Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Prayers for the healing of the nations.

Prayer canvas created for ASM. © Genesis+Art Studio
STORIES FROM THE ROAD:


WHEATON COLLEGE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. Our studio was asked to create a prayer canvas for the American Society of Missiology Conference held at Wheaton College June 20-23, 2013. The prayer canvas was completed by missionaries that gathered from around the world. The canvas was filled with written prayers for the nations and painted into the final visual prayer. On Saturday evening we gathered around the canvas that served as an icon for our prayers for the healing of the nations. The worship service, inspired by Holden: Prayer Around the Cross had us placing candles on the part of the world for which we offered prayers for healing. The creation of our prayer canvas will serve the ritual of worship gatherings and will remain as an artwork created by participants of the 40th Anniversary and used in future gatherings.


Learning from the wisdom of children.

photo © Genesis+Art Studio
STORIES FROM THE ROAD

EAST BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND. These are just a few of the young artists that helped our team create a mural in the Short Strand Community of East Belfast. Over the course of six months our team of University of Kansas senior design students gathered in our studio to collaborate and imagine a mural that the community could help us paint. Andrés Rivas–Cruz, Jon Duong, Lauren Bowles and Noel Rivard, all recent design school graduates, joined us to travel to East Belfast for two weeks of painting and working with youth of the Short Strand. We found it to be an amazing experience of how art can build relationships by creating something together that we could not create alone. Click for more about the Genesis Art Belfast Project

Monday, June 17, 2013

What Shoes Should I Wear?

William Jewell College 2013 Baccalaureate Service.
Photo © WJC
STORIES FROM THE ROAD

WILLIAM JEWELL COLLEGE, LIBERTY, MISSOURI. Once a week we gathered with William Jewell College students in our Genesis+Art Studio to create a communal piece of art. Together, we created an intensional space to explore our creativity, spiritual connections and to discover our common vision and purpose. We asked questions of each other and explored personal and global issues like economic upheaval, political instability, ecological extremes, cultural and religious polarization and how we might find our common ground rather than let these issues divide us. Who are we as a human community?  And How might we turn to one another? We transformed symbol, shape and color to create a prayer canvas to be used in a Taizé style vesper service called 
the Holden Prayer Around the Cross: For the Healing of the Nations. The art was part of our 2013 Baccalaureate Service homily to the 2013 graduates, parents and faculty titled: What Shoes Should I Wear? William Jewell College Commencement Ceremony.

Learning to live what we learn.

From our lecture Intersections: Finding Our Common Ground
photo © WJC
STORIES FROM THE ROAD

WILLIAM JEWELL COLLEGE, USA.
We were honored to be part of the Center for Justice and Sustainability Summit at William Jewell College the past several months. We worked with the college over a five month period that included an art exhibition of our work titled, Intersections: Finding Our Common Ground at the Stocksdale Gallery. We also lectured and facilitated several workshops, including working with William Jewell students in our studio. The lecture and art workshops explored the intersection of art, spirituality and reconciliation. We are grateful for what we learned from our time with students and faculty and their commitment to social justice. Click for more information about WJC Center for Justice & Sustainability

Monday, February 4, 2013

Art of collaberation

Dar al Kalima workshop photo © 2013 George Anderson
STORIES FROM THE ROAD:

Untitled, 2013
Tempera on paper
76.2 cm x 304.8 cm (30 in x 120 in)

BETHLEHEM, PALESTINE. This tempera painting is a collaborative work created 4 January 2013 by twenty Muslim and Christian artists at Dar al Kalima College in Bethlehem, Palestine. We gathered for a day of creative, artistic and spiritual exploration and concluded our time together by offering painted prayers on the World Canvas. Dar Al Kalima is located in the West Bank and was created and founded by the Rev. Dr. Mitri Raheb, a Palestinian Christian. Dar Al Kalima College promotes ideals of tolerance and respect for the thinking and beliefs of others. It encourages active communication between educators, theologians, journalists, musicians, and artists from Palestine and the rest of the world cultivating the region’s renewal and sustainability in a time plagued by destruction and unemployment. 

The Gate

The Gate © Genesis+Art STudio
FROM OUR STUDIO:

The Gate, 2013
Acrylic on Canvas
76.2 cm x 76.2 cm (30 in x 30 in)


Intersections: Finding Our Common Ground
Being trapped by the same way of thinking or safe, tried and true ideas of the past can become the walls that cut us off with a false sense of security. Perhaps what walls do most is separate us from the possibility of participating in relationship. Over and above our diversity, seeking relationship with one another can lead to growth and inspiration and together, lead us into new territory. Holding creative tension in this meeting place offers an alternative from extremes and prevents us from rushing to judgment and demanding a complete resolution to things before we have learned what they have to teach us. Light comes from elsewhere as we remain in this creative tension, drawing out the unique bit of heaven’s mystery in each other to form a new beginning. Through the use of archetypal shapes and symbols we seek to create a visible sign of invisible grace.

Intersections: Finding Our Common Ground

Finished exhibition at our Genesis+Art Studio  
FROM OUR STUDIO:

We recently completed a new body of work for our exhibition that begins at William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri. The exhibition titled: Intersections: Finding Our Common Ground will be in the Stocksdale Gallery until the end of March.  From there the show will move to St. Paul’s Monastery, Benedictine Center for Spirituality and Art in St. Paul, Minnesota and will be on exhibition through the month of May. If you are in Kansas City or Minneapolis, we invite you to spend some time with our work. We would like to hear from you.