Title: Theology and the Arts
1Theology and the Arts
Paulist Press, 2000
2Chapter 1 God and the Beautiful Art as a Way
to God
Van Gogh Enclosed Wheatfield with Rising Sun
3Unify-ing Motif
- Beauty as revelation (cf. Tillichs Primary
Revelation) - Art as the human mediation that both enables and
limits its revelatory power (5) (cf. Tillichs
Dependent Revelation)
Thomas Cole--The Connecticut River Near
Northhamton
4Art
- The minds apprehension of God
- Cf. Tillichs Subjective Reason
- Gods self-revelation through creation (13)
- Cf. Tillichs Objective Reason
Paul Cezánne--Mount Saint Victor
5Trope Revelation All is Number, from The
Hidden Sky
- Music and Lyrics by Mark Foley
6- The Hidden Sky is set in a post-apocalyptic world
where scientific and technological advancement
have been outlawed, mathematical computation is a
heresy, and seeking knowledge is forbidden, in
order to protect humanity from destroying itself
again. Ganil, the protagonist, has been recruited
by a group of underground scientists who have
taught her mathematics. On her own, she discovers
a miraculous set of numbers when rendered
graphically, the series creates a particular type
of spiral which can be found throughout the
natural world. Ganil is completely transformed
by her realization that numbers lie beneath all
the wonders in the world.
7- From the numbers comes the series,
- Comes the ratio, the Golden Mean,
- The balance and the link between
- The shapes that form the spiral.
- A graceful web around me, weaving all around me,
- Weaving into everything around me
- A graceful web emerging from a single thread,
- And the thread is number, a single thread of
number.
8- Passing through me, passing under me and over me
- and in and out and then around and back again
- All creation from a single thread,
- That pulls me in my heart, that passes through my
head, - That pulls me so I follow where Im led
- On from zero into one and moving higher, passing
one, two three, and higher still, - And higher still, and higher to infinity
9- From the spiral in the heavens to the spiral in
the seashell, from the swirling of the clouds to
the whirling water, in the cabbage and the corn,
from the spiral in the seashell to the spiral in
the rams horn, in the fist, in the ear, on the
tip of your finger, all is number. - From the leaves of the linden to the needles on
the pinetree, in the leaves of the elm and the
oak and apple, all is number.
10- Oh, I must have been sleeping,
- I must have been sleeping,
- I must have been sleeping,
- But Im wide awake now.
- In the eye of the spiral, all around me the one
great thought, the one great thought, - The Absolute, the Truly Real
- Its coming out of my head and into my heart, and
out of my heart and into my head, coming out of
my heart - Nothing is random at all!
- Two petals on the nightshade,
- Three petals on the iris,
- Five petals on the daisy,
- All is number
- All is number
11- Where there is a pattern, there is a purpose.
- There is a pattern!
- There is a purpose!
- An undeniable design
- One mind
- One plan
- One thought
In the spiral in the heavens, yes! In the spiral
in the seashell, yes! In the swirling of the
clouds and the whirling water, yes! Yes!
12- Three petals on the iris, five petals on the
buttercup, yes! Eight petals on the daisy, yes!
Yes! Yes! Yes!O, the Absolute, the Truly Real,
the Beautiful, the SimplicityI believe, I
believe, I believe, I believe that
- All is number, all is number. I believe, I
believe, yes! O, the wonder, O the love, the law,
the Absolute, the Beautiful, the Simplicity, the
passionate creation of God!
13- I have seen the face of God!
- One plan, there is one foundation
- I believe that I have seen the face of God!
- One mind, behind all creation
- Praise God for my longing heart!
- Praise God for my sacred part in the infinite
art - Praise be to the mind of God!
- Praise be to the mind of God!
14- Back before the stars were hung,
- God spoke in His native tongue
- symbol and sign.
- Then the light of the glorious sun unfurled,
- And in symbol and sign, God wrote the world.
- All is number
- In symbol and sign, God wrote the world.
15Fritz Eichenburg Christ of the Breadlines
- Christian solidarity with the poor and suffering,
symbolized by the spirituality of the cross,
introduces a hermeneutic of suspicion to our
experience of the world and its beauties. (52)
16he had no beauty in him
- The Christian message is not merely that God is
lovely, but that God is love not merely that God
is to be found in the pursuit of what is
attractive and desirable in the world, but that
God is transcendently and absolutely beautiful
and is to be found even in what to the worlds
eye is ugly and deformed and unworthy. (52-3)
Van Gogh Head of a Peasant Woman
17Eschatological perspective
- Beautyattains its full meaning only in the light
of the final, total order and harmony of Gods
kingdom, the triumph of Gods love over the evil,
sorrow, and pain, the ugliness and disorder that
we now experience in an incomplete and still
evolving world. (53)
Fra Angelico The Transfiguration
18Chapter 2 Paradigms in Theology and Art
Michelangelo David (1504)
19(No Transcript)
20Berninis David (1624)
21Hellenistic realism
realistic not in an ordinary visual sense but in
a Platonic sense its purpose is to portray not
what is seen but what is known by faith not the
world of physical appearances, but the world of
religious truths not material objects but
spiritual reality. (84)
22The really real is transcendental.
- Hellenistic thought takes a Platonic view
- Things of the material world are shadows or
images that refer to and to some degree
participate in the divine Mind. (97) - Cf. the Parable of the Cave
23Duccio di Buoninsegna (fl. 12781319) Last Supper
24Giotto di Bondone (1267?-1337) Last Supper
25Caravaggio The Supper at Emmaus
26 Diego Velázquez (1599-1660) Supper at Emmaus
27I think, therefore I am.
- The knowing subject is the starting point of
philosophical reflection.
René Descartes
28Pierre Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) The Luncheon of
the Boating Party
29(No Transcript)
30Vincent van Gogh Starry Night (1889)
31the structure of the world
- Per Ortega, with Cézanne painting recovers volume
and attention to shapes. (92)
Paul Cézanne (1839-1906)
32 Still Life
33The really real is transcendental.
- Hellenistic thought takes a Platonic view
- Things of the material world are shadows or
images that refer to and to some degree
participate in the divine Mind. (97) - Cf. the Parable of the Cave
34From Cézanne onwards, painting paints only ideas.
(92)
- Cézanne and Gauguin represent a rebellion, based
on the conviction that art must be revelatory.
(92)
Paul Gauguin (1848-1903)
35Spirit of the Dead Watching
36The real world is invisible
- Painting, like music, should devote itself not
to the reproduction of natural phenomena, but to
the expression of the artists soul. (93)
Wassily Kandinsky 1866-1944
37Composition 6
38Piet Mondrian (1872-1944) Blue Plane
39Salvador Dali Christ of St. John of the Cross
40Sacrament of the Last Supper
41Edvard Munch (1863-1944) The Scream
42Chapter 3 Art as a Theological Text
Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) Starry Night (1889)
43Art as Locus of the Faith Tradition
Sandro Botticelli (1444?-1510) Annunciation
44Different realms of meaning
- Spirituality
- Transcendence
- Preaching and worship
- Common sense and imagination
- Conceptual theology
- Theory and intellectual interiority
- Popular piety and official doctrine
Campin, Robert (13781444) Annunciation
45(No Transcript)
46Localization conveys theological truth and
relevance.
Paolo Veronese (1528-1588) The Feast in the House
of Levi
47the sorting out of conflicts within the
Christian tradition
James Christensen Jonah
48The encounter with the plurality of images in the
tradition can be liberating insofar as it allows
us to imagine differently.
James Tissot Journey of the Magi (1894)
Edvard Munch Madonna (1906)
49 Pictures become an auxiliary text, an
interpretive gloss that consciously or
unconsciously bears a further dimension of
message. (143)
Fra Angelico Crucifixion with Sts. Dominic and
Jerome
50Art as Visible Reflection of the Divine Beauty
and Mystery
Van Gogh View of Arles with Irises
51The Beautiful
- is itself a word about God and of God, even when
it is not explicitly tied to the sacred. - In sacred art, then, we encounter not only the
beauty of the salvific message, but also the
beauty of form in general. (144-5)
Boticelli Annunciation
52Tradition
- Roman Catholic theology consistently affirms that
there is a genuine knowledge of God through
creation and human history--a self-manifestation
of God attainable independently of explicit
biblical revelation. (146)
Fra Angelico The Stoning of St. Stephen
53Not simply sensible pleasure
Matthias Grünewald (Died 1528) The Crucifixion
54Limitations of Art as Text and as Revelatory Word
- Symbols and representations do not necessarily
yield their original meaning easily, even when
they have a positive aesthetic or spiritual
effect. (157)
55Sacramentality vs. Idolatry
- The iconoclast controversy highlighted the need
to distinguish between sacred arts
sacramentality and the widespread notion of the
religious image as the material abode of the
deity or repository of divine power.(159)
56Sacramentals
- Things or acts that are used as aids to the
Churchs principle acts of worship and
fellowship. (158)
57Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564) The Creation
of Man (detail)
58- The concreteness and specificity of the work of
art are an integral part of its power but at the
same time they can also overdetermine its message.
59(No Transcript)
60- Signs may draw attention to themselves as signs,
rather that to what they represent. (162)
61Anti-signs The Opiate of the People
William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825- 1905) The
Thanks Offering
Karl Marx (1818-1883)