches were even destroyed. [link]
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Posted in Art Christian, Congregations, Europe, Provenance | No comments

Book on Hindu Art and Architecture in Sri Lanka to be Launched on April 25

Posted on 01:00 by the great khali
TAMIL WEEK
By Maheen Senanayake

INDIAN---"The Life and Times of R Namasivayam" and his contribution of the restoration of Tirukketisvaram serves perhaps to fill an unforgettable chapter in the commitment to and retention of a Hindu tradition. The book edited by Prof. S. Pathmanathan, Professor Emeritus, University of Peradeniya, and published by the Namasivayam family will be launched on April 25 at the Saraswathi Hall, Bambalapitiya at 5.30 pm. Hindu lore states that in ancient Sri Lanka there were five sacred Hindu temples dedicated to Siva. They were Munnesvaram, Kataragama, Kailayanatar Kovil in Nallur, Tirukketisvaram in Mantota and Tirukkonesvaram in Trincomalee. [link]
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Posted in Art Hindu, Book Reviews | No comments

Sunday, 21 April 2013

RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS 
By TAHLIB
Inspired by Buddhist principles, an exhibition of new works by Takashi Murakami opened in Los Angeles this week just as notions of "impermanence" were shaping human experiences from North Korea to Boston.  There are three basic tenets of Buddhism: (1) nothing is fixed or permanent; (2) actions have consequences; and (3) change is possible. Unlike Hindu and Abrahamic traditions, it does not include the idea of worshipping a creator God; but its goal of reaching "Enlightenment" or "Buddhahood" where an individual (Arhat: Saint) sees the nature of reality absolutely clearly, and lives fully in accordance with that vision is consistent with other religions. My exploration of world religions through art makes Takashi Murakami's "Arhat" series (above), my NEWS OF WEEK.

In other religious art news from across the USA, and around the world:
  • Buddhism in Art: Phalluses — adorn many houses in the happy nation of Bhutan. [More News]
  • Christianity in Art: Pope Benedict portrait created from unlubricated condoms. [More News]
  • Hinduism in Art: University of Richmond Museums showcase their collection. [More News]
  • Islam in Art: Sikh Fortress Turban at British Museum in Birmingham, England. [More News]
  • Judaism in Art: Independence Day and the Biblical blue of the Israeli flag. [More News]
Are your friends A&O Believers yet? If not, please invite them today! We are believers, but also skeptics too united in the search for human understanding through Religious Art. Some join by making an annual commitment to become a member of the governing A&O Society; others join as donors supporting the A&O Scholarship & Exhibition Prize; and others as member-subscribers of this RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK. Please invite a friend to join the journey. It's for Believers, and Skeptics too.
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Posted in AOANews | No comments

Saturday, 20 April 2013

Keith Harings Reinterpretation of the 10 Commandments Now in France

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
"10 Commandments" by Keith Haring
FRANCE---The Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, in association with Le CENTQUATRE, is devoting a wide-ranging retrospective to American artist Keith Haring (1958-1990). The exhibition entitled, "Keith Haring: The Political Line" will bear witness to the importance of Haring's work, in particular its profoundly "political" content, apparent in his work throughout his career. Almost 250 pictures on canvas and tarpaulins and from subway walls – as well as twenty monumental works – will be exhibited at Le CENTQUATRE, making this one of the largest presentations of Keith Haring’s works ever.
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Posted in Art Christian, Artist_KHaring, Europe, Museums | No comments

Dillon Gallery’s Makoto Fujimura Exhibition, ‘Golden Sea’

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
BLOUIN ARTINFO |
By Julie Hamilton
"Walking on Water- Waves," (2012)
Azurite on Canvas with Polished Gesso, 84 x 132 inches
NEW YORK---Trained in the techniques of Japanese Nihonga, Makoto Fujimura offers a seasoned yet innovative vision in his upcoming exhibition "Golden Sea" at Dillon Gallery, with vanguard approaches to traditional materials. Originally intended as a response to the devastating Japanese tsunami in 2011, the Walking on Water series became a reality for Fujimura as he waded through the flooded Dillon Gallery this past October, losing numerous works. Yet the “walking on water” reference alludes to more than the event of Sandy. For Fujimura, it is also an encounter with the impossible, even the miraculous, an ability to maintain peace amidst the storm. [link]
"Walking on Water-Banquo's Dream"
"Golden Sea"

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Posted in AOMeetup, AOSalons, Art Christian, Artist_MFujimura, Galleries, New York | No comments

Review: Tom Cruise's 'Oblivion' a Sci-Fi Adventure to Remember

Posted on 01:30 by the great khali
LOS ANGELES TIMES
By Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times Film Critic
HOLLYWOOD---"Oblivion" will make you remember, not forget. This Tom Cruise vehicle is a throwback to the days when on-screen science fiction was about speculative ideas rather than selling toys to tots — think of it as the most expensive episode of "The Twilight Zone" ever made. "Oblivion" is not perfect. Its dystopian story makes no apologies for its familiarity, echoing such films as "The Planet of the Apes," "The Matrix," "2001" and even "Wall-E." And expecting the wheels not to eventually begin to fall off its pleasantly complicated, head-spinning plot (based on the director Joseph Kosinski's graphic novel) is asking a little too much. But even given all this implausibility, "Oblivion" has the ability to haunt you visually and, with an unanticipated love story, even emotionally. [link] (A&O Rating: ★★★)

The new Roger Ebert's gave it just 2 of 5 stars ★★
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Posted in Movies, Movies2013 | No comments

Friday, 19 April 2013

Canadian Artist Parviz Tanavoli’s Bronze Gleams in UBC Museum of Anthropology

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
STRAIGHT.COM
By Robin Laurence
Oh Persepolis II, a sculpture that’s part of a UBC Museum of Anthropology show.
CANADA---Few of Parvitz Tanavoli’s West Vancouver neighbours know that he is one of Iran’s most acclaimed modern artists. Perhaps his understated local status will change, however, when Safar/Voyage opens at the UBC Museum of Anthropology this Saturday (April 20). A survey of contemporary works by 16 Arab, Iranian, and Turkish artists, the exhibition promises to introduce Vancouverites to a range of ideas and practices from a region of the world that is little understood in the West. Among the video, installation, performance, and photographic works on view is Tanavoli’s striking "Oh Persepolis II." Nearly two metres high, it is executed in bronze so highly polished that it gleams like gold. "Safar/Voyage" is at the UBC Museum of Anthropology from Saturday (April 20) to September 15. [link]
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Posted in Art Islamic, Canada, Museums, North America | No comments

Sotheby’s Auctions Mega-Philanthropist’s $11 Million Judaica Trove

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
NY | THE JEWISH WEEK
By Sandee Brawarsky
Detail of Frankfurt Mishnah Torah, which was created in Italy in the Middle Ages.
NEW YORK---In the largest sale of a single owner’s Judaica collection in more than 50 years, Sotheby’s New York is offering “A Treasured Legacy: The Michael and Judy Steinhardt Judaica Collection” at auction on April 29. With 386 lots, the sale is estimated in excess of $11 million. Michael Steinhardt, the legendary hedge fund manager and mega-philanthropist best known for his role in launching the Birthright Israel program, told The Jewish Week, “I’m selling it because I am 72 years old and I have been collecting for over 40 years. No one else in my family, sadly, has expressed any deep interest in the collection.”[link]
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Posted in Art Judaic, Auctions, Collectors, New York | No comments

Torah Outcasts Find Redemption With Indian-Jewish Artist

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
THE TIMES OF ISRAEL
By Chavie Lieber
NEW JERSEY---In the space of a single painting, Siona Benjamin juxtaposes feminism, Indian mythology and Jewish imagery. On a three-foot canvas, she’ll paint a portrait of a blue-skinned figure, usually a character from the Bible, with nods to Persian miniatures, Talmudic fables and Vishnu gods. Often there’s a message in Arabic. “I want people to realize there can be a universal message in Jewish art,” Benjamin said. “I didn’t want to just be a Jewish artist, explaining my culture in my paintings, because it’s deeper than that. I’m a Jewish woman of color and a feminist with Islamic and Hindu influences, and they are all a part of me.” [link]
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Posted in Art Hindu, Art Judaic, Artist_SBenjamin, New Jersey | No comments

Frame of Mind: Artist Oleg Kulik Rethinks Religious Art

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
CALVERT JOURNAL
By Oleg Kulik
"Madonna" by Oleg Kulik
RUSSIA---At the beginning of my career I never planned on becoming a human-dog or on studying Buddhist or Christian philosophy. Oleg Kulik made his name with shocking, provocative performance art with an animal twist — most memorable are his extended periods inhabiting the persona of a dog and his bid for president in the guise of a bull. But now, at a new show, Frames, at Moscow’s Regina Gallery, Kulik’s art is taking a new turn, investigating the role of the sacred in contemporary society.  [link]

"Madonna" detail

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Posted in Art Christian, Europe, Galleries | No comments

Thursday, 18 April 2013

Sistine Chapel Reinterpretation of "Creation of Adam" Inspired by Filipino Funny Man

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Tahlib
PHILIPPINES---If God created Man in his own image, why don't artists make Adam look like God? Recently, Niccolo Cosme explored that question in a new work. "This guy, named Ramon Bautista is a famous personality here in the Philippines (TV, Movie, online)," said Cosme.
The Creation of Adam is a section of Michelangelo's fresco Sistine Chapel ceiling painted circa 1511
"We were already done with our shoot when he said he really loves my conceptual works and suggested perhaps we should do one at the very last minute, and then I remembered the creation by Michelangelo, and how I was so in love with that image." Cosme, an internationally celebrated conceptual photographer, and an A&O INSPIRE ME! Artist had visited the Sistine Chapel when he was 19 years old and "I thought I want it to be fun, since Ramon is a very funny and witty guy." At A&O, we trust and adore Niccolo's inspirational works and were particularly struck by his concept of making Ramon "both Adam and God... and that God was not really happy of his creation." Truth speaks so forcefully when you take the time to listen through the eyes of an artist.
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Artist_Michelangelo, Artist_NCosme, Asia | No comments
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Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ►  May (104)
    • ▼  April (104)
      • After Airport Debacle: Artist James Wille Faust Un...
      • Online Exhibit Challenges Stereotypes of Muslim Women
      • 'Jesus of the People' Artist Reflects on Art and I...
      • "Ganesha" Sculpture Earns Another Laurel for Sand ...
      • Thiraphan Lorphaibul Puts Patriarch's Buddhist Tea...
      • Greek Orthodox Church Celebrates Easter by Reinsta...
      • Call for Entries: Crypto-Judaic Artwork
      • University Students to Curate Exhibition at Museum...
      • RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK
      • Film Critics' Failure to Engage With Terrence Mali...
      • Touching the Voice of God by Shen Shaomin at Eli K...
      • Biblical Women Show Pain and Suffering in Olivia J...
      • New Leader Fights to Preserve Egypt’s Ancient Jewi...
      • Review: Not So Innocent Bystanders at U.S. Holocau...
      • NYC's China Institute Presents Exhibition, "Buddhi...
      • Ancient Maya Civilization's Roots Deepen With New ...
      • Uffizi Gallery to Mark Car Bomb Disaster With Spec...
      • Poland to Defy European Union Ban, and Will Permit...
      • American's Divided on Impressions About Islam, Inc...
      • Polish Museum Unveils Synagogue Roof
      • Hindus Worldwide Mark the Holyday of Hanuman Murti...
      • Review: The Ballad of Saint Jay DeFeo at Whitney M...
      • Allegoria Sacra: Giovanni Bellini’s vs. AES+F (Sac...
      • ‘A Chinese Threat to Afghan Buddhas’ by Brent E. H...
      • A Talented Islamic Artist and Now, Accused Bomber'...
      • The Colored "Sands" of Former Buddhist Monk Illust...
      • A&O Meetup in NYC: 'The Testament of Mary' on Broa...
      • 6 Parts of a Great Grant Application Program Descr...
      • Religious Arts Calendar Maker Celebrates 100 Years...
      • Massachusetts Couple Re-Creates a Piece of Jewish ...
      • Bodhirajaramaya Temple Offers Tranquility to Sri L...
      • Crime: Church Art Theft Impoverishing Albanian Cul...
      • Book on Hindu Art and Architecture in Sri Lanka to...
      • RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK
      • Keith Harings Reinterpretation of the 10 Commandme...
      • Dillon Gallery’s Makoto Fujimura Exhibition, ‘Gold...
      • Review: Tom Cruise's 'Oblivion' a Sci-Fi Adventure...
      • Canadian Artist Parviz Tanavoli’s Bronze Gleams in...
      • Sotheby’s Auctions Mega-Philanthropist’s $11 Milli...
      • Torah Outcasts Find Redemption With Indian-Jewish ...
      • Frame of Mind: Artist Oleg Kulik Rethinks Religiou...
      • Sistine Chapel Reinterpretation of "Creation of Ad...
      • The Genius of Elizabeth Ohlson-Wallin - Krucifix
      • A Phallus a Day Keeps the Evil Away: Phallus Art A...
      • Shirtless Women in Fight Against Iranian Theocracy
      • Gravity and Grace: Monumental Works by El Anatsui,...
      • Sikh Fortress Turban at British Museum
      • Israeli Flag: Star of David, Biblical Blue
      • A Portrait of Pope Benedict ... Made Out of Condoms
      • 2013 Collectors Committee Acquires Asian Religious...
      • Poland Unveils World's Tallest Statue of Pope John...
      • Takashi Murakami: Buddhism's Storied Eightfold Path
      • University of Richmond Museums Present Religion an...
      • ‘Great and Mighty Things,’ at the Philadelphia Mus...
      • "Last Supper" by Justin Chase Lane
      • Remembering the Shoah in Rap by Francky Perez
      • Angry Atheists, 9/11 History and America's Future
      • Pakistani Artists Under Assault by Islamic Extremists
      • RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK
      • Review: 'Trance' is Transfixing Film Noir From 'Sl...
      • In Vogue: London Gallery Reflects Arab Art Boom
      • $400,000 Awarded by Arts Council of Indianapolis f...
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      • The Religious Art of M.C. Escher
      • The Bonsai Tree: A Living Art Form of Buddhist Monks
      • Hindu "Lord Shiva" Paintings by Buffalo Resident, ...
      • Roman Catholic Bishop: No Communion for Same-Sex M...
      • Indian Artist, Eleena Banik, Forced to Remove Godd...
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      • World's Top Catholic Worships Marc Chagall, a Jew
      • Judas Revealed in Better Light by Ancient Text
      • Scientists Believe Jesus Died on Friday, April 3, ...
      • "Joyful Mystery #1: Annunciation" by James Janknegt
      • Aglow With Intricate Religious Icons: Lackawanna, ...
      • RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK
      • Review: "Oz, the Great and Powerful"
      • Scientists Determine, The Shroud of Turin is Real
      • Artist and Author, Makoto Fujimura's Top 5 Books o...
      • Bucking French Tradition, City Sets Up a Kind of H...
      • Chicago's "Divine and Princely Realms" of Asian Fa...
      • Book Review: 'Imagining the Passion' Through Devot...
      • The Arts Are Better at Developing Good Citizens Th...
      • Buddhism, Planted in Sri Lanka Along With Bodhi Tree
      • Hopi - Native Americans Outraged Over Auction Of R...
      • Christie's London Announces Islamic Art Week Auction
      • The Artist As Philanthropist: Artist-Endowed Found...
      • Filipino Man Crucified With Nails on Good Friday
      • (Video) Holi - Hindu Festival of Colors
      • Now Jews Are Getting in Boxes for Art
      • Islamic Art Mounts Comeback at Renowned Dutch Fair
      • Life-Sized, Wax 'Last Supper' is the Exceedingly C...
      • Gays Fight Muslim Hate Advertising in San Francisco
      • The Faces of Jesus: Minister's Collection Numbers ...
      • Chinese Buyers Paying Top Dollar for Ming and Qing...
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the great khali
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