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cbayer

(146,218 posts)
Tue Aug 19, 2014, 03:30 AM Aug 2014

Religion Is Alive and Well in Contemporary Art

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/s-brent-plate/religion-is-alive-and-wel_b_5676134.html

S. Brent Plate
Visiting Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Hamilton College

Posted: 08/18/2014 11:24 am EDT Updated: 08/18/2014 11:59 am EDT


Getty images

On a breezy summer day, I joined a group of artists and writers in the basement of the Liberty Bar in midtown Manhattan to discuss the many places religious life meets the visual arts.* Contrary to the shortsighted views of secular art critics, one thing is clear: religion is alive and well in contemporary art.

Artists are toying with and tweaking rituals until they become relevant again to a new age. Ancient sacred texts provide a warehouse of endlessly adaptable narratives, while in their bookish, printed forms they become physical objects that are parsed and pared into new shapes and designs. Symbols are utilized for compositional structures, mined for their meaningful connections, and invoke the viewer toward a contemplative repose. And in their creation and implementation, communities of people join together to collectively experience these aesthetically moving sights, sounds, smells, gestures, and bodies touching bodies. The religious and the aesthetic have never been far apart.

The day before our basement bar meeting, I was uptown at the Museum of Biblical Art, looking at the small but striking exhibition, "Back to Eden: Contemporary Artists Wander the Garden." Prominent contemporary artists in the show include Barnaby Furnas, Jim Dine, Naomi Reis, Fred Tomaselli, and Adam Fuss. Each in their own way uses the mythology of Eden to explore ongoing human themes of innocence, loss, and temptation, as well as environmental concerns. It's all the stuff that good mythologies are made of. (Hint: you don't have to believe Adam and Eve literally existed to "believe in" the mythology of it.)

Other major contemporary artists have consistently returned to religion as subject matter, as well as to the spiritual/aesthetic experience of making and experiencing works of art. My own shortlist of contemporaries includes Shahzia Sikander, Anselm Kiefer, Andy Goldsworthy, Ann Hamilton, Atta Kim, Bill Viola, Theaster Gates, Meredith Monk, Sanford Biggers, and James Turrell.

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