SDG who?

Yes, the red name above isn’t Jimmy, Michelle, or Tim J. In a rare foray from guest-blogging limbo, I’ve returned to… share some pictures from my summer vacation.

Wait! Come back! Don’t worry, I’m not talking about a slide show of My Trip to the Grand Canyon or anything like that. It’s just that last week, vacationing in North Carolina, I contributed an entry to a sand sculpture contest — and won — and, given the subject matter, I thought Jimmy’s readers might like to see the results.


See more pictures.

Granted, on this particular blog, graced as it is from time to time with Tim J’s stunning artwork, my summer-day diversion isn’t as impressive as it might somewhere else, but still, I’m pretty pleased with the results.

This was my first complete crucifixion sculpture; last year I made a couple of unfinished studies that gave me the confidence to tackle this project in spite of having only 75 minutes to do it in before the contest judging.

(The conditions weren’t ideal… The tide was high and rising; the time to sculpt sand is when the tide is receding, which allows the best access to wet sand. For awhile I wasn’t even going to enter the contest, but eventually I decided to give it a try, and was pleasantly surprised at how well the relatively dry sand above the tide line handled.)

In previous years, I’ve done sharks, crocodiles, mermaids and sea serpents.

Well, that’s all I have to say about that, so… see you next summer!

Channeling Thomas Howard

No. Not really.

The truth is: Thomas Howard is my hero, in more ways than one.

First, as an explainer of Catholic sensibilities to the Evangelical Protestant mindset in which I was raised, he is without peer. Just as to deconstruct non-Catholic misunderstandings on justification, the papacy, the canon of scripture, and practically anything else you can think of, go to Jimmy Akin every time (Jimmy is my hero too), likewise to awaken appreciation in the most trenchant Fundamentalist heart of ritual and ceremony, of worship in liturgy and sacrament, of sacred art and architecture, of the whole sacramental and incarnational worldview, Tom Howard is your man.

As a young Evangelical yearning for something more, I discovered Howard’s Evangelical Is Not Enough at just the right moment in my life. It was like water in the desert to me. Chance or the Dance? also is wonderful, though I got even more out of Hallowed Be This House (which I see is now published under the title Splendor in the Ordinary: Your Home as a Holy Place).

Secondly, Howard is a magnificent writer, a stylist of extraordinary grace, wit, and power. He makes wonderful use of words like "precincts" and "hugger-mugger" and "surfeit," and puts sentences and paragraphs together with such elegance and music that form and function become one, and you start to absorb something of what he is trying to tell you just from the sound of the words. He is almost more a poet than an essayist; he writes with the moving energy and joy of a man who loves deeply what he is writing about, who feels it down to the marrow in his bones.

Robert Bolt said that in A Man for All Seasons that he strove to create "a bold and beautiful verbal architecture." Howard’s writing is like that, and reading it, one feels, rather than thinks: If verbal architecture can be like this, with nothing dry or functional or utilitarian about it, why not church architecture also?

Anyway, recently at Arts & Faith, a discussion board I visit more or less regularly, there was some discussion around the disconnect between, on the one hand, Catholic and Orthodox veneration of relics and icons, and Protestant discomfort with such practices on the other.

This subject triggered my Thomas Howard Response Mechanism, which sets me off and running quoting Evangelical Is Not Enough, Hallowed Be This House and whatever else comes to hand (in a pinch I’ve even been known to reach for Once Upon a Time, God…).

So, I began working on a contribution to the thread, but what with one thing leading to another, as I secretly knew from the beginning it would, I got completely carried away and ended up writing a sprawling essay touching on some of the general themes regarding which Howard had been among my earliest and most influential guides.

And, as is often the case when one tries to do the same sort of thing that one’s hero does, I did what little I could to honor Howard’s style as well as his ideas.

Of course I could never really even approximately "channel" Howard, or hope to match either the talent or the style of his inimitable prose. The man is a true original. (The first few grafs of my piece in particular are too jargony and abstract, though I think it gets better after that, about the time I get to Genesis 1.) But I think anyone familiar with Howard may notice that I am at least trying to walk in Howard’s footsteps, even if I don’t quite have his stride.

Read SDG’s "Reflections on a sacramental/incarnational worldview" at Arts & Faith

Crow’s Ears and Karma Lite Nuns

Terry Mattingly has the story.

The Vatican is known its complex rituals, rich in ancient symbols and mysterious details. Take, for example, the funeral of Pope John Paul II, as described by the International Herald Tribune.

“The 84-year-old John Paul was laid out in Clementine Hall, dressed in white and red vestments, his head covered with a white bishop’s miter and propped up on three dark gold pillows,” wrote Ian Fisher of the New York Times. “Tucked under his left arm was the silver staff, called the crow’s ear, that he had carried in public.”

Get the joke?

You see, that ornate silver shepherd’s crook is actually called a crosier (or “crozier”), not a “crow’s ear.”

Get the story.

Who’s oppressing who?

SDG here making a rare foray from occasional-blogger semi-retirement spurred by a recent screening of V for Vendetta, scripted by the Wachowski brothers from a graphic novel by Alan Moore.

The scene: In the English-speaking West, a happy couple sits at home, minding their own business. Suddenly, jack-booted Lifestyle Police swoop in and arrest first one, then the other.

Q: Who are these people and what is their offense?

  1. Conservative homeschooling parents guilty of withdrawing their children from mandatory kindergarten sex ed and diversity training about different kinds of families.

  2. Lesbians guilty of violating the religious lifestyle laws of the fascist conservative Christian theocracy.

If the question is which of these two scenarios represents a more reality-based fictionalization or projection of actual current trends in the English-speaking West or anywhere in Europe, it seems to me that the obvious answer is A. Every so often I get a bulletin from the Homeschool Legal Defense Association detailing incidents from around the country of government harrassment of homeschooling parents. If there’s a GLBT Legal Defense Association dedicated to combatting government harrassment of that constituency, I’ve not heard of it.

But of course it’s scenario B that we find in V for Vendetta, which imagines a world in which homosexuals are actively hunted down, owning a Koran is a capital offense, the media is a mouthpiece of the conservative government (!), high-powered Catholic bishops conspire with the government and have kinky sex with child prostitutes, and razing the bastions of Western civilization (e.g., blowing up the English Parliament building) is a moral victory.

Alan Moore, the writer of the original story, has taken his name off the film, which he claims the Wachowskis have turned from an ambiguous story of anarchy vs. fascism into an allegory of the American Right (Evil) vs. the American Left (Good).

In principle, I suppose that Moore, who considers himself an anarchist, would be equally against any form of coercive, overbearing government intrusion into people’s lives, beliefs and expression, whether liberal or conservative (though this is just a guess and I could be wrong).

As Moore complains, though, the film turns the story into a parable of the American left (good) vs. the American right (bad), completely blowing over the facts that [a] both sides are capable of intrusive oppression of dissenters, and [b] right now, in spite of certain conservative trends in recent years, it still looks like being conservative is more likely to get you in trouble in one way or another than being liberal — at least, in the English-speaking West as well as throughout Europe.

At least, that’s how it seems to me, although I tend to be pretty isolated from political issues (which is one reason I avoided reviewing most of last year’s crop of politically themed films, Good Night and Good Luck, Syriana, Munich, The Constant Gardener, etc.).

I seem to recall hearing about, e.g., Catholic leaders in Canada running afoul of the law over the Church’s teaching on homosexuality. It also seems to be that while university professors are typically free to advocate the most radical and extreme leftist points of view, there have been a number of incidents in universities in which individual professors or other faculty members have been internally persecuted and forced to apologize or resign over expressing politically incorrect views.

Here’s an interesting tidbit: Earlier this week, apparently, the Netherlands instituted a "tolerance test" for would-be immigrants that requires applicants to buy and watch a video that includes footage of two men kissing in a park and a topless woman bather, in order to ensure that they’re all right with such behavior before the Netherlands will accept them.

GET THE STORY.

On closer examination, it turns out that this law seems specifically targeted at conservative Muslims, since there are apparently generous exceptions to the requirement for Americans and Australians as well as citizens of EU members, making the Middle East the obvious target of the law.  But this merely illustrates that discrimination against Muslims is not the province of the conservative Christian right; here are ultra-liberal, anything-goes secular lefties doing this very thing. But of course that’s a provocative nuance you would hardly expect to find in an ideologically oriented Hollywood film.

Anyway, I’m writing my review tonight, and would like to be able to cite a few well-chosen specifics on the subject of liberal/secularist government/institutional opposition to, harrassment or punishment of, or otherwise discrimination against conservative/religious individuals, values, expressions, etc. So this is ultimately an info-bleg post. Help me out, politics watchers Who’s oppressing who, and how, and where?

Bremer Article Highlights Progress, Mistakes

Lpaulbremer Tim J here.

One-time head of the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq, L. Paul Bremer, gives some interesting comment on the reconstruction in Iraq in THIS N.Y. TIMES ARTICLE. (there was no registration requirement when I was there).

He touches on just a few of the many complex difficulties in trying to rebuild, from the ground up, the economic, political and physical infrastructure of an entire country… one that had been ravaged by a ruthless dictator, grinding (yet tragically ineffectual) U.N. sanctions, and decades of war (with both Iran and the U.S.-led coalitions).

In all this, there is a balance to be struck between those who will admit no flaw in the U.S. effort there, and those who see it all as one ghastly mistake, or worse.

I see it as a job that needed doing sooner or later, and that no one else was going to do. I therefore disagree with the Buchananites who would have us withdraw into a fortified bunker within our borders and wait until we are invaded. I think the present world situation is far more like a game of chess than it is like a wrestling match. The reality of Islamo-fascism makes the old pattern of clashes between nation-states too simplistic a model. I don’t know (perhaps can’t know) whether this is ultimately a just war, but it can legitimately be argued either way.

That said, I think it is obvious that blunders were made in the aftermath of the initial military campaign. This happened because our enemy employed an old, but unexpected tactic, called "running away", for which we were not prepared. The Bush administration was geared up for a longer military conflict and had only a vague occupation plan. When they found themselves in downtown Baghdad a few weeks later, they were like a dog that has been chasing a car that suddenly stops… what do I do with it now?

Bremer’s article argues that real progress is being made, in spite of the obvious setbacks.

Pray for our troops. Pray for the people of Iraq.

GET THE STORY.

Beloved Leader Missing??

KimjongilapKim Jong Il, North Korea’s Supreme Dictator and all-around nut job, may have disappeared on his way to Beijing from Pyongyang, according to THIS STORY over at Monsters and Critics (via Catholic Exchange).

I haven’t verified it through any major news outlets, though.

If true, it is a fascinating scenario, involving the Asian Mob, the island of Macao (which is kinda like a modern-day Casablanca), money laundering, counterfeiting in the tens of millions of U.S. dollars, noo-que-lar weapons, intrigue, the inscrutable Chinese government… and starring Kim Jong Il (that iron-fisted, but loveable psychopath) as himself.

Someone should get right to work on a screenplay.

Is it possible that Kim Jong Il has gone to visit Jimmy Hoffa?

GET THE STORY.

(JIMMY ADDS: If so, no floral basket for the Asian Mafia!)

But Is It Art? Part II

Regisphilbin_1 Suppose an advanced alien race gives you an exotic, high-tech gizmo capable of making a perfectly precise plastic replica of anything. Let’s say it can exactly reproduce every color, texture and detail. Excited, you quickly use it to create a life-sized copy of Regis Philbin to adorn your foyer.

The alien gizmo would take certain information about the original Regis (like size, shape, color, texture…), and reconstitute and re-present it in plastic. However, the copy would lack other original "Reej" properties (like speech, movement, intellect, etc…).

In other words, the copy would be an abstraction of the original Regis Philbin.It could represent Regis Philbin, but it couldn’t work a live studio audience with the verve and panache (what I call the "X-factor") of the original Regis.

Still, anyone familiar with Regis Philbin could walk into your house, look at your plastic Regis monument and think "Wow, this guy really like Regis Philbin" , even if they thought that meant you needed professional help.

Grapepicker_3 Now, if you made a photograph of your alien-tech Regis statue to carry in your wallet, you would find that the image would lose even more of the original information in the process, making the photo more of an abstraction. If you were to use the old office Xerox to make copies for all your co-workers, the images would be even more abstract, though they would still probably carry enough of the original data to be recognizable to fans of daytime television.

Abstraction is just the reduction or simplification of an object, from a complex reality to a less complex representation. In this sense, even the most realistic art is an abstraction. All artists make decisions about how much original data to retain, and which specific pieces of information they want to exclude.

Art that retains more of that original data appears more realistic (like the William Bougereau painting at left), while art that discards more information is more abstract (like the Picasso below). Though many people use the term "abstract" to describe images that are unrecognizable (or nearly so), in fact all art is abstract.

Or is it?

Picassostilllife_2 True abstraction presupposes an original object that is being abstracted, even if that object is imaginary. I could imagine a blue-skinned, reptilian, evil Anti-Regis and make a picture of that. It would still be an abstraction.

But there is art that does not represent or refer to any object. Not surprisingly, it is often referred to as non-objective art. Many proponents of this type of art assert that it transcends ordinary, traditional art, because it is not mired in the emotional or intellectual baggage associated with a recognizable image. People can respond directly to it’s native, visual properties, without interference.

Kandinsky Non-objective art often represents something, though, even if it is just a feeling, or an idea (Kandinsky was known for this type of image – like the one at left), so it must be distinguished from art that truly represents nothing. This kind of art (the Mark Rothko piece below, for example), which is called non-representational art, is so transcendent and self-existent that it refers to nothing outside itself. It passes beyond any attachment to the reality we understand, and (it is argued) establishes a new, independent reality.

There are problems and pitfalls associated with all these different categories. I’ll talk about those in my next post.

Rothko_2 In the meantime, what’s your favorite piece of art?

But, Is It Art? Part I

MotherwellHey, Tim Jones, here.

I’ve been asked by some commenters here at JA.O what I thought about abstract art, and whether I appreciate any modern art (like that of Robert Motherwell, shown at left).

Now, I am no expert on anything. I am a practicing artist (a painter ) *begin hypnosis – VISIT MY WEBSITE – end hypnosis* with a Master’s degree in Fine Art. Maybe something worthwhile rubbed off while I was in college, but I do not present myself as any kind of Art Pundit.

I am also really not that well-read, so I can’t lay claim to any great depth of historical knowledge.

What I can try to do is to clarify some terms and state, in very simple language, what I believe art is and is supposed to "do". Art should not be presented (in my view) as the exclusive purview of highly trained experts. If you have to read a paper to understand a painting, it has already failed as a work of art, in my opinion.

I had a professor once, who traced the meaning of the word art back to it’s Latin root ars, pointing out that this was also the root of the word artificial. He went on to say that, in a sense, everything that is not from nature, that is "man-made", could be called "art".

This was received with knowing nods of approval at the time, probably even from me. It is an idea that still holds a great deal of sway in the world of modern art. The idea was that we should not take a narrow view of what is and is not art, which sounds okay, until you try to really begin talking about art.

The truth is, this is just not the way that people think and talk. In this broad, philosophical view of art, the tissue that I just used is "art". So is the notepad I just scribbled on, my shoelace, and every other human artifact you can think of.

The logical conclusion to this kind of thinking led the Dada-ists to hang latrines in museums, and still resonates to this day.

So, what separates art and fine art from non-art? Here is where it might help to draw and define some broad categories. You will see that there will be a good deal of possible overlap between them.

To get the ball rolling, I offer these working categories:


Spearpoint_1DESIGN
– Everything that people make has a design. A tent, a spear point (like the one pictured) a clay pot, a mocassin, a tissue – all are made with an ideal design in mind. The actual object may be more or less close to the ideal, but the design is still evident. The design of an object can be pleasing, but this is not necessary. While some man-made objects may incidentally strike people as pleasing, the same is true of non-man-made objects. Design – in itself, then – would not be what we would call "art" in any commonly understood usage of the word. Art certainly incorporates design, but art is more than just design. Some design is so consciously elegant, though, that it becomes…

Korean_potDECORATION – You might think that early in human history, people made plain things and gradually began to decorate them over time. There is no evidence for this, in fact. People have always decorated things. It’s what we do, and part of what makes us qualitatively different from the animals. From the beginning, people wanted to make their stuff look cool. So, clay pots received etched, painted or stamped decoration. Clothing was beaded and fringed and dyed. Spears were hung with feathers. People tattooed their skin. Decoration is just built into human beings.

Some of these decorations had symbolic meaning, and some did not. Decoration could be a simple geometric pattern, or an actual picture of something else. The purpose of the decoration, though, was always to add something (appeal, interest, information, etc…) to an already existing object, and was not there to be appreciated simply for itself. So while art can incorporate elements of decoration, decoration – by itself – does not constitute art. Decoration can, however, begin to take on the characteristics of…

Alta_miraILLUSTRATION – Now we come to the real magic of art; that is, the ability to invoke, or to make present (in a way that is truly mysterious) something that is not there. Not only objects and creatures, but events and environments can be re-presented, merely by the etching of lines or the arrangement of pigment. You probably already have an intuitive grasp of something else that separates illustration from decoration – storytelling. Where do we generally find illustrations? In books.

Illustration exists, not to enliven some existing object or tool, but at the service of a story, or narrative. Many great pieces of art are illustrations, including so many of the wonderful religious icons you are familiar with. Norman Rockwell was proud to be called an illustrator. The strong narrative (story) element in his art makes it very illustrative. All illustration is art, then, but at times it can be elevated to…


LeggpotsFINE ART
– What sets fine art apart from illustration is the way it treats this element of narrative or story. All images tell some kind of story, of course, but in fine art the narrative element is subordinated to the visual, sensual properties of the depicted objects (like in the piece at left, by artist Jeff Legg).

It might be a landscape, a woman, a bowl of fruit… but a piece of fine art exists as an homage to some discreet part of creation. Fine art is meant to be appreciated in itself, and by itself. It needs no underlying narrative (as a religious icon or other illustration does) to make sense of it.

Many great illustrations (like Michelangelo’s Pieta) cross over into the area of fine art, owing to the importance that they give to the native visual properties of the depicted objects, environments or people. Great artists often walk a line between illustration and fine art.

There is a danger, in pushing an illustration toward becoming fine art, that the visual elements of the image will overwhelm or detract from the desired narrative. This is why many religious icons are so graphic and simple. Too much attention to realism would actually serve as a distraction. As long as people can readily recognize who the icon symbolically represents, things like realistic shading or accurate anatomy are unnecessary.

There is, conversly, also a danger in allowing a piece of fine art to become bogged down in sentiment and narrative, to the detriment of the image. If an object can’t stand on it’s visual properties alone, then it’s presence in a piece of fine art becomes questionable.

Now, because of the arrangement of the above categories, you may have the idea that I think that fine art is superior to illustration, illustration to decoration, etc… . This is not the case. All of these things are good and necessary in their own right. The reason they are placed in a kind of ascending order is because each successive category comprehends, or incorporates, all the previous categories. So, all art involves design, but not all design is art. This will also be important in the next post…


BEYOND?
– There are those who posit another kind of art that passes beyond mere illustration or representation, and becomes something greater. I will examine that idea in my next post, where I discuss Realism, Abstraction and Non-Objective Art.

There will be a quiz next Thursday. Bring two #2 pencils.

If you have read this far, God Bless You!!

Glory to the New Born King

Harkthe_herald Just a quick post to wish everyone at JA.O a Blessed and Merry Christmas.

Thanks to Jimmy for all the work and thought he puts into his ‘blog, and for inviting me to participate.

Thanks to everyone who reads and posts here, for your patient indulgence.

And THANKS BE TO GOD for all He is, and all He has done, especially for the gift of His Son, through the Holy Spirit, and our Blessed Mother.

Peace to all your houses!