Tag Archive: Pictorial Thoughts

The Bored Christian Man.

bored

Lately, I’ve been wondering about a lot of the Christian men who have influenced me over the years.  They have been wild, reckless, and otherwise outcasts in their Christian walk.

I want to be more like them.  It’s going to mean doing things differently than I have.  Taking a few more chances.

After all, Christ in John chapter 7 seems to mislead his own brothers, go to the feast of Tabernacles and then almost cause a riot in the temple.

Doggy Demands

doggy-demands

Perpetual Life Waiting to Happen

perpetual-life-waiting-to-happen

Father – a pictorial definition.

father-a-self-portrait1I caught sight of myself in the mirror tonight when I came home to finally get some sleep.  I looked like I might have been sleeping on the streets for the last few nights.  Haggard, worn out and stressed, I decided to sit down and recuperate mentally before I recuperate physically by drawing a little.  Above is a self-portrait of the mess I am at the moment.  I think if I was one of the nurses walking into a room and seeing me there, I might have been a little freaked out.

Goodnight all.  Signing off at 8:53 pm.  Exactly 1 day and 1 minutes since Aidan arrived here.

Be Yourself.

uniqueI try to write pretty frequently around here.  I have experiemented with decloned being an art blog, a Christian forum, a photography site, and even a personal blog.

Truth is, I don’t know what it is.  It’s like some kind of extension of who I am.  If I seem have a complicated existence, the site has a complicated look.  If I am into art, the site is suddenly an art blog.  I draw a comic and it’s a comic blog.

I don’t want to narrow it down to just being a personal blog, because I think it’s too narrowly defined.  Rather I think decloned is about people who are fed up with trying to fit into the mold that culture wants to make for us.  We are tired of being  the sold out slaves to culture, and long to be ourselves, our true selves.

The Art and Theology Discussion

There’s been a bit of a discussion going on in the art & theology blogging world about the (to use Casey‘s term) “nexus” between the two.  I feel obliged to participate considering my last work “The Gospel of John. The Cross of Christ.” and the overall nature of my blog sometimes being completely art and sometimes completely theology (and sometimes something completely different).  I never seem to be able to separate the two.  Maybe you’ll understand why through this post, but first off I must tell you I am approaching it first through scripture, then through art.  It is only through these two lenses that theology really ever comes into focus.

John 1:3  – “Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.”

John makes his first few statements in his version of the gospel very cosmological including using the same wording as Genesis 1:1 “In the beginning…”

Where Genesis states “In the beginning God created the Heavens and the earth”  John equates the method of creation as something spoken.  The Word became flesh.

So when we see that John also includes this one particular narrative that is existent in some of the later manuscripts of John’s Gospel, it fits in nicely. Oh yeah, it’s the story where the woman is caught in adultery and Jesus stoops down and draws in the sand.  We don’t know what He wrote (or had drawn), but I think Michael Card has this spot on in the following song.

Art is one way God intimately shares part of who He is with us.  Being made in the image of God, we also are creators.  Worship being one of the main purposes of our particular creation, we can give back to God in a way that is more intimate, through a process of creating something completely of our own free will.  But since our free will can also choose rebellion, we can create wicked works as well.

Casey has asked me to respond to his 10 Theses on Art from a Christian Perspective. On some I agree completely, some only in part, and some I may disagree completely.  Keep in mind this is a discussion, not a flame contest.  Casey is a great guy and I respect him very much as an artist and as a fellow believer. I will also confess I had to look up words like “didactic” to even hope to respond semi-intelligently.  ;)   But for my reader’s sake here, I’ll use “lehmans” terms…

“As iron sharpens iron, so one man sharpens another.”  – Proverbs 27:17

  • Art (etymology=artifice,artificial) is a visual, organic parable. Emotional and conceptual aspects of art are of the soul. Auto-didactic art remains a function of nature.

Too often I think we use the word “nature” without equating it to a particular nature.  Eden was perfect nature, being made “good” from the standpoint of God.  After the fall of man we see imperfect nature as part of the curse.  One is pure.  One has a twisted element that resides in it.  If art inherent in “the creation” is a visual, organic parable of God’s then I would completely agree.  Romans 1:20 would be my basis of this statement.  “For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse.”

What happens is the above statement breaks down in this analysis.  Art is visual, organic and based out of emotion, even if we deny it to be so.  Even what seems to be “Auto-didactic”  from our point of view is planned, purposeful and providential.

  • Sacred art is a category of art that involves subject. If art were, or could be, “Sacred,” the Lord Jesus would have drawn the gospel.

Isn’t that why He created the monks and their illuminated manuscripts?  Seriously though, I would go the other way and say that Sacred art is that which is inspired by The Creator.  In scriptures, we see poetry & songs.  I would suppose if it were deemed relevant for us to have visual arts beyond what nature provides, that there would have been visual arts as well.

  • At some point, content must always supersede subject in art. Content is the construct and concept of the artist.

I agree.  Otherwise the art is completely irrelevant and meaningless.  It’s creation is in itself due to the free will of the artist.  It must become it’s own apart from it’s subject, but in doing so becomes the subject of the creator.

  • Nature is corrupt, but art may rise above nature inasmuch as it may be created in an environment of redemption.

Yet nature was not meant to be corrupt.  In our redemptive state as believers, can we create without the impact of corruption?  No, but insomuch as we come close determines the nature in us.  In this, Art also becomes reflective.

  • Making art is a creative act. Individuality is intrinsic to the making of art.

Free will.  I agree with Casey here.  God sat us down in the midst of this world and entrusted it all to us.  Our canvas never ends.  It is as wide and high as the Earth.  I think this is why I like Andy Goldsworthy‘s works.

  • The need of art is an act of faith, rather than a scientific quantity.

Agreed.  Completely.

  • Truth in art is no more self-evident or intrinsic than any other act in nature. We assert that truth is resident in Jesus Christ.

Agreed.  Though, at this point I will assume you mean perfect nature (since I addressed this earlier).

  • Beauty in the classic sense is resident in nature, and therefore must be interpreted.

Why?  C.S. Lewis writes in his allegory “The Great Divorce” of a man who is entranced with painting heaven so much that he refuses to live there.  If our interpretation is all we long to do, than we might want to reevaluate our own pride that we can ever truly interpret beauty.  In our human nature, even a redemptive human nature, we still fall short of the glory of God.  Our most redemptive act then is worship.

  • Art has a long life – longer than human mortality. With perhaps the exception of performance art and conceptual art, Fine Art is a corporeal object of exceptional longevity.

Agreed.  In this it also comes closest to our own longing for Heaven and ties into what we are created to be.  We are both eternal and physical.

  • We reject the theology that God must not be represented in art. God is personal, and art is one of the many (perhaps imperfect) means of relating to Him.

Agreed.  But is is also a way He relates to us.

Contest: Write the Winning Caption

I don’t know if it’s really a contest because there really isn’t a prize, but I’d like to see what you come up with.  Write your caption for the comic below in the comments.

outside-the-door

Feelings Aren’t Everything!

feelings-arent-everythingPeople will often search high and low for the feeling of being alive.  They’ll do crazy things, even illegal, immoral, even outright weird things to get that rush of so-called “life”.  Jesus said it pretty plainly…

John 10:10 (New King James Version)

The thief does not come except to steal, and to kill, and to destroy. I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly.

What we “feel” can often be misleading.  The things that are looking to steal, kill and destroy are not just mere things.  They are lies designed to offer something that seems like what we think is “real life” but it is a facade, a fake version of the truth.

#1 – Things I am thankful for…my wife.

I was looking through my pictures this morning and I ran across my favorite picture from my wife and I’s wedding. This funny one of her and her grandpa. I guess they were trying to fix the bouquet, but it just turned out to be one of those rare moments where people and personalities are captured so amazingly; frozen in time.

Anyway, I’ll try to update and list 9 more today…

picture 029

Images and thoughts for October 20th, 2008

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the dugal dog

Both of these images are more just for fun. Today I have been feeling a bit more relaxed than I’ve felt in quite some time. Yesterday was my last paid day at the church and I also for the first time felt completely at ease in the camera room at Olan Mills again. So yesterday my sales average was a lot better. I was happy with it.

I think the photography experience I am getting is also paying off in my art and the way I view light in day to day observance.

That second picture above of Dugal I took today with my little canon point and shoot, then played with it in paint shop a bit. I thought it turned out pretty cool. The original was a bit grainy as I didn’t use a flash for the portrait.

I may go out and take some pictures around town a little later. I am still deciding what to do with my day off. ;)