Yea, the sparrow hath found an house, and the swallow a nest for herself, where she may lay her young, even thine altars, O Lord of hosts, my King, and my God.
About 7 years ago, I started a blog featuring Catholic artists who were doing great stuff. My problem at first was that I was unable to find very many on my own. And then I started getting lots of requests from artists who wanted to be added — and many of these did work that was no different from the SoV2 stuff that I dislike. I deleted the blog.
Yeah, that's pretty much the first half of the problem. That Catholic artists in nearly all media, have the artistic sense they got from the line cartoons in the Good News Bible they got in 3rd grade catechism class.
The other half is that the great majority of the artists with serious training have no emotional maturity and no spiritual depth, no sense of historical context and no souls.
6 comments:
There's a young man here in NC who does some fantastic stuff.
http://www.matthewsgood.com/
And his blog - http://matthewsgood.wordpress.com/
Not sure why, but most of religious art is on his facebook page but not on his website. He's done several murals for local churches here.
It seems to be a rule that artists' 'blogs and facebook pages are more interesting than the websites. More lively and less static, I suppose.
That's beautiful. Do you know who the saint portrayed in this painting is?
Lydia
I would guess St Rose of Lima: the cross, the roses, white scapular looking garment, and what appears to be a crown of thorns with the jewels.
Cheers,
-John-
About 7 years ago, I started a blog featuring Catholic artists who were doing great stuff. My problem at first was that I was unable to find very many on my own. And then I started getting lots of requests from artists who wanted to be added — and many of these did work that was no different from the SoV2 stuff that I dislike. I deleted the blog.
Yeah, that's pretty much the first half of the problem. That Catholic artists in nearly all media, have the artistic sense they got from the line cartoons in the Good News Bible they got in 3rd grade catechism class.
The other half is that the great majority of the artists with serious training have no emotional maturity and no spiritual depth, no sense of historical context and no souls.
Post a Comment