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Monday, 27 May 2013

Bequeathing the Keys to Your Digital Afterlife

Posted on 00:00 by the great khali
THE NEW YORK TIMES 
By Anne Eisenberg
It's tough enough to write an ordinary will, deciding how to pass along worldly goods like your savings, your real estate and that treasured rocking chair from Aunt Martha in the living room. But you may want to provide for your virtual goods, too. Who gets the photographs and the e-mail stored online, the contents of a Facebook account, or that digital sword won in an online game? “Digital assets have value, sometimes sentimental, and sometimes commercial, just like a boxful of jewelry,” said John M. Riccione, a lawyer at Aronberg Goldgehn Davis & Garmisa in Chicago. [link]

Make a private list of all your user names and passwords for all the accounts in which you have a digital presence, and make sure you update the list if you change login information but don't put user names or passwords in the will. It is a public record after death. Other services include:  
  • Google has a program called Inactive Account Manager, introduced in April.
  • Accounts like this at SecureSafe, are free for up to 50 passwords
  • Name an executor or agent can who contact Facebook and other social media sites, establish his or her authority to administer the estate, and request the contents of the account.
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Sunday, 26 May 2013

Making Cash in the Business of Rites and Rituals

Posted on 22:00 by the great khali
THE HINDU | BUSINESS LINE
By G Naga Sridhar

INDIA---Achanta Sai Kumar, first-year MBA student, is making the best use of his knowledge in traditional rituals. On Sundays and holidays, he works – making a quick buck by performing last rites. Sai Kumar belongs to a breed of priests who conduct religious rituals, especially death ceremonies, for the fast-paced urban world that has no time or the wherewithal for such ceremonies. “There has been a strong demand for these services in urban areas as many cannot conduct these rituals in their houses like before,” said Rajya Lakshmi, who runs Gayatri Seva Sadan here along with her husband, Swamy.  [link]
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Posted in Art Hindu, Asia, Rituals | No comments

RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK

Posted on 18:30 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS 
By TAHLIB
Buddha, Moses, Mohammad, Guru Nanak, and Jesus were all religious radicals, and their ideas were blasphemous to the conformists of their day. When was the last time your faith was tested by radical ideas? Naftali Brawer cites philosopher William James in arguing that there is an unhealthy obsession with conformity; and not nearly enough attention to developing a heightened sensitivity to God today. Like Doubting Thomas, we fear art & ideas that make us feel uncomfortable. Contemporary artists like Michael Landy challenge that sheep like nature, and that's why his exhibit "Saints Alive" (above), is the A&O NEWS OF WEEK.

In other religious art news from across the USA, and around the world:
  • Buddhism in Art: Wesak Day honored Lord Buddha's 2,557th birthday. [More News]
  • Christianity in Art: The Saint John's Bible on view at NYC's Morgan Library. [More News]
  • Hinduism in Art: Yoga comes to the Indianapolis Museum of Art this summer. [More News]
  • Islam in Art: Lisa Ross captures the mazar, holy shrines of western China. [More News]
  • Judaism in Art: Roy Lichtenstein's grand "brushstrokes" likened to religious genius. [More News]
Are your radical friends on the list yet? Invite them today! At A&O, 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 A&O Society; others join as donors supporting the A&O Youth Scholarship Prize; and others as member-subscribers of this RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK. Take the challenge. Invite a friend to join the journey. It's for Believers, and Skeptics too.
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Posted in AOANews, Artist_MLandy | No comments

10 Questions for Artist Michael Landy

Posted on 15:07 by the great khali
THE ARTSDESK.COM
By Fisun Güner
Michael Landy wearing a mask of Saint Peter, one of Christ's 12 Apostles
UNITED KINGDOM---Much of Michael Landy’s work concerns destruction or decay. The British artist, who recently turned 50 and is part of the YBA generation, came to prominence in 2001 with the Artangel commission Break Down, which saw all his worldly possessions destroyed in an industrial shredder. His National Gallery exhibition Saints Alive opens this week, the culmination of a two-year residency in which he responds to the gallery's collection of paintings of saints, from Lucas Cranach the Elder's Saint Apollonia to Botticelli's Saint Francis of Assisi. [link]
  1. You’d never visited the National Gallery collection before getting your residency. What’s it like coming to the collection completely fresh, after practising as an artist for so long?
  2. Why where you drawn to the saints?
  3. You were brought up Catholic. Are you religious?
  4. Were you thinking of Hieronymus Bosch when you started to think of your sculptures?
  5. Jean Tinguely obviously made a profound impression on you when you were still a teenager. Is he why you wanted to become an artist?
  6. Do you still draw every day?
  7. Do you think drawing has helped you as an artist?
  8. Do you ever feel, like Saint Francis, that you’d like to divest yourself of all your material possessions?
  9. Do you think about death a lot?
  10. Finally, are you getting nervous about what kind of reception you'll receive for this exhibition of self-destructing saints?
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Posted in Art Christian, Artist_MLandy, Europe, Museums, Roman Catholic | No comments

Art Review: Michael Landy Martyr to the Cause of Destruction

Posted on 13:21 by the great khali
THE TELEGRAPH
By Christy Harvey
Michael Landy's 9ft kinetic sculpture of
St Apollonia inspired by 1506 painting by Lucas Cranach
UNITED KINGDOM---Visitors to the National Gallery are in for a shock. At its entrance, they will be greeted by St Apollonia – nine feet tall and made of fibre glass. Her pleated red dress will identify her as the sculptural incarnation of a figure painted by Lucas Cranach in 1506, in a work held elsewhere in the gallery. In her hands a pair of pliers will grip one of the teeth that were pulled out as she was tortured to death by an anti-Christian mob in the third century. This is the work of Michael Landy, the National Gallery’s current artist in residence. [link]
 Lucas Cranach's Saints Genevieve and Apollonia (1506) from the National Gallery collection 
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Posted in Art Christian, Artist_MLandy, Europe, Museums | No comments

Saturday, 25 May 2013

Collection of Detroit Institute of Arts Cannot Be Sold, Its Director Says

Posted on 18:00 by the great khali
GRANTMAKERS IN THE ARTS
"Saint Jerome in his study" (1435) by Jan can Eyck. The collection of DIA
From David Itzkoff, writing for The New York Times:
"The director of the Detroit Institute of Arts said on Friday that he believed the museum’s collection was “held in the public trust” and could not be sold by the city to help pay down its multibillion-dollar debt, and that he expected the city’s emergency manager and his office to reach the same conclusion. “They’re interested in making a healthy and viable Detroit,” the director, Graham W. J. Beal, said on Friday in a telephone interview. “We believe that that kind of action — diminishing our collection, the cultural value — would not be in the long-term interest.” 
Mr. Beal’s remarks came in response to a report in The Detroit Free Press that Kevyn Orr, the emergency manager appointed to oversee operations in Detroit, was exploring whether the museum’s collection of art could be sold to help cover the city’s debt of nearly $15 billion. [link]
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Posted in Michigan, Museums, Provenance | No comments

Professors, Christianity and the Arts

Posted on 03:56 by the great khali
THE ASBURY COLLEGIAN
By Brittany Butler

UNITED KINGDOM---It may be tempting to separate photographs, plays, books, movies and other forms of art into “Christian” and “non-Christian” categories regardless of their redeeming messages. It’s also easy to make excuses for aesthetically outstanding art containing nudity, gratuitous violence, bad language or casual sex because of the positive message it portrays. Where do we draw the line? Professors Marcia Hurlow, Keith Barker and Jeff Day teach in different areas of the arts, but they all agree that separating art into “Christian” and “secular” categories isn’t the most efficient method. Hurlow said. She believes the better question to ask is whether or not your art matches your worldview. [link]
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Next Normal: Viacom Measuring Distrust of Religions by Global Millennials

Posted on 03:48 by the great khali
PARLIMENT OF RELIGIONS

The average percentage of global youth trusting religious leaders is now in the single digits. This “mass exodus” is becoming a pervasive challenge for a lion’s share of the world’s major faith traditions while leaders grapple, struggle, and investigate. Even framing the issue is problematic and poses controversy. So how can the claim religious leaders are performing best in South Africa to connecting to youth be considered credible? Viacom International, the media corporation owning MTV networks and numerable communications platform is spearheading an ambitious research endeavor. “The Next Normal” plans to be the largest, sharpest, and most comprehensive survey of Millennials (Gen-Y, predecessors to “Digital Natives) in the world. [link]
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Friday, 24 May 2013

Movie Review: "Epic" a Big War of Good Versus Evil

Posted on 21:07 by the great khali
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Stephen Holden
Queen Tara (Beyonce) selecting the seedling to continue protecting the forest.
HOLLYWOOD---As you watch its characters zoom through a lush forest on the backs of hummingbirds, the gorgeous 3-D adventure comedy “Epic” suggests a warmer, fuzzier “Avatar,” with a green heart. Directed by Chris Wedge, the movie is a hymn to nature rendered in phantasmagoric detail as refined as anything I’ve seen in a computer-animated family film. [link] (A&O Rating: ★★)
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Posted in Hollywood, Movies, Movies2013 | No comments

Doodle 4 Google: Teenager's Drawing Of Father's Homecoming Wins Big In Google Doodle Contest

Posted on 06:07 by the great khali
THE HUFFINGTON POST
By Alexis Kleinman
High school senior Sabrina Brady's entry into Google's annual Doodle 4 Google contest really stood out. The contest asks students in grades kindergarten through 12 to submit drawings based on a theme. The theme for 2013 was "My Best Day Ever," and Brady's depiction of her greeting her father after his 18-month deployment in Iraq when she was 10 years old won. Brady's Doodle, perhaps the most heartwarming incarnation of a multinational's corporate logo ever, will appear on the Google homepage all day Thursday, and she will be awarded a $30,000 college scholarship. Google is also giving her school a $50,000 technology grant. Four national finalists will receive college scholarships worth $5,000. [link]
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Posted in Art Prizes, Philanthropy | No comments

On May 25th, Commemorate Lord Buddha's 2,557th Birthday

Posted on 03:46 by the great khali
THE NEW YORK TIMES
INDIA---A statue of Lord Buddha in Agartala, Tripura, being cleaned on the eve of Wesak, a Buddhist festival that commemorates the birth of Gautam Buddha. [link]
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Posted in Art Buddhist, Asia | No comments

A Moses-Jesus Hybrid: Alien, Yet Familiar ‘Man of Steel’

Posted on 02:07 by the great khali
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Dave Itzkoff
Henry Cavill stars as Superman in the new Warner Brothers movie, which will be released on June 14
HOLLYWOOD---It is strange that Superman, the smiling, soaring Moses-Jesus hybrid who ushered in the era of superhero comics, should be struggling at the multiplexes in an age when every other studio movie seems to feature a man in a cape, a mask with pointy bat-ears or a high-tech suit of iron. The qualities that have made Superman timeless have not necessarily made him relevant to this particular time, with its roster of ironic and loudly violent protagonists, but it was this paradox that made Mr. Snyder eager to take him on in “Man of Steel.” [link]
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Thursday, 23 May 2013

Salvaged Saints: Michael Landy's Martyrs Invade UK's National Gallery

Posted on 12:07 by the great khali
THE GUARDIAN
By Adrian Searle
Mechanical martyrs ... Michael Landy's Saints Alive exhibition
at the National Gallery, London. Photograph: Sarah Lee for the Guardian
UNITED KINGDOM---From Saint Lucy plucking out her eyes to Saint Apollonia bashing in her teeth, Michael Landy's mechanical martyrs are a destructive delight. The Christian saints had a hard time of it, but they were pretty stoical about their grisly martyrdoms. Saint Peter, the 13th-century friar from Verona, was done to death on the road, stabbed after having his head cleaved open with an axe. The other two panels depict Saint Lucy, who plucked out her own eyes and offered them to an unwanted suitor; and the Archangel Saint Michael, whose task was to weigh the souls of the dead. Slaying demons and summoning the deceased on judgment day were also part of his remit. [link]
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Posted in Art Christian, Artist_MLandy, Europe, Museums | No comments

Yoga at the Indianapolis Museum of Art

Posted on 10:07 by the great khali
INDIANAPOLIS MUSEUM OF ART 
INDIANA---As a member of the IMA, we wanted you to be the first to hear that we will be offering a new YOGA IN THE GALLERIES program this summer! This six-week session, taught by certified instructor Erin Morgan, will take place each Saturday from July 13 through August 17 from 10 to 11 am on the IMA galleries and grounds. The entire series is available at a discounted rate of just $60 for members. This class will sell out, so make sure to reserve your space today by calling 317-920-2679. [link]
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Posted in @IMAmuseum, Art Hindu, Indiana, Museums, Museums2013, Rituals | No comments

Solias Mendis Paintings Calm the Mind and Eye

Posted on 06:07 by the great khali
THE SUNDAY TIMES
Murals by Solias Mendis depicting the main events of Lord Buddha’s life at the Kelaniya temple
SRI LANKA---They say that all your sins will be washed away if you set foot once in Kelaniya, the land Lord Buddha famously visited thousands of years ago on a Vesak Poya day. And the stresses of the harried mind are swept away on stepping into the hallowed halls of the Kelaniya temple’s shrine room, where the incomparable murals of Solias Mendis capture the imagination. Kelaniya, is important to Buddhist devotees for many reasons; the primary one being Lord Buddha’s visit to Kelaniya in order to settle a dispute that had erupted between the Naga Kings – Chulodara and Mahodara- over a gem studded throne. Significantly this visit was on a Vesak full-moon Poya day. [link]
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Posted in Art Hindu, Asia, Congregations, Sacred Spaces | No comments

Guide to Mezuzah Protection for Jewish Homes

Posted on 04:00 by the great khali
AISH.COM
By Rabbi Shraga Simmons
Wholesale Lot 6 Mezuzah Cases Silver Plate Gold Plate Jewish Israel Judaica Gift
On the doorpost of every Jewish home rests a mezuzah. Some may think it's a dainty decoration or a good luck charm. Put one up to keep the evil spirits away! Actually, a mezuzah is a daily reminder ― and a public declaration ― of Jewish identity and faith. Though mezuzah literally means "doorpost," it commonly refers to a scroll of parchment containing biblical verses, placed on the doorpost. The mezuzah recalls the Exodus from Egypt, when the lamb's blood smeared on the doorpost "identified" the Jewish homes that God passed over during the plague of the first born. [link]
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Posted in Art Judaic | No comments

U.S. Lists "Eight Countries" With Most Repressive Religious Freedom With Laws

Posted on 02:07 by the great khali
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Steven Lee Meyers

WASHINGTON, DC---Countries around the world, including allies of the United States, have used laws on blasphemy and apostasy to suppress political opponents, the State Department said on Monday in an annual report chronicling a grim decline in religious freedom that has resulted in rising bigotry and sectarian violence. The report singled out eight countries for particularly egregious and systemic repression of religious rights: China, Eritrea, Iran, Myanmar, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Uzbekistan. In China, the report said, religious freedoms declined in the last year, highlighted by punitive actions against Christians, Muslims and Buddhists in Tibet, where 82 monks, nuns or laypeople killed themselves in acts of self-immolation last year. [link]
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Posted in Censorship, Censorship2013, Freedom, Religious Freedom | No comments

Wednesday, 22 May 2013

Eternal Sleep: The Islamic Mausoleum's of China's Taklamakan Desert

Posted on 14:07 by the great khali
LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS
By Nick Holdstock
CHINA---There are mosques in towns all over China, but the most concentrated signs of Islamic belief are found in the western province of Xinjiang. The region is home to most of China’s Uyghurs, a Muslim people linguistically and culturally distinct from the Han Chinese (the ethnic majority in China). This is the setting for Lisa Ross’s "Living Shrines of Uyghur China", a book of photographs a decade in the making, whose subject is the shrines to folk saints (in Uyghur, mazar) found throughout the region. [link]
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Posted in Art Islamic, Asia, Book Reviews, Bookshelf | No comments

Colonial Jewish Roots in America Take Center Stage

Posted on 10:07 by the great khali
THE TIMES OF ISREAL
By Matt Lebovic
Meyers Rimonim for Torah scrolls (photo credit: courtesy of Boston Museum of Fine Arts)
MASSACHUSETTS---Fewer than 2,500 Jews called the American colonies home in 1776, but today they are more alive than ever in US museums and universities. From North Carolina to Boston, early American Jewish artifacts are “moving out of the ghetto,” according to American Jewish historian Jonathan Sarna. Aspects of the phenomenon include new academic research about colonial Jews and recent high-profile auctions of private Judaica collections. The transition of Judaica from “the ghetto” to mainstream America is well illustrated at Boston’s Museum of Fine of Arts (MFA), where Sarna helped launch a campaign to enlarge the museum’s Judaica collection. [link]
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Posted in Art Judaic, Collectors, Massachusetts, Museums, Museums2013 | No comments

Saint John's Bible on View at NYC's Morgan Library & Museum

Posted on 08:07 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By TAHLIB
The Saint John’s Bible. Apostles Edition, Collegeville, Minn:
Hill Museum & Manuscript Library, 2007–2011. 5 vols.
NEW YORK---Saint John’s University in Collegeville, Minnesota donated a copy of their newly finished 1,100 page illuminated bible to The Morgan Library & Museum, where it will be on display through August 25, 2013. There are only twelve Apostle Edition copies of this bible, and the Morgan will display the Prophets volume from the seven-volume edition. The Prophets volume contains 232 pages and twenty illuminations. In 1998 Saint John’s University commissioned calligrapher Donald Jackson to produce a fully illuminated luxury manuscript called The Saint John's Bible, and the project was completed in May 2011. The Morgan Library & Museum began as the private library of financier Pierpont Morgan, and today serves as a museum, independent research library, musical venue, architectural landmark, and historic site.
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Posted in Art Christian, Book Art, Minnesota, Museums, Museums2013, Saint Johns Bible | No comments

Roy Lichtenstein's Grand Gestures in Art Reflecting Religion

Posted on 08:07 by the great khali
JEWISH CHRONICLE
By Naftali Brawer
Roy Lichtenstein’s ‘Whaam!’. A retrospective of his work is at the Tate Modern until May 27
UNITED KINGDOM---The Tate Modern's current retrospective of Roy Lichtenstein's pop art includes a series of 1960s paintings called "brushstrokes". Describing his work, the [Jewish] artist said: "Brushstrokes in painting convey a sense of grand gesture but, in my hands, the brushstroke becomes the depiction of a grand gesture." This distinction between the grand gesture and the depiction of the grand gesture brought to mind the work of the 19th-century philosopher of religion and psychologist, William James. In his 1902 book, "Varieties of Religious Experience", James makes a clear distinction between the spontaneous religious experience of the founders of a religion - whom he calls religious geniuses - and that of the "ordinary religious believer" who comes later and "follow[s] the conventional observances".  [link]
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Posted in Art Christian, Art Interfaith, Art Judaic, Art Others, Museums, Museums2013, New York | No comments

Pakistani Islamic Art: Infusing the Old With the New

Posted on 03:45 by the great khali
THE EXPRESS TRIBUNE
These artists have international recognition, but they should be shown at home as well, says Exhibit curator.
PAKISTAN---“The artists here have invented a new language,” says Quddus Mirza, curator of the ‘Here and Now’ art exhibit. Their focus on the ideas and concerns of modern times was one of his reasons for putting together the exhibit, he says. The exhibition by artists Mohammad Ali Talpur, Hasnat Mehmood, Nausheen Saeed, Adeela Suleman, and Mohammad Zeeshan, opened at the Lahore Art Gallery on Monday and will continue till June 22.  [link]

While each artist has a distinct style and uses different media, all the works deal with certain issues affecting Pakistan as well as the rest of the modern world.
  1. Talpur prompts the observer to feel new sensations through minimalist lines and tones.A recurrent theme in the work is a comparison between the past and the ever-changing present.
  2. Zeeshan, a trained miniaturist, has drawn inspiration from old Sufi shrines for his pieces, which combine the modern technique of laser scoring with traditional painting. 
  3. In his graphite drawings, Mehmood takes old, iconic works of art and infuses them with reminders of globalisation in an increasingly interconnected world; a sketch of the Mona Lisa includes a ‘Made in Pakistan’ note in the bottom corner. 
  4. Suleman uses mixed media to depict a medieval battle mounted on the wall, her illustration of past violence serving to highlight Pakistan’s ongoing struggle with violence today. 
  5. Saeed’s startling fiberglass sculptures depict women’s bodies as shopping bags, a comment on the commoditisation of women in the society. 
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Posted in Art Islamic, Asia, Galleries | No comments

Tuesday, 21 May 2013

Muslims, Hindus, Christians, Etc: How Religions Change Their Mind

Posted on 14:07 by the great khali
THE BBC | RELIGION
By William Kremer
UNITED KINGDOM---Once upon a time, animal sacrifice was an important part of Hindu life, Catholic priests weren't celibate and visual depictions of the Prophet Muhammad were part of Islamic art. And soon some churches in the UK may be marrying gay couples. How do religions manage to change their mind? If that sounds like a problem easily solved, it wasn't - according to Kathleen Flake, a professor in American religious history at Vanderbilt University, and a Mormon herself.History shows that any religion that refuses to change dies out, Flake adds. But what about those religions that don't have living prophets - how do they change? [link]
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Posted in Art Christian, Art Hindu, Art Islamic, Roman Catholic | No comments

8th-century Buddhist Images Back on Exhibit After Major Face-lift

Posted on 11:07 by the great khali
THE ASAHI SHIMBUN
Reporters check out the 10 Buddhist statues from the eighth century at Todaiji temple's Hokkedo Hall
JAPAN---After intermittent closures since 2010 for restoration work, Hokkedo Hall at the eighth-century Todaiji temple is set to reopen to the public on May 18 to show off its 1,000-year-old national treasures. On a restored raised platform, visitors will be able to check out 10 Buddhist statues from the Nara Period (710-784) at the temple in Nara, Nara Prefecture. Called "Shumidan," the restored platform is less crowded than before and offers modern LED lighting, the better to view the Buddhas, which have also been restored. Shumidan used to house 16 statues, including the principal image of Fukukensaku Kannon, as well as Bonten. Hokkedo Hall is a national treasure and the oldest structure in the temple. [link]
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Posted in Art Buddhist, Asia, Congregations | No comments

Spanish Colonial Art Goes on Display at Miami’s Frost-FIU Museum

Posted on 10:07 by the great khali
THE MIAMI HERALD
By John Coppola
St. Joseph and the Christ Child Cuzco, Peru, 18th century
Oil on canvas Frost Art Museum, MMAC Collection Alex Garcia
FLORIDA---In art as in religion, the colonial period of Latin America took its greatest influence from Spain. But it wasn’t simply a thin imitation of the motherland, but a complex confluence tinged with politics, racial issues and religions both indigenous and European. That point lies at the heart of a new exhibition at the Frost Art Museum, "Spanish Colonial Art: The Beauty of Two Traditions," curated by museum director Carol Damian. “The idea,’’ says Damian, “is to show that the colonial art of Latin America is not derivative and a poor copy of Spanish art, but so much more.” [link]

Frost Art Museum: "Spanish Colonial Art: The Beauty of Two Traditions,"Florida International University (Ends Aug. 25), 10975 SW 17th St., Miami, FL, (305) 346-2890 or thefrost.fiu.edu
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Posted in Art Christian, Florida, Museums, Museums2013 | No comments

Statue of Pope Francis Unveiled in Italian Potato Field

Posted on 05:18 by the great khali
ARTDAILY
Giuseppe Imperatore artist and sculptor (L) Barbato De Stefano (C) and Antonio
De Stefano adjust the vestments of a statue depicting Pope Francis in a small field of potatoes
ITALY---The first-ever statue of Pope Francis has been unveiled in a potato field near Naples -- an unorthodox homage to the fact that the Argentine pope's ancestors were farmers in northern Italy. The statue will be presented to the pope next month by Italian actor Barbato De Stefano, who comes from the village of Cicciano where it was presented and has financed the project. The primitive-style statue was shown on Sunday, with a painted background of the balcony of St Peter's Basilica on which the pope stood after his election at a conclave of cardinals in March. [link]
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Posted in Art Christian, Europe, Roman Catholic | No comments

Two Very Different Exhibits Of Religious Artistic Expression in Connecticut

Posted on 05:00 by the great khali
HARTFORD COURANT
By SUSAN DUNNE
Robin Rice of Enfield created this angel painting. It is part of the "Angels in the Casa" art exhibit at ArtSpace.
CONNECTICUT---Ever since mankind began creating art, spirituality oriented themes have been eternally the most popular. Two shows in Connecticut, a contemporary show open for just a few weeks and a show of ancient art open until next April, show different facets, and different eras, of celestial artistic inspiration. In today's secular world, any subject matter is open to artists. Spiritual art is increasingly in the minority. Yet the artists gathering beginning this weekend at ArtSpace in Hartford have one thing on their minds: angels. [link]

Artspace in Hartford: 'Angels In The Casa '555," Asylum Street, Hartford, CT, (860)548-9975 or artspacect.com/hartford/

Knights of Columbus Museum in New Haven: "Windows Into Heaven: Russian Icons and Treasures," One State Street New Haven, CT (203)865-0400 or kofcmuseum.org
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Posted in Art Christian, Connecticut, Galleries | No comments

Monday, 20 May 2013

Heavenly Bodies: Michael Landy's Artistic Marriage Made in Heaven...and Hell

Posted on 12:07 by the great khali
THE INDEPENDENT
By Adrian Hamilton
‘Multi-Saint’ (2013)
UNITED KINGDOM---YBA Michael Landy’s show Saints Alive at the National Gallery draws on details of the torture of the martyrs represented in masterpieces of the Renaissance. It was always going to be a marriage made in Heaven or Hell, depending on your theological view or artistic expectation. Certainly the National Gallery took a chance when it invited Michael Landy, a founding face of the YBAs (Young British Artists), to become an associate artist and to mount a show of the resulting works at the end of his two-year stint. Michael Landy: Saints Alive, National Gallery, London WC2 (020 7747 2885) 23 May to 24 November  [link]

‘Chest Beater’ (2012)
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Posted in Art Christian, Artist_MLandy, Europe, Museums | No comments

Photoessay: Monochrome Vignettes From Burma's Shwedagon Pagoda

Posted on 10:07 by the great khali
MING THEIN | PHOTO BLOG 
By Ming Thein
BURMA---Perhaps the most famous landmark in Burma, Shwedagon Pagoda has been a focal point for life in Yangon for a very long time – it has reputedly existed in some form or other for the last 2,600 years. It reached its current height of approximately 114m in the late 1700s after the most recent rebuilding as a result of multiple earthquakes. It is thought of as the most sacred location for Buddhists in Burma, with the relics of multiple past Buddhas housed within: the staff of Kakusandha, the water filter of Koṇāgamana, a piece of the robe of Kassapa and eight strands of hair from Gautama – the one traditionally thought of as Buddha. [link]
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Posted in Art Buddhist, Asia | No comments

Muslim ‘Prayer Rooms’ by Ammar Al Attar at Saudi Arabian Art Gallery

Posted on 06:07 by the great khali
ISLAMIC ARTS MAGAZINE
By
Ammar Al Attar, Jeddah, Al Sawareekh Market, 2012,
42x52,4 cm, Lambda C-Print / Courtesy of Athr Gallery and the Artist
SAUDI ARABIA---A photo exhibition 'Prayer Rooms' [is now open] at Athr Gallery in Jeddah. A photographer Ammar Al Attar surveys prayer rooms across Jeddah. Mandated in public buildings by national legislation, these informal worship areas are ubiquitous, providing the faithful a place for their five prayers a day regardless of their location. The exhibition will run until June 13, 2013. The viewer experiences the artist’s perspective of these rooms as they are. [link]
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Posted in Art Islamic, Asia, Galleries | No comments

"Christians, Muslims & Jesus" by Mona Siddiqui: Book Review

Posted on 04:07 by the great khali
TELEGRAPH
By Sameer Rahim
Pakistani Christian children look at Christmas decorations in Islamabad Photo: Getty Images
Given that in some parts of the world you find violent conflict between Christians and Muslims, you might think that skirting around religious difference would be all to the good. The Muslim theologian Mona Siddiqui would disagree. Only by properly engaging with other traditions, she argues, can we avoid a mere “dialogue on the surface”. In this fascinating book she touches on a central doctrinal difference between the two largest monotheisms: the true nature of Jesus of Nazareth.  [link]
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Posted in Art Christian, Art Islamic, Asia, Bookshelf | No comments

Sunday, 19 May 2013

Hungary Kickboxer Loses Gig Over Nazi Tattoos

Posted on 21:30 by the great khali
THE JEWISH DAILY FORWARD
By JTA

CZECH REPUBLICH---A Hungarian martial arts fighter was disinvited from an event in Prague because of his Nazi tattoos, including one reading “death to the Jews.” Some of the sponsors of the Heroes Gate martial arts tournament told organizers that Attila Petrovszki from Hungary could not attend the May 17 event because he had a tattoo of Adolf Hitler and a swastika on his body and the anti-Semitic words, Radio Prague reported. [link]
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Posted in Art Judaic, Censorship2013, Europe, Performing Arts, Trends | No comments

RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK

Posted on 03:10 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS 
By TAHLIB
The blood of innocents is splattered all over the 8,000-square-foot terrace atop the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC, or at least that is the message Pakistani artist Imran Qureshi wants visitors to understand. His application of white and red brush strokes looks like the dried blood of a disaster, but it's really an intricate Islamic art pattern intended to remind us of the cost of the religious divide. Creating art that will inspire believers, and skeptics to bridge the world's religious divide is what makes "The Roof Garden Commission: Imran Qureshi" (above), the A&O NEWS OF WEEK.

In other religious art news from across the USA, and around the world:
  • Buddhism in Art: God's the difference between Shintoism and Buddhism [More News]
  • Christianity in Art: The Vatican sponsors first-ever exhibit at Venice Biennial. [More News]
  • Hinduism in Art: Yoga goes on exhibition at the Smithsonian Institution. [More News]
  • Islam in Art: Islamic artist Steven Naifeh at South Carolina art museum. [More News]
  • Spiritual in Art: Dance Kaleidoscope brings gay marriage to Indiana. [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, 18 May 2013

Contemporary Works of Nhat Tran of Indianapolis Take Center-Stage at Asian Lacquer International

Posted on 09:07 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Gregory Disney-Britton
“Regardless of Explanation,” a lacquer painting by Nhat Tran. Image courtesy of The Buffalo News.
NEW YORK---Indianapolis-based artist Nhat Tran will join dozens of artists and scholars from around the world at SUNY Buffalo State on Monday for a four-day symposium dedicated to the ancient art of Asian lacquer. To accompany the conference, the Burchfield Penney Art Center will host “Asian Lacquer International,” an exhibition that explores artists’ diverse uses of lacquer – an expensive resin extracted from trees found only in Asia – in decoration, painting and sculpture. While ancient art is on the schedule, a highlight of the gathering will be contemporary uses of the medium, such as the luminous, other-worldly paintings of Vietnam-born artist Nhat Tran, a two-time Creative Renewal Arts Fellow of the Arts Council of Indianapolis.
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Posted in Art Interfaith, Art Others, Indiana, New York | No comments

Unitarians Mulls Yielding Ownership of Their Frank Lloyd Wright-Designed Church

Posted on 08:07 by the great khali
WBEZ91.5
By Lee Bey
ILLINOIS---Ownership of Oak Park's Unity Temple could be transferred from its long-time congregation to an organization that would be responsible for maintaining the church, according to a $10 million deal aimed at restoring the internationally-recognized Frank Lloyd Wright structure. According to an email sent to the congregation Tuesday evening by the Unitarian Universalist congregation's board of Trustees, Chicago's Alphawood Foundation would donate $10 million toward the restoration of the 105-year-old building, 875 Lake St. Built in 1908, the blocky reinforced concrete church is National Historic Landmark and is one of Wright's best-known buildings. [link]
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Posted in Art Interfaith, Art Others, Illinois, Philanthropy, Sacred Spaces | No comments

Friday, 17 May 2013

Black Community Not to Blame for Pittsburgh's August Wilson Center Crisis

Posted on 09:04 by the great khali
NEW PITTSBURGH GAZETTE
By Fred Logan

PENNSYLVANIA---We are all very sad to hear that the August Wilson Center is in deep financial trouble and may close its doors. But don’t let anyone try to tell you that the local Black community is to blame for AWC’s plight. The May 11, 2013 Post-Gazette reported that AWC has a multi-million dollar debt and is laying off its staff. Some fools are bound to argue what they always do: They will also charge that the Black community does this and that with its money but doesn't support black institutions as much as it should. [link]

Even if this is true in general, we still, in this case, are not the blame for AWC. The local Black community at large never pledged or signed an oath that it would take on ACW’s financial burden. It was never polled on support for AWC. On a very bright, but cold and windy weekday morning several years back, I was at the AWC’s groundbreaking with Aisha White. We stood there trembling in the cold under a great big white tent. Bill Robinson, Dan Onorato, and several other elected officials were on the platform to speak. At the time, Neil Barclay was AWC’s CEO. He said the center had raised $27 million of its $38 million total costs. And it looked to raise most of the $11 million shortfall in the Black community. That was my first time hearing that.
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Posted in Black Arts Management, Museums, Pennsylvania, Trends | No comments

Dance Kaleidoscope Celebrates Same-Sex Marriage

Posted on 03:46 by the great khali
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
By Greg Disney-Britton
Dress rehearsal for Barefoot Renegades of DK dancers Brandon Comer 
and Timothy June in David Hochoy's "Les Noces." Photo by Freddie Kelvin.
INDIANA---Two major "marriage moments" took place this week in the Midwest; in fact, they were a high point of a long winter season. The first was Minnesota becoming the 12th state in the US to legislatively affirm marriage equality. The second was David Hochoy's world premiere dance rendition of "Les Noces" (The Wedding), with music by Igor Stravinsky. Both were bracing examples of the power of love. Hochoy's "Les Noces," performed by Dance Kaleidoscope of Indianapolis is spare, essential, rhythmically virtuosic, and utterly compelling—as the full weight and promise of marriage  descends down upon us. Everything feels just right and in its place. The performance is a celebration of virtuosity, fast paced and energetic, and concludes with a Priest's mystical blessing as Hochoy's dancers move in a state of marital bliss.

For ticket information on "Barefoot Renegades" (featuring "Les Noces") by Dance Kaleidoscope (Ending May 19), visit the website at www.dancekal.org or call 317-635-5252.

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Posted in Art Interfaith, Art Others, Freedom, Freedom to Marry, Indiana, Performing Arts | No comments

Thursday, 16 May 2013

Steven Naifeh's Large Scale Islamic Art Comes to South Carolina Art Museum

Posted on 23:00 by the great khali
THE TIMES AND DEMOCRAT
Viewers at the Columbia Museum of Art. Courtesy of White Cubb Diaries.
SOUTH CAROLINA---The Columbia Museum of Art new exhibit by South Carolina-based artist Steven Naifeh will be on display May 18-Sept. 1 in the museum’s special exhibition galleries. The CMA has organized the first retrospective museum exhibition of Naifeh’s paintings and sculpture, titled “Found in Translation: The Art of Steven Naifeh.” The 26 large-scale works of modern art reflect the artist’s personal taste, preferences and attitudes about geometric abstraction that developed over the span of 40 years. For more information about the exhibit, visit columbiamuseum.org. [link]

The Columbia Museum of Art: “Found in Translation: The Art of Steven Naifeh” (May 18-Sept. 1), 1515 Main Street, Columbia, South Carolina | (803) 799.2810 or columbiamuseum.org
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Posted in Art Islamic, Museums, Museums2013, South Carolina | No comments

Dropping the Bomb of With Absolute Aplomb - Id-ion Artists

Posted on 12:07 by the great khali
AK ROCKEFELLER
By Id-iom
"What a Religious Background" Collage by ITS Image Factory
Id-iom are artists and purveyors of all manner of artistic creations. Original artwork, stencils, graffiti, screenprints, limited editions…check out their blog and flickr. [link]
"Race of Cain"


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Posted in Art Christian | No comments

Faith & Form/IFRAA International Awards Program for Religious Art & Architecture

Posted on 10:07 by the great khali
ARCHLEB

The 2013 Faith & Form / IFRAA International Awards Program for Religious Art and Architecture is now accepting project submissions, including those for student work. The awards program recognizes the best in religious art and architecture, unbuilt work, and student work. All submissions must be made online by June 30 at this address: www.faithandformawards.com. If you have questions, please contact the Faith & Form editor, Michael J. Crosbie, at: mcrosbie@faithandform.com. [link]
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Posted in Arts Prizes, Sacred Spaces | No comments

Discover Where Shinto and Buddhism Cross in New Exhibit

Posted on 08:07 by the great khali
THE JAPAN TIMES
By SACHIKO TAMASHIGE
Seated male diety, seated female diety, and seated male Diety. 
Heian period, Matsunoo Taisha Shrine, Kyoto
JAPAN---“The number of Shinto shrines in Japan has changed over centuries due to various political and social changes. There were about 190,000 shrines during the early Meiji Era (1867-1912), before a drastic change came about in the merging of shrines and temples. The number of shrines was greatly reduced, and now there are only around 80,000. [link]

That’s not much more than the number of convenience stores across Japan.” This is how Tsunekiyo Tanaka, president of Jinja Honcho (Association of Shinto Shrines) began a lecture — with a little humor. Established after World War II, Jinja Honcho was created to supervise Shinto shrines throughout in Japan, and Tanaka was speaking at a recent special public event hosted by “The Grand Exhibition of Sacred Treasures from Shinto Shrines” at the Tokyo National Museum. The exhibition celebrates the 62nd “grand relocation” of the Ise Grand Shrine and is being held with special assistance from Jinja Honcho and with the cooperation of numerous individual shrines throughout Japan.
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Posted in Art Buddhist, Asia, Museums | No comments

Stunning Roof Garden Installation by Pakistani Artist Imran Qureshi Opens at Metropolitan Museum

Posted on 06:09 by the great khali
ART DAILY
NEW YORK---A large-scale site-specific work of art by Imran Qureshi (b. 1972, Hyderabad, Pakistan)—an artist known for his unique style of combining the motifs, symbolism, and ornamental techniques of Islamic art with modern conceptual approaches—is the 2013 installation on The Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Roof Garden at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Entitled "The Roof Garden Commission: Imran Qureshi," the project represents the artist’s emotional response to violence occurring across the globe in recent decades and his earnest hope for regeneration and lasting peace in the aftermath of man-made disasters. [link]

The Metropolitan Museum of Art: "The Roof Garden Commission: Imran Qureshi," (Ends Nov. 3, 2013), 1000 Fifth Avenue (at 82nd Street), New York (212) 535-7710 or metmuseum.org.
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Posted in Art Islamic, Artist_IQureshi, Museums, Museums2013 | No comments

Smithsonian to Launch World’s First Yoga History Exhibit

Posted on 06:07 by the great khali
INDIA WEST
WASHINGTON, D.C.---“Yoga: The Art of Transformation,” dubbed as the world’s first exhibition of the visual history of yoga, will be held at the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C. Oct. 19 to Jan. 26, 2014. The Arthur M. Sackler Gallery of the Smithsonian, the world’s largest museum and research complex, will display over 130 stone and bronze sculptures, devotional icons, illustrated manuscripts, court paintings, photographs, books, missionary postcards, magic posters, medical illustrations and films borrowed from 25 museums and collections worldwide.  [link]

Smithsonian Institute: "Yoga: The Art of Transformation" (October 19, 2013 - January 26, 2014). Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, 050 Independence Ave., SW Washington, DC, 202.633.1000 or asia.si.edu
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Posted in Art Hindu, Museums, Museums2013, Washington DC | No comments

From Dante to Dan Brown: How Artists Have Portrayed the Divine Comedy

Posted on 03:15 by the great khali
THE GUARDIAN 
By Jonathon Jones
Holly roller...Dante Illuminating Florence with His Poem, painted by Domenico di Michelino. Photograph: Corbis
UNITED KINGDOM---Dan Brown's Inferno is doing wonders for Dante and the artists who have illustrated him. For instance, the other day a story in the Observer about the thriller writer's gift to tourism in Florence was illustrated with a painting by Domenico di Michelino in the city's cathedral. In this picture, which dates from around 1465, the medieval poet Dante Alighieri stands, a red-robed colossus, revealing his poem The Divine Comedy to the city of Florence which he dwarfs. Give yourself a treat this summer. Read Dan Brown; why not. But also read Allen Mandelbaum's Everyman translation of The Divine Comedy that is illustrated with Botticelli's wonderful drawings. [link]
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Posted in Art Christian, Bookshelf | No comments

Wednesday, 15 May 2013

'Star Trek Into Darkness' Eyes $100 Million Box Office Opening

Posted on 16:07 by the great khali
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
By Todd Cummingham
HOLLYWOOD---Projections for "Star Trek Into Darkness" have surged in the past week, putting J.J. Abrams' space epic sequel on track to take in more than $100 million at the box office over its extended debut weekend. Paramount Pictures will dock "Star Trek Into Darkness" in 336 Imax 3D theaters Wednesday, one day ahead of its nationwide rollout in more than 3,800 locations. The sci-fi adventure should easily knock Disney's Marvel superhero sequel "Iron Man 3," which is coming off a $72 million second week, out of the weekend's top box-office spot. Other studios are steering clear: there are no other wide releases this week. [link] (A&O Rating: ★★★)

On Tuesday, tickets for "Star Trek Into Darkness" accounted for 71 percent of online ticket broker Fandango's sales, and rival Movietickets.com reports more than 300 sellouts. The reviews have been very strong; it has an 88 percent positive rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
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Posted in Art Interfaith, Art Others, Hollywood, Movies, Movies2013 | No comments

Police Charge Art Students; Catholic Bishop Seeks Restrictions on ‘Freedom of Speech’

Posted on 14:07 by the great khali
THINK PROGRESS 
By Ian Millhiser
Carnegie Mellon University police filed charges of indecent exposure against
two art students  including sophomore Katherine B. O’Connor, 19 
PENNSYLVANIA---Katherine O’Connor is an art student at Carnegie Mellon University who allegedly decided to dress as the pope and march in a campus parade — or, at least, dress as the pope from the waist up. Police charged her with public nudity because she allegedly wore nothing at all below the belt. As Eugene Volokh points out, there’s nothing unconstitutional about arresting someone this kind of childish stunt. If O’Connor actually displayed her genitals in public, police may arrest her for public nudity. [link]

Yet, in a statement expressing satisfaction with O’Connor’s arrest, Catholic Bishop David Zubik of the Pittsburgh Diocese endorsed far greater restrictions on free speech:
“As I have said over these last few weeks, this is an opportunity for all of us to be reminded that freedom of speech and freedom of expression do not constitute a freedom to dismiss or disrespect the beauty of anyone’s race, the sacredness of anyone’s religious belief or the uniqueness of anyone’s nationality.”
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Posted in Art Christian, Censorship, Censorship2013, Pennsylvania, Roman Catholic, Trends | No comments

Islamic Mosque in Croatia is a Contemporary Masterpiece

Posted on 12:07 by the great khali
ISLAMIC ARTS MAGAZINE
South-west side of the Mosque in Rijeka / Courtesy of Islamic Community in Rijeka
CROATIA---The Mosque In Rijeka (in Croatia) – The Mosque is the result of decades-old aspirations of Muslims in Rijeka to have an adequate religious space. Now they have, and what a space it is; one of the most beautiful religious buildings in Europe. The most interesting fact is that the design was not defined by architects, but by one of the most prominent Croatian sculptor, Dušan Džamonja (b. 1928 - d. 2009). He created a miniature model of the mosque, reflecting his well-known abstract sculptures. Later, the architects Darko Vlahović and Branko Vučinović have undertaken the task to implement this conceptual idea in order to achieve the superior aesthetics of the project. [link]
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Posted in Art Islamic, Congregations, Europe, Sacred Spaces | No comments

Art Review: Mathew Barney's Fixations on Fabulists, Hermetics and Mysticism

Posted on 10:07 by the great khali
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Holland Cotter
Matthew Barney, KHU: Djed, 2011, Brush and ink, gold leaf, iron,
and lapis lazuli on black paper in polyethylene frame, 12 3/4 x 10 3/4 x 1 1/4 inches 
NEW YORK---The Morgan Library, with its Gospels, missals and reliquaries, is just the right place for “Subliming Vessel: The Drawings of Matthew Barney,” the first survey of graphic work by the most medievalizing of American contemporary artists. Mr. Barney, who was born in 1967, first came to the art world’s attention with a New York solo show in 1991. He was just two years out of Yale, but as an undergraduate had already developed a version of the body-centered, performance-based work that would bring him fame. There’s a lot of work to see, none of it simple. Mr. Barney’s recurrent themes are death and resurrection, or transformation, and they’re the abiding subjects of his drawings. [link]

“Subliming Vessel: The Drawings of Matthew Barney” runs through Sept. 2 at the Morgan Library & Museum, 225 Madison Avenue, at 36th Street; (212) 685-0008, themorgan.org.
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Posted in Art Interfaith, Art Others, Museums, Museums2013, New York | No comments
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Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ▼  May (104)
      • Bequeathing the Keys to Your Digital Afterlife
      • Making Cash in the Business of Rites and Rituals
      • RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK
      • 10 Questions for Artist Michael Landy
      • Art Review: Michael Landy Martyr to the Cause of D...
      • Collection of Detroit Institute of Arts Cannot Be ...
      • Professors, Christianity and the Arts
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      • Movie Review: "Epic" a Big War of Good Versus Evil
      • Doodle 4 Google: Teenager's Drawing Of Father's Ho...
      • On May 25th, Commemorate Lord Buddha's 2,557th Bir...
      • A Moses-Jesus Hybrid: Alien, Yet Familiar ‘Man of ...
      • Salvaged Saints: Michael Landy's Martyrs Invade UK...
      • Yoga at the Indianapolis Museum of Art
      • Solias Mendis Paintings Calm the Mind and Eye
      • Guide to Mezuzah Protection for Jewish Homes
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      • Eternal Sleep: The Islamic Mausoleum's of China's ...
      • Colonial Jewish Roots in America Take Center Stage
      • Saint John's Bible on View at NYC's Morgan Library...
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      • Pakistani Islamic Art: Infusing the Old With the New
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      • Contemporary Works of Nhat Tran of Indianapolis Ta...
      • Unitarians Mulls Yielding Ownership of Their Frank...
      • Black Community Not to Blame for Pittsburgh's Augu...
      • Dance Kaleidoscope Celebrates Same-Sex Marriage
      • Steven Naifeh's Large Scale Islamic Art Comes to S...
      • Dropping the Bomb of With Absolute Aplomb - Id-ion...
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      • Discover Where Shinto and Buddhism Cross in New Ex...
      • Stunning Roof Garden Installation by Pakistani Art...
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