Thursday, November 8, 2012

Creativity for the healing of the nations.

Healing of the Nations © Genesis+Art Studio



FROM OUR STUDIO:

We recently completed a body of work for the new Skainos Chapel in East Belfast, Northern Ireland. Thirteen in total, our prayer paintings are reflections on the writings of Genesis and the book of Revelation. This particular piece called Healing of the Nations is a reflection on Rev. 22:2, and the leaves of the trees are for the healing of the nations. Working in the studio on our painted prayers paralleled the US elections. With words and images of anger, power grabs and venomous attacks, people of power added their ingredients and stirred up an unhealthy pot of hatred and grinding away at our very souls.  Post election calls for revolution and revenge are a result of months of divisive language. We hope that we are not as divided and cynical as it seems. It was timely for us to be reflecting on healing.

Our reflections for healing are delicate and spiritual at best, perhaps like peace itself. Our process of painting together gives us a feeling that life is being generated when we turn towards one another. Drawing close to the vine gives us life, while separating isolates and stirs more despair and destruction. Creation is happening and is constantly evolving, as one-friend states it’s a verb.

Creativity and the act of creating opens a space where the possibility for a transcendent experience can take place. This is what creativity does. It is a circle, a circle of creativity and wholeness that opens a dialogue between the divine, the viewer and us. And many people know, from their experience either in giving birth to the creativity in them or to receiving it from others, that these become some of our most profound mystical experiences. When we are open to one another and connect our relationship to our creator, we will travel the rapids of creativity together on a raft over which we have no control. We’re being borne along by the power of the Holy Spirit, trusting in this process of renewal.

In the thirteenth century, St. Thomas Aquinas said, that the same spirit that hovered over the waters at the beginning of creation hovers over the mind of the artist at work. The work of creation, whether it happened six thousand years ago or 13.7 billion years ago is still going on today. Creation is continuous and we as humans, gifted with creativity, have a role in carrying this great work forward. We are also radically dangerous for this same reason as we carry within us this divine power of creativity.

When we imagine healing between us, and all nations, we see art as a visual language that helps transform divergence into dialogue. Art and creativity can empower us so that what was separate becomes whole, what was severed becomes healed, what was difference can become welcomed diversity. Perhaps moving us closer to the healing of nations.

Painting as Prayer

Holden Village Vesper Service. Photo © Lisa Thompson
FROM OUR TRAVELS:

Painting as Prayer 
by 
Chuck Hoffman + Peg Carlson–Hoffman
Holden Village Vesper Service
Holden Village Voice 
24 August 2012

How many of you consider yourself an artist? Generally if I ask a Kindergarten class, “How many of you are artists?” nearly every hand waves enthusiastically in the air. By third grade, half the class and by sixth grade, maybe just a handful.

What happens to us? How do we lose our sense of creativity? Do we begin to dismiss our need for inspired expression as we dissolve into the mainstream of cultural needs? Could we awaken our imaginations and see new possibilities in what appears to be fixed and framed ways of doing things? How could the arts enable us to risk new ways of existing with one another in our world?

The arts can help till the soil of our hearts. By opening the door to our imaginations, art can help reveal, heal and renew our spirits, our churches, our communities and our world. We need to risk coming together in our diversity, and re–imagine issues that divide us; the health of our planet and the ability to see our neighbor in the image of our creator, God.

The arts can provide a new lens to explore our faith and an understanding of our place in creation.

In one of our classes at Holden, a painting was created and placed on the altar with a belief that creativity is a gift from God and using that gift is an offering back to God. The process itself is a form of prayer, where time seems suspended and our thoughts connect with our feelings. Color, shape and form become our language.

The process involves having our group around the table.
• Each person has a single color of tempera paint, the paint we all used in our beginning days as young artists.
• We paint to music, but there is no talking during the process to get at the contemplative and prayerful nature of painting in this way.
• When the bell rings paint moves to the left and we move to the right. That way you have a new color to work with and you are now interacting with your neighbors painting.
• We move around the table working with one another’s ideas.
• We do this until we have covered the entire paper.

We created this together as a group. We each brought our individual expression to the table. Coming alongside our neighbors, we shaped a collective visual language. We forged ideas that allowed individual perspectives that are still evident in the painting. But the painting became a work that none of us could have created alone. In creating–we must become transparent. In this vulnerability new revelations about ourselves and those around us can be revealed.

The imagination is like a lantern that illuminates the inner landscape of our life and helps us to discover our hidden riches. The claiming and reclaiming who we are as persons created in God’s image, growing in the likeness of Christ to serve a hurting world, comes as we intentionally open ourselves to the movement of the Holy Spirit. By pushing back the boundaries of the familiar and being guided into areas of the unknown, we experience that which we did not know was in us – surprised by God!