amc-theater-w

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Saturday, 31 May 2014

A&O Meetup on June 11 in Nashville at the Upper Room's Christian Art Museum

Posted on 21:00 by tripal h
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS NEWS
By TAHLIB
Whether you are in Nashville for just a few hours or a few days, you will want to place the Upper Room Chapel and Museum at the top of your “must see” list. It is sure to be the stop you will tell your friends about and the one that will linger in your memory for years to come. The uniqueness makes the Upper Room Chapel and Museum Nashville’s best Christian attraction for individual tourists, church groups, students of all ages and a regular stop for tour bus companies. Each year the Upper Room Chapel and Museum hosts more than a thousand visitors. Christians of all denominations, religious history buffs of any faith, or those who are simply interested in art and sculpture visit this remarkable tourist spot to view the nearly life-size woodcarving of Leonardo da Vinci’s Last Supper and the many other interesting features of the chapel and pieces of art in the museum. [Source]
  • Exhibition: Museum's collection of 21st to 11th century art and artifacts.
  • Location: The Upper Room Chapel, 1908 Grand Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee, 877-899-2780 ext.7207, chapel.upperroom.org
  • When: Wednesday, June 11, 10:00 a.m. (2-hours)
  • RSVP: By Saturday, June 7 to "Tahlib(at)AlphaOmegaArts.org"
  • Cost: Admission is free. A $4.00 donation is encouraged
  • Dress: Dress blue, of course and the group tour
Read More
Posted in AOMeetup, AOSalons, Art Christian, Museums, Tennessee | No comments

Andre Rieu's "I Will Follow Him" With Nun's Choir

Posted on 11:58 by tripal h
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS NEWS
By TAHLIB

 

Today, my friend, Dr. Leon Boothe forwarded this YouTube video, first published on Jan 13, 2013 "Under The Stars - Live In Maastricht V." He wrote: "I have not forwarded anything for along time due to a number of reasons, but this is one of those WOW! moments. Enjoy!" Most of us remember this performance from "Sister Act" with Whoopie Goldberg, but it's also worth remembering the original secular romantic-love story by Little Peggy March from 1963.
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Performing Arts | No comments

Movie Review: Angelina Jolie Stars in ‘Maleficent,’ From Disney

Posted on 02:00 by tripal h
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Manohla Dargis
A scene from “Maleficent,” featuring Angelina Jolie.
HOLLYWOOD---Angelina Jolie makes a fabulous monster. As the title character in “Maleficent” — a divertingly different rethink of an awfully old story — she breezes through the movie, part superstar, part superfreak. She wears them like a crown in this live-action postscript to the visually stunning 1959 Disney animated musical “Sleeping Beauty.” This time, the focus isn’t on the beautiful, blond Aurora, who falls into a deep, bewitched sleep after pricking her finger on a spindle, but rather on the sinister scene stealer who cursed her in a fit of pique and a puff of acid-green smoke. “Maleficent” tells a new kind of story about how we live now, not once upon another time. And it does so by suggesting, among other things, that budding girls and older women are not natural foes, even if that’s what fairy tales, Hollywood and the world like to tell us. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Hollywood | No comments

Friday, 30 May 2014

‘Jesus Christ Superstar’ Tour Is Abruptly Canceled

Posted on 21:30 by tripal h
NYT: ARTSBEAT
By Dave Itzkoff
Touring production is "Canceled" without explanation. Courtesy of Tickemaster.com
A high-wattage and eclectically cast new North American touring production of “Jesus Christ Superstar” has been abruptly canceled, just over a week before what would have been its first performance. In a brief statement on Friday, an affiliate of the production company S2BN Entertainment announced “the cancellation of the Jesus Christ Superstar Arena Spectacular Tour” and said that all purchased tickets would be refunded. This production of the Andrew Lloyd Webber-Tim Rice rock opera was begun with some fanfare in April, with a cast that was to include Ben Forster, the winner of a British reality-TV competition, as Jesus; Brandon Boyd of Incubus as Judas; Michelle Williams of Destiny’s Child as Mary Magdalene; and John Lydon, the lead singer of the Sex Pistols, as King Herod. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Performing Arts, Trends | No comments

Just Like Taco Trucks, Art Takes to the Road

Posted on 21:00 by tripal h
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By ALYSON KRUEGER
The Rodi Gallery, parked in Astoria Park in Queens.
NEW YORK---Around the United States, art is on the roll. Inspired by the success of food trucks, gallery owners like the Grahams, who are based in Yorktown Heights, N.Y., have been taking their show on the road. For the last year, they have traveled to populated spots like the meatpacking district of Manhattan, the Peekskill train station and Astoria Park in Queens.  In interviews, mobile owners say they are trying to avoid the confines — and politics — of the gallery system; to help people think about art in different ways; or to reach more communities, especially those with young and old people who tend not to visit art districts. But art critics, scholars and gallery owners ask: Is it possible to become a force within the art world without commercial representation? [link]
Read More
Posted in Galleries, Trends | No comments

The Almost-Forgotten Jewish Artist Who Propagandized Against Hitler

Posted on 04:14 by tripal h
THE ATLANTIC 
By Steven Heller
A 1942 Szyk work depicting Hitler as the Anti-Christ. (courtesy Irvin Ungar)
CALIFORNIA---Forty years ago, the young rabbi Irvin Ungar found himself enamored with the work of a Polish émigré illustrator, Arthur Szyk. A new documentary created in part by Ungar, Soldier in Art: Arthur Szyk, has screened in six film festivals and is scheduled to show at the Laemmle Theatres in West Los Angeles and Encino, May 30 through June 5. The film shows Szyk’s visual commentary on American democracy, the horrors of Nazism and the Holocaust, and the rebirth of the Jewish people in Israel. Almost without exception, Szyk’s art was never ambiguous or abstract. “It almost always had a common theme,” Ungar says. “Freedom, not tyranny; justice, not oppression—which, when combined with the uniqueness of his style, is why Szyk became one of the leading political artists of the first half of the 20th century.” [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Judaic, Artist_ASzyk, California | No comments

White House Dedicates Stamp to Jewish Gay Right's Advocate Harvey Milk

Posted on 03:55 by tripal h
JWEEKLY
WASHINGTON, DC---The White House will dedicate a Harvey Milk stamp on its first day of issue. The “forever” stamp — valid for first-class postage even in the event of price hikes — was to be issued May 22. It features a photo of Milk, a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, taken in 1977, the year he made history when he became the first openly gay elected official from a major U.S. city. In November 1978, Milk and San Francisco Mayor George Moscone were shot and killed by a former colleague of Milk’s on the Board of Supervisors. Memorial services for Milk, a secular Jew, were held at congregations Sha’ar Zahav and Emanu-El.  [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Judaic, Washington DC | No comments

Art Review: ‘Object of Devotion,’ an Exhibition of Alabaster Sculptures

Posted on 03:50 by tripal h
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Ken Johnson
The head of St. John the Baptist on a plate (circa 1470-1500).
NEW YORK---A hotly debated issue among theologians in medieval Europe concerned what has since been called “the cult of images.” Proponents of images argued that they were educational and edifying. Iconoclasts feared that people would become enthralled by images and fall into the sin of idolatry. The debate about images was not just academic. It had profound, and sometimes violent and tragic, consequences in the real world, especially for art and artists. One sad chapter of that history is resonantly told by “Object of Devotion: Medieval English Alabaster Sculpture From the Victoria and Albert Museum,” a beautiful and fascinating exhibition at the Museum of Biblical Art. [link]

Museum of Biblical Art: “Object of Devotion: Medieval English Alabaster Sculpture From the Victoria and Albert Museum,” (Ends Junes 8, 2014); 1865 Broadway at 61st Street, New York, NY; (212) 408-1500; mobia.org
Read More
Posted in @MoBIAnyc, Art Christian, Museums, New York | No comments

‘Facing East’ Explores Mizrachi, Asian Influences on Art, Modern Jewish Culture

Posted on 03:49 by tripal h
JWEEKLY
By lyn davidson
“Further East: Library Cave” (part 1) by Andrea Guskin
CALIFORNIA---Judaism and Buddhism have both been major influences in the life and art of Guskin, one of 31 Bay Area artists exhibiting in “Facing East: A Jewish Orientation” at the Jewish Community Library in San Francisco. The show, which runs through Aug. 3, features painting, sculpture, paper, textiles, graphic arts and mixed media. Her three-piece collage uses tape, thread, paint, maps, scraps of Hebrew lettering, and photographic transparencies that capture images of shadows she and her children found at home. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Judaic, California | No comments

Art Review: Mary Carlson: ‘Paradise’

Posted on 03:40 by tripal h
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Ken Johnson
Mary Carlson’s glazed porcelain Mary Magdalene, with glass beads.
NEW YORK---Mary Carlson’s wonderfully soulful little ceramic sculptures in this show represent Adam and Eve and various Christian saints. From four and six inches tall, they are made of white porcelain and glazed in watery colors that appear faded by time, as if they’d been made many years ago and were recently found in a thrift shop. Titles indicate they are based on figures from famous paintings. "Paradise" at Elizabeth Harris Gallery, 529 West 20th Street, Chelsea, Through June 21. [link]

"Adam and Eve," 2014,glazed porcelain,4.25 x 4.75 x 2"

Read More
Posted in AddArtist, Art Christian, Galleries, New York | No comments

Theatre Review: ‘Early Shaker Spirituals,’ Plain-Spoken Tribute

Posted on 03:23 by tripal h
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Ben Brantley
A scene from the Wooster Group's "Early Shaker Spirituals."
NEW YORK---The gift of being simple has never been widely associated with the Wooster Group, whose austere and profoundly affecting “Early Shaker Spirituals” opened on Thursday night at the Performing Garage in SoHo. So to find the Wooster Group paying plain-spoken tribute to the Shakers, a sect celebrated for its religious ardor and unadorned aesthetic, feels like a setup for a joke. Abstemiousness is also a hallmark of the Shaker religion, a celibate 18th-century offshoot of the Quakers and now nearly extinct. A Dionysian spirit is reined in and refined until it becomes a precise worldly expression of something impalpable and divine. That’s what the Wooster Group, like the Shakers, has aimed for. May their lessons, too, be preserved for the generations to come. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, New York, Performing Arts | No comments

Thursday, 29 May 2014

Muslim World Poet Project Brings Artist to Detroit Today

Posted on 21:00 by tripal h
MIAMI HERALD
By AP

MICHIGAN---A Syrian-American hip-hop and spoken-word artist is performing in Detroit as part of the Poetic Voices of the Muslim World project. Omar Offendum is scheduled to appear Friday evening at the Detroit Public Library. The Saudi Arabia-born, Washington, D.C.-raised and Los Angeles-residing artist has toured the world and helped raise money for humanitarian relief organizations. Poetic Voices of the Muslim World is funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Islamic, Michigan | No comments

William Blake at Australia's National Gallery of Victoria

Posted on 01:00 by tripal h
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS NEWS
By TAHLIB
William Blake's Dante running from the Three Beasts (1824-1827) illustration for The Divine Comedy by Dante 
AUSTRALIA---The National Gallery of Victoria presents an exhibition showcasing its collection of works by William Blake. The exhibition includes watercolours, single prints and illustrated books. Due to the material’s light sensitivity, these works are only infrequently exhibited and the exhibition provides the rare opportunity to see the Gallery’s complete holdings of Blake’s work which span his full career, from his earliest to his latest years. The NGV owns thirty-six of the 102 watercolours Blake executed in the 1820s to illustrate Dante’s Divine Comedy, which are regarded as among the artist’s finest and most impressive creations. Founded in 1861, the National Gallery of Victoria is Australia’s oldest public art gallery.


Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Australia | No comments

Christians Need More Engagement in Culture Through Arts, Literature

Posted on 00:30 by tripal h
CHRISTIAN POST
By Alex Murashko
Image of TIME Magazine courtesy of WM Events
Christians should intentionally and intelligently do more to engage current culture through the arts, says Anthony Horvath, the executive director of Athanatos Christian Ministries, an apologetics ministry. "If you want to understand the power of culture, look at how gay 'marriage' went from being unfathomable to unstoppable in less than ten years. That doesn't happen by accident," Horvath recently said. "We want to help authors and artists understand how their work can address emotional and intellectual objections to the Christian faith and then help them do so, and similarly, goad apologists into considering how they can carry out their work through cultural engagement, rather than limiting themselves to argument," Horvath said. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian | No comments

In the City of Angels: Jews Up All night With God

Posted on 00:00 by tripal h
JEWISH JOURNAL
By Edmond Rodman
Detail of Shechina on “Angel Wall”
CALIFORNIA---In a City of Angels, with murals and figures of the agents of heaven fluttering everywhere, as we approach Shavuot and the time of Matan Torah — the receiving of the Torah — you would think that finding a place to have a revelatory moment would be as easy as stepping outside. On the night of June 3, many Jews here will celebrate the first night of Shavuot by traveling to their own Mount Sinais, climbing a metaphorical mountain of ideas, impressions and words that will be presented to help them imagine what it means to receive the Torah. According to a midrash, the Jewish people slept the entire night before receiving the Torah. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Judaic, California, Holydays Art | No comments

Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Exhibition at Capitoline Museums in Rome Lauds Michelangelo as a "Universal Artist"

Posted on 22:00 by tripal h
ARTDAILY
People visit an exhibition dedicated to Michelangelo at the Capitoline Museum in Rome on May 27, 2014 as part of the celebration of the 450th anniversary of the death of the Italian artist Michelangelo Buonarroti. The exhibiton is held from May 27 to September 14, 2014. AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI.
ITALY---The exhibition Michelangelo. Incontrare un artista universale, covering the life and work of this colossus for all times, is to be held at the Musei Capitolini on the occasion of the 450th anniversary of the death of Michelangelo Buonarroti in Rome on 18 February 1564. In the heart of the city, in that very Piazza del Campidoglio which the genius of Michelangelo made unique in the world, over one hundred and fifty works, of which around seventy by the Tuscan artist, from many of the leading cultural institutions in Italy and elsewhere, are to commemorate the 450th anniversary of the death of an artist who was so magnificent as to have a lasting influence not only on the arts in Italy but also on all universally known culture. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Artist_Michelangelo, Europe | No comments

Religious Art Treasures Uncovered at Church in Louisiana

Posted on 21:30 by tripal h
BAYOU BONE BUZZ
Exterior view of Saint John Berchmans Catholic Church in Cankton, founded 1925
LOUISIANA---Parishioners at St. John Berchmans Catholic Church are just now becoming aware of the nearly century’s old religious art treasures which were hidden from their view for nearly 50 years. Exposed for the first time since the small village church underwent a remodeling project during the 1960s are 25 circular paintings. Monsignor Russell Harrington, pastor of St. John Berchmans since 2012, said until he began his own investigation, few of the current churchgoers recalled the paintings, which feature prominent scenes, psalms and passages found in the Bible and New Testament. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Louisiana, Sacred Spaces | No comments

Shavuot: BAJC Marks Jewish Holiday and Gay Pride Month

Posted on 21:00 by tripal h
THE COMMONS ONLINE
Ruth and Naomi by Arthur Szyk. Courtesy of Contemporary Jewish Museum
VERMONT---On Tuesday, June 3, from 7 p.m. to midnight, Brattleboro Area Jewish Community (BAJC) will offer a fun evening of study for the holiday of Shavuot and to mark June as Gay Pride Month in Brattleboro. On Shavuot, it is customary to stay up all night to study Jewish texts. In honor of Gay Pride Month in Brattleboro, the community will study the contemporary midrashic (interpretive) reading of this text as a story of lesbian love and commitment between Ruth and Naomi. They’ll also consider Naomi as a stranger in a foreign land, Ruth as a convert, and Ruth and Naomi as powerful women who use gender relations to their advantage. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Judaic, Artist_ASzyk, Gay Spirituality, Holydays Art, Vermont | No comments

Church Reignites the Painting of Abstract Expressionist Victor Atkins

Posted on 02:35 by tripal h
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS NEWS
By TAHLIB
"Noah's Landing" by Victor Atkins. Acrylic, oil and oil crayon on canvas - 83" x 107". Courtesy of the artist
PENNSYLVANIA---Retired abstract expressionist, Victor Atkins debuted a new collection of paintings for the first time since 1988 this month at the White Stone Gallery in Philadelphia. The solo exhibition "Come and Play," ends June 13. For Atkins, this show is a celebration of his child-like joy in the unforeseen renewal of his artistic passion. In the mid-80's he gave up pursuit of a commercial artistic career and opened a bike shop in West Chester, PA, but while there his church community began commissioning his abstract work, and reignited his artistic career. Established in 2002, White Stone Gallery is located at 1817 Frankford Ave, Philadelphia, PA.
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Pennsylvania | No comments

Calligraphy Paintings by Javed Qamar Open Until Saturday

Posted on 01:00 by tripal h
PAKISTAN OBSERVER
"The Islamic Dream Land" by Javed Qamar
PAKISTAN---Artciti Gallery has organized an exclusive exhibition of Calligraphy paintings by Javed Qamar. The exhibition will continue till Saturday, May 31, 2014. Calligraphy artist have presented inspir-ing religious art pieces featured on verses of Holy Quran. On the occasion of inauguration, a large number of citizens of Karachi besides art critics were present. Javed Qamar presented ‘Quraani Ayat’ in gold and ink. De-spite using a difficult medium, the calligraphy was amazingly beautiful. The art piece was encased in a circle, with purple, light blue, light brown and black. Calligraphy exhibitions are rare, and mostly art galleries and artist are focusing on others theme. Javed Qamar was inspired by 16th century calligraphy art. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Islamic, Asia | No comments

Former Buddhist Art Collection of Baron Antoine Allard, the "Red Baron", to be Offered at Sotheby's

Posted on 00:00 by tripal h
ARTDAILY
A fine and rare large gilt-bronze figure of Buddha Shakyamuni
FRANCE---Almost 400 works of art from China, Tibet, Nepal and Japan will be offered in the Sotheby's Asian Art Sale in Paris on June 10th 2014. Many of the pieces come from private European collections and have never been offered on the market before. They comprise fine Chinese ceramics, jades and scholar's objects as well as Tibetan and Nepalese religious paintings and sculpture, and Japanese lacquerwork. Asian works of art formerly in the collection of Baron Antoine Allard (1907 - 1981). [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Buddhist, Auctions | No comments

Tuesday, 27 May 2014

Mystical Buddhist & Hindu Paintings Suddenly Appear at Angkor Wat

Posted on 23:00 by tripal h
DISCOVERY NEWS
By Jennifer Viegas
Detail of one mural from Angkor Wat
CHINA---Over 200 paintings dating to the 16th century were recently discovered at Cambodia’s Temple of Angkor Wat, the world’s largest religious monument. Angkor Wat is already famous for its spectacular bas-relief friezes depicting ceremonial and religious scenes, so this newly uncovered series of images only adds to the temple’s importance. This map of the temple shows, in red, where the newly found paintings are located. [link]
The Locations of the Uncovered Paintings
Read More
Posted in Art Buddhist, Art Hindu, Asia, Sacred Spaces | No comments

Television: ‘The Leftovers,’ Small Town Loss After the Rapture on HBO

Posted on 22:00 by tripal h
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Lorne Manly
Amy Brenneman plays the wife of a small-town police chief. Credit Paul Schiraldi/HBO
BROADCASTING---“The Leftovers,” which debuts on HBO on June 29, is not a David Lynchian exploration of small-town evil. The creation of Damon Lindelof and Tom Perrotta, based on the novel of the same name by Mr. Perrotta, it is an intimate family drama that traffics in issues like faith and loss and grief and how to proceed after an enormous tragedy. “This show is about the condition of living in a post-apocalyptic world where, if you look out the window, it doesn’t look like the apocalypse happened,” Mr. Lindelof said. “But it did.” [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Broadcasting | No comments

Refiguring Chinese Religious Art: Buddhist Devotion and Funerary Practice

Posted on 21:00 by tripal h
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS NEWS

ILLINOIS---Conference participants this week at the Franke Institute for the Humanities at the University of Chicago explored Buddhism and ancestor veneration, and their relationship in Chinese art. The conference had two interrelated purposes. The first was to conduct more systematic investigations of images, objects, architectural structures, and historical situations that reflect the interaction and interpenetration of Buddhist devotion and funerary practice. The second was to articulate broader analytical methods and interpretative approaches based on such historical investigations in order to show larger historical patterns. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Buddhist, Illinois | No comments

The Sacred Objects of 9/11

Posted on 04:04 by tripal h
RELIGION DISPATCHES
By S. Brent Plate
NEW YORK---Mark Schaming is the director of the New York State Historical Museum in Albany. As the National September 11 Memorial and Museum opened this past week, Schaming was interviewed about the process of collecting and showing such highly charged objects. "We secular people may not believe we are fetishists, bowing to divine sculptures for help in fertility and war, but our responses at memorials and museums show that we at least continue to be functional animists. There is an animating force at work within the material realm. Objects may or may not be living beings, but they do a very good job of conveying information, evoking emotion, and triggering memory. Which is why objects stand at the heart of the September 11 Museum, and why objects are the primary building material of religious traditions. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Art Others, Museums, New York | No comments

Crowds Flock to Neue Galerie in N.Y. to See Art Condemned as ‘Degenerate’ by Nazis in 1937

Posted on 03:41 by tripal h
THE WASHINGTON POST
By Philip Kennicott
NEW YORK---In March, shortly after the Neue Galerie in New York opened its exhibition “Degenerate Art: The Attack on Modern Art in Nazi Germany, 1937,” lines were forming outside the ornate Fifth Avenue mansion the museum calls home. So this exhibition has competing messages. The easiest, quickest and dumbest truism is that the Nazis unfairly demonized great artists, creating a pantheon of artist-martyrs whom we continue to celebrate today in part as recompense for how savagely they were treated. But the other message is that the practice of art is always deeply political, there are always winners and losers, and many artists, like other professionals, are very good at the infighting, undercutting and self-promoting it takes to climb the greasy pole. [link]

“The Four Elements,” by Adolf Ziegler, who was president of the Reich Chamber of Art
The Ziegler, a triptych, is placed next to a similarly scaled triptych, “Departure,” by Max Beckmann.

Read More
Posted in Art Judaic, Museums, New York | No comments

Korea's Flagship Museum Reopens Silla Hall

Posted on 03:24 by tripal h
KOREA TIMES
By Baek Byung-yeul
This Buddhist statue believed to be made in the Unified Silla Kingdom is one of the highlights at National Museum of Korea's new Silla exhibition hall.
KOREA---Many remember that there was a huge controversy over the Cultural Administration Heritage's (CHA) decision to loan the Maitreya in Meditation, the country's most famous Buddhist statue, to New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art (MET) last year. Nevertheless, some Korean expected that the seventh century gilt-bronze Buddhist statue would wow the audience at the Met's "Silla: Korea's Golden Kingdom" exhibition, which was held from November to February in New York, displaying artifacts of the Korean Peninsula's ancient Silla Kingdom (B.C. 57-A.D. 935). The biggest highlight was the cast-iron Buddhist statue, believed to be made between the late 7th and 10th century of the Unified Silla Kingdom (668-935) period, Korea's first unified country. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Buddhist, Asia | No comments

Monday, 26 May 2014

Theatre: The Wooster Group Presents ‘Early Shaker Spirituals’

Posted on 22:00 by tripal h
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Michael Paulson
Crew and cast members of “Early Shaker Spirituals”
NEW YORK---For three decades, the album sat on a shelf. Over the years, Ms. LeCompte, a founding member of the Wooster Group, an avant-garde theater collective, would occasionally listen to the album, “Early Shaker Spirituals,” for reasons she can’t quite explain, other than that she liked it. Now the Wooster Group is taking the album out for a serious spin....— is staging “Early Shaker Spirituals.” “This is not historical or religious or anthropological,” she added. “But there’s a love for the aesthetic and the dedication to the spiritual aspect of work, which is something that we find in our own house here. I love imagining that we sing these songs and make up these simple dances as an expression of what we do. It lifts my life up in the theater.” [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, New York, Performing Arts | No comments

Killing in the Name of Buddhism

Posted on 22:00 by tripal h
TRICYCLE
By Robert E. Buswell Jr. and Donald S. Lopez Jr.
This article is the fourth in the Tricycle blog series 10 Misconceptions about Buddhism with scholars Robert E. Buswell Jr. and Donald S. Lopez Jr. One sometimes hears people say, “A war has never been fought in the name of Buddhism.” Exactly what “in the name of Buddhism” means is debatable. Not debatable is that Buddhists over the centuries have engaged in violent acts, including warfare, and have also condoned such acts. Buddhism, like other world religions, has its own justifications for violence. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Buddhist | No comments

Around the Art World in Six Minutes: Artnet's Profile of Bill Viola

Posted on 22:00 by tripal h
ARTNET NEWS
By Alexander Forbes
Bill Viola, The Martyr (2014) Photo: TV Lab via Facebook
Profile: “I saw this blue glow on the screen before the actual image came up, something in my brain said I’d be doing this all my life,” says eminent video artist Bill Viola about the first time he turned on a video camera in Nicholas Wroe’s excellent look back at the artist’s career in the Guardian. Published to coincide with the unveiling of Viola’s long-term installation Martyrs (2014) at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London last week. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Artist_BViola, Europe, Sacred Spaces | No comments

Thailand's Semidivine Buddhist King Bhumibol Endorses Military Coup

Posted on 02:00 by tripal h
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Thomas Fuller
King Bhumibol during his period of service as a Buddhist monk Courtesy Royal Thai Embassy
THAILAND---Thailand’s military junta said Monday that it would stay in power “indefinitely” and that its rule had been endorsed by King Bhumibol Adulyadej, the monarch of nearly seven decades who has semidivine status in the country. An endorsement by the king, who is 86 years old and ailing, is crucial for the coup leaders. After Thailand’s previous coup, in 2006, the top general was photographed prostrating himself before the king. King Bhumibol is above criticism both by tradition and law; insulting him, the queen or the crown prince is punishable by up to 15 years’ imprisonment under a law that has been broadly interpreted by the authorities in recent years. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Buddhist, Asia, Clergy, Trends | No comments

Monday's Madonna & Child from 16th Century at Auction

Posted on 01:30 by tripal h
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Scott Reyburn
Detail of The 16th-century German painting ‘‘Virgin and Child on a grassy bank.’’ Credit Sotheby’s
UNITED KINGDOM---Up until the 1980s, paintings by canonical figures such as Rembrandt, Rubens and Velázquez were the main income-generators for Sotheby’s and Christie’s. Since then, they’ve fallen out of fashion with wealthy collectors, who increasingly want to buy instantly recognizable works by “brand” artists rather than connoisseurs’ paintings whose authorship might be open to question. Now 20th- and 21st-century art, and even Chinese antiques, are more lucrative categories for the salerooms. Last year, worldwide auctions of Old Master paintings raised 1 billion euros, or about $1.4 billion. Unlike the supercharged market for contemporary art, auction sales of Old Masters have actually contracted; in 2011, they stood at €1.4 billion. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Auctions, Europe, Madonna & Child | No comments

Wedding Planned for Rabbi Who Conveys Torah Topics Through Nail Art

Posted on 01:00 by tripal h
THE NEW YORK TIMES
Nail art for the book of Exodus by Rabbi Buechler
NEW YORK---Rabbi Yael Miriam Buechler, a daughter of Laura A. Buechler and Rabbi Howard R. Buechler of Dix Hills, N.Y., is to be married Sunday to Yair Kramer, a son of Deborah Kramer and Rabbi Michael Kramer. The bride’s father will officiate at the Dix Hills Jewish Center, where he is the rabbi, with the groom’s father participating in the ceremony. The bride, 28, who is keeping her name, is the rabbi in residence at the Lower School of the Solomon Schechter School of Westchester in White Plains. She is the founder of MidrashManicures.com in Manhattan, which conveys Torah topics through nail art done at religious institutions and synagogues. She graduated magna cum laude from Brandeis and was ordained at the Jewish Theological Seminary in Manhattan. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Judaic, New York | No comments

Sunday, 25 May 2014

Pope Lays Wreath at Tomb of Zionism’s Founder

Posted on 23:30 by tripal h
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Jodi Rudoren
Pope Francis prayed after laying a wreath at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial.
ISRAEL---Making history for the second day running, Pope Francis laid a wreath Monday on the grave of the founder of Zionism, becoming the first pope to do so, a gesture of support to Israel after several symbolic signals the day before that lent a spiritual lift to Palestinian aspirations for sovereignty. Francis also joined the Israeli leaders in condemning Saturday’s slaying of at least three people outside the Jewish museum in Brussels, which he called a “criminal act of anti-Semitic hatred.” [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Art Judaic, Asia, Roman Catholic | No comments

Pope & Patriarch Pray Together in Jerusalem's Holy Sepulcher Church

Posted on 12:35 by tripal h
THE WASHINGTON POST
By Associated Press, Updated: Sunday, May 25, 3:21 PM

ISRAEL---Pope Francis and the spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians have prayed together inside the Jerusalem church that symbolizes their divisions, calling their historic meeting a step toward healing the centuries-old Catholic-Orthodox schism. Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I embraced one another in the stone courtyard outside the 12th century Church of the Holy Sepulcher and recited the “Our Father” prayer together once inside. It was an unprecedented moment of solemnity at the spot where Christians believe Jesus was crucified and resurrected. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Roman Catholic, Sacred Spaces | No comments

RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK

Posted on 02:00 by tripal h
ALPHA OMEGA ARTS NEWS
By TAHLIB
Why do we memorialize? A new altarpiece for St Paul’s Cathedral in London is a video quadriptych of unnamed figures engulfed in flames, doused in water, buried by soil and strung up by the ankles. Installed during a week when death felt close at hand, this digital work "Martyr's" (above) by Bill Viola is my NEWS OF WEEK. Critics predict Viola's universal work will change the future of religious art. During this week, when a family member passed away; 3 shot dead at a Jewish Museum of Belgium; 7 killed in a rampage in California; and a museum opened for 2,977 who died in NYC; we ask, how should art memorialize?
In other religious art news from across the USA, and around the world:
  • Buddhist Art of Week: Korea's iron Buddha gets NYC star status at home [More News]
  • Christian Art of Week: El Paso Museum of Art announces retablo exhibition [More News]
  • Hindu Art of Week: Houston's Asia Society exhibit spotlights Hindu deities [More News]
  • Islamic Art of Week: New art by Negar Ahkami at Jen Bekmann's 20x200 [More News]
  • Judaic Art of Week: Gifts of Jewish art from the Jewish heartland [More News]
  • Interfaith Art News: Deadline for Butler University's Religion, Spirituality and the Arts
Join the journey. We are all members of one spiritual family united in the search for human meaning through art from the religious imagination. For us, it's more than Art. It's Religion. We follow artists who explore religious ideas with their creativity. When you follow religious artists, you join others who do the same. Some of us join as "Collectors" and make policy decisions; others join as "Friends" who gather for the dialogues; and most of us join as "Subscribers" to this "free" weekly newsletter; (or follow on: Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook, or Soundcloud).


Read More
Posted in AOANews, AONews, Artist_BViola | No comments

Saturday, 24 May 2014

Stained Glass for the 21st Century: St Paul’s Installs Plasma Screen Art

Posted on 02:00 by tripal h
THE TELEGRAPH
By John Bingham
Martyrs (Earth, Air, Fire, Water), a new large-scale video installation
by artist Bill Viola for St Paul's Cathedral (JULIAN SIMMONDS)
UNITED KINGDOM--- It is being viewed as a 21st century answer to the medieval stained glass masterpieces or renaissance frescoes depicting vivid Biblical scenes of suffering and death. St Paul’s Cathedral in London has become the first church in Britain to introduce a permanent a video art installation – complete with hints of bondage and waterboarding. Martyrs, by the American artist Bill Viola, is made up of four plasma screens installed next to the High Altar in Sir Christopher Wren’s church. The panels, arranged like a traditional altarpiece, simultaneously show four seven minute-films, in which the martyrs are subjected to torture and death through the elements: earth, air, fire and water. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Artist_BViola, Europe | No comments

Friday, 23 May 2014

Anthropologist and Photographer Reinterpret "Pattini-Kannaki" Cult Via Photographs

Posted on 02:00 by tripal h
THE HINDU
By Shailaja Tripathi
Devotee at the Door Opening ceremony of the annual Kannaki Amman festival, Manchanthudawai, Eastern Province
SRI LANKA---During the brutal civil war in Sri Lanka many found shelter in her spaces and many saw life slipping away in those same spaces as the militant outfit LTTE used some of those sites to inflict more damage. These are the shrines of the goddess Pattini-Kannaki revered by Sinhala Buddhists and Tamil Hindus in Sri Lanka. With “Invoking the Goddess” (presented by Ritu Menon’s Women Unlimited), the anthropologist and photographer duo of Malathi de Alwis and Sharni Jayawardena set out to document the Pattini-Kannaki cult and retell it in the context of war. The result is an assortment of 50 photographs on view at the art gallery of India International Centre. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Hindu, Asia | No comments

Why the de Unger Family Decided to Move The Keir Collection From Berlin to Dallas

Posted on 00:00 by tripal h
DALLAS MAGAZINE
By Peter Simek
Rock crystal ewer, Egypt, late 10th-11th century, Fatimid, mounts by Jean-Valentin Morel, Sevres (France), 1854, rock crystal with enameled gold mounts, The Keir Collection of Islamic Art on loan to the Dallas Museum of Art
TEXAS---The first object from the Kier Collection, a trove of Islamic Art that includes nearly 2,000 object and will be on a 15-year renewable loan with the Dallas Museum of Art, was unveiled at the museum this morning. The Keir Collection was amassed by the late Hungarian real estate magnet Edmund de Unger. Before passing away in 2011, de Unger penned a long-term loan agreement with the Pergamon Museum of Islamic Art in Berlin to house, conserve, and display his collection. However, earlier this year, the Dallas Museum of Art announced that it had negotiated a similar long-term agreement with the de Unger family that would see the massive Islamic collection move from Berlin to Dallas. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Islamic, Museums, Texas | No comments

Thursday, 22 May 2014

Hazem Mahdy’s Moments of Pure Self-Expression

Posted on 23:00 by tripal h
GULF NEWS
By Jyoti Kalsi
Hazem Mahdy’s abstract photographic works resemble the geometric patterns seen in Islamic art or in fractal art
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES---At first glance, UAE-based Egyptian artist Hazem Mahdy’s abstract photographic artworks resemble the geometric patterns seen in Islamic art or in fractal art, which is inspired by the symmetry in nature. But a closer look reveals that these digitally created patterns are actually composed of repeated images of the artist’s body. Mahdy’s style was inspired by a vision he saw while meditating. The image that appeared in his mind was that of a tree with roots and branches made of human arms and hands holding on to each other to form a massive grid of interconnected hands. In his last show the artist tried to create visual interpretations of this mental image by using photographs of his own arms, hands and torso to create a series of interesting patterns. In his latest show, “Atman”, Mahdy explores this concept and technique further. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Islamic, Asia | No comments

Liberian President Visits Museum of Islamic Art

Posted on 22:00 by tripal h
GULF-TIMES
Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf being seen off at Doha International Airport
DOHA---President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia and her accompanying delegation yesterday visited the Museum of Islamic Art (MIA). During the tour, President Ellen Johnson was briefed on the contents of the MIA which include manuscripts, artefacts and precious stones which have been collected from the three continents and other Middle Eastern states and countries such as Spain and India. The museum’s contents reflect the period extending from the 7th and the 20th Centuries. Following the tour, the Liberian president signed the honorary record of the MIA highlighting the contents of the MIA describing these collections as a wealth to the Islamic culture and heritage. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Islamic, Asia | No comments

Bill Viola Video Installation Finds Permanent Home at St. Paul's Cathedral

Posted on 21:00 by tripal h
BOSTON GLOBE
Detail of Bill Viola's Martyrs (2014). Courtesy of The Guardian
UNITED KINGDOM---St. Paul's Cathedral in London is playing host to a strikingly modern altar piece—American artist, Bill Viola's video installation called 'Martyrs'. [Video]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Artist_BViola, Europe | No comments

Atanu Roy's Illustrations of Magical Indian Mythology

Posted on 06:08 by tripal h
THE HINDU
INDIA---Every artist has his own way to express his or her feelings and ideas. Illustrations and illustrators are often victims of this thinking and seen as minor artists. This idea slowly crumbles while looking at the exhibition “The Maverick’s Palette”, the first solo show of the illustrator Atanu Roy, being held at the India International Centre till May 23. The first artworks come from perhaps his biggest assignment: Magical Indian Myths. This book is not for children alone, but for everyone. Anger and violence are present in the drawing that depicts a furious Lord Shiva with his hand in Pushan’s mouth while ripping out his teeth. In the end, an illustrator uses his art to materialise imagination. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Hindu | No comments

New Art by Artist Negar Ahkami at Jen Bekmann's 20x200 Art Site

Posted on 06:02 by tripal h
20x200.com 
Backsplash by Negar Ahkami, 11"x14" ($60) | 16"x20" ($240) | 24"x30" ($1,200)
NEW YORK---Today we're featuring a brand new to 20x200 artist, painter Negar Ahkami. As a first-generation American born to Iranian parents, Ahkami's work is heavily influenced both by Persian-Islamic traditions and Western notions of the individual, personal emotions and experimentation. Like many children born to immigrant parents, Negar Ahkami's contemplations on the duality of her identity continue to inform her life—and work. She uses her art to select the aspects of each culture she wants to own, on her own terms. In Backsplash, sapphire textures and patterns sweep the frame, reflecting the influence of Persian-Islamic art on Negar's work. The stylized representation and symbolism are reminiscent of beautifully illuminated Persian manuscripts, decorative tiles and rugs. But the painting is also uniquely Western and of her imagination—a work that is emotional and impossible to categorize. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Islamic, New York | No comments

For Artist David Kern, the Past Pushes Artist to New Style

Posted on 04:19 by tripal h
THE SENTINEL
Harrisburg artist David Kern re-interpreted images in his artwork currently on display at the LGBT Center Gallery in Harrisburg.
PENNSYLVANIA---For many people, a look into the past can propel them forward. It was precisely a look into the past at the great Renaissance artists that has helped pushed Harrisburg artist David K. to break out of his familiar style and techniques. David K., aka David Kern, former Carlisle resident, has spent recent years working with abstract shapes in acrylic paints. But in is his first new series in over a year and a half, Kern puts a modern twist on late 14th century and early 15th century iconic religious art works by the Renaissance masters, including El Greco, Caravaggio, Bernini and Michelangelo. “Gospel, a Modern Twist by artist David K.” opened May 16 at the LGBT Center Gallery in midtown Harrisburg. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Gay Spirituality, Pennsylvania | No comments

Video of Bill Viola on his Commission for St Paul's Cathedral

Posted on 04:09 by tripal h
THE TELEGRAPH
Video by Heathcliff O'Malley
Scenes from Bill Viola's video altarpiece which will be installed at St Paul's Cathedral
UNITED KINGDOM---A few years ago, the American artist Bill Viola got a mental block about the Virgin Mary. This is a big moment in the history of religious art. Over the last two millennia, tens – even hundreds – of thousands of religious paintings have been placed on the altars of the world in numerous different media. But this is the first time that moving images will take a prominent place in one of the great cathedrals of Christendom. He conceived the altarpiece dedicated to Mary to be about earth and birth, the other work is dedicated to The Martyrs (Earth, Air, Fire Water), is about death, release and ascension. [link]
Read More
Posted in Art Christian, Artist_BViola, Europe, Sacred Spaces, Trends | No comments
Newer Posts Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Beauty of Message Show Highlights Islamic Art
    SAUDI GAZETTE By Syed Mussarat Khalil Hamida Ali Reza (L), Najia Aizaz (C) and Afshan Khokher (R) cut the ribbon to open the Arabic calligra...
  • Family Behind Hobby Lobby Has New Project: Bible Museum
    THE NEW YORK TIMES By Alan Rappeport The proposed museum, shown in this rendering, is scheduled to open in 2017. WASHINGTON, DC---The evange...
  • In Brooklyn, a Trove of Hebrew Books From Centuries Past
    THE NEW YORK TIMES By Allan Kozinn A page from Maimonides’s Mishneh Torah from 1574.Credit The Chabad-Lubavitch Library NEW YORK---The Chaba...
  • For The Love of Basquiat: 25 Years After His Drug Overdose\
    VANITY FAIR By Ingrid Sischy ELECTRIC DUO Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat with their collaborative paintings at the Tony Shafrazi Galle...
  • Norton Simon Museum to Return Contested Ancient Statue to Cambodia
    THE LOS ANGELES TIMES By David NG Temple Wrestler, c. 925-50, Cambodia: Koh Ker, Angkor period, 900-975, Sandstone, 61-3/4 in. (156.8 cm), N...
  • A Victory for ‘Religious Freedom’ is a Loss for Religion
    DAILY BEAST By Gene Robinson WASHINGTON, DC---In the next few weeks, the Supreme Court of the United States will rule on two cases taken up ...
  • Sacred Spaces: Curbing Memorial Sprawl
    THE WALL STREET JOURNAL By Catesby Leigh An earlier proposal by Frank Gehry for the Eisenhower Memorial raised objections from members of Ik...
  • Pittsburgh Art Exhibit Canceled After Palestinian Artists Threatened, Pull Out
    JTA | JEWISH NEWS SOURCE A woman hold a Palestinian flag during a protest to show solidarity with Palestinians. Photo by Reuters / Haaretz A...
  • Op-Ed: The Mirage of Political Islam
    THE NEW YORK TIMES By Mustapha Tlili During the decades of dictatorship in the Arab world, political Islamists marketed themselves in the We...
  • Qatar’s National Museum Eyeing 2016 Opening
    DOHA NEWS By Shabina Khatri In this video published on YouTube in late April, QMA offers a peek into the construction of the National Museum...

Categories

  • @ArtPrize
  • @BYUMOA
  • @FreedomCenter
  • @IMAmuseum
  • @MetMuseum
  • @MoBIAnyc
  • @TheJewishMuseum
  • Add2Calendar
  • AddArtist
  • Africa
  • AOANews
  • AOINSPIRE ME!
  • AOMeetup
  • AONews
  • AOPrize
  • AOProject
  • AOSalons
  • Arabia
  • Arizona
  • Art Atheist
  • Art Baha'i
  • Art Buddhist
  • Art Christian
  • Art Hindu
  • Art Interfaith
  • Art Islamic
  • Art Judaic
  • Art Native American
  • Art Others
  • Art Prizes
  • Art Salons
  • Art Sikh
  • Artist_ALeibovitz
  • Artist_ASerrano
  • Artist_ASzyk
  • Artist_AWarhol
  • Artist_BFurnas
  • Artist_BViola
  • Artist_CGanesh
  • Artist_CKent
  • Artist_DIannone
  • Artist_GDemetz
  • Artist_HFinster
  • Artist_HSugimoto
  • Artist_IQureshi
  • Artist_JMBasqauit
  • Artist_KWiley
  • Artist_LEssaydi
  • Artist_LWHenke
  • Artist_MChagall
  • Artist_MHartley
  • Artist_Michelangelo
  • Artist_MRothko
  • Artist_QOwens
  • Artist_RBKitaj
  • Artist_TMas
  • Artist_YMoully
  • Artist_ZHuan
  • ArtRace
  • Arts Education
  • Arts Management
  • Arts Marketing
  • Arts Prizes
  • Arts Research
  • Asia
  • Auctions
  • Australia
  • Broadcasting
  • California
  • Canada
  • Censorship
  • Clergy
  • Collectors
  • Colorado
  • Commission
  • Commissions
  • Connecticut
  • Controversey
  • DIA detroit
  • DisneyBritton
  • Europe
  • Fashion Arts
  • Festival-Fair
  • Florida
  • Folk Arts
  • Freedom
  • Freedom of Expression
  • Freedom to Marry
  • Galleries
  • Gay Spirituality
  • Georgia
  • Gods Art Museums
  • Government
  • Government Policy
  • Hate Crimes
  • Hawaii
  • Higher Education
  • Hollywood
  • Holydays Art
  • Illinois
  • Indiana
  • Islamic Art
  • Kansas
  • Kasey
  • Kentucky
  • Louisiana
  • Madonna & Child
  • Maine
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • Michigan
  • Minnesota
  • Missouri
  • Mormons
  • Museums
  • Nevada
  • New Hampshire
  • New Jersey
  • New Mexico
  • New York
  • North Carolina
  • Ohio
  • Oklahoma
  • Oregon
  • Pennsylvania
  • Performing Arts
  • Philanthropy
  • Provenance
  • Public Art
  • Publishing
  • Religious Freedom
  • Rhode Island
  • Rituals
  • Roman Catholic
  • Sacred Spaces
  • Sacred Text
  • South America
  • South Carolina
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Trends
  • Utah
  • Vermont
  • Verneida Britton
  • Virginia
  • Washington DC
  • Wisconsin

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2014 (500)
    • ►  August (19)
    • ►  July (158)
    • ►  June (160)
    • ▼  May (140)
      • A&O Meetup on June 11 in Nashville at the Upper Ro...
      • Andre Rieu's "I Will Follow Him" With Nun's Choir
      • Movie Review: Angelina Jolie Stars in ‘Maleficent,...
      • ‘Jesus Christ Superstar’ Tour Is Abruptly Canceled
      • Just Like Taco Trucks, Art Takes to the Road
      • The Almost-Forgotten Jewish Artist Who Propagandiz...
      • White House Dedicates Stamp to Jewish Gay Right's ...
      • Art Review: ‘Object of Devotion,’ an Exhibition of...
      • ‘Facing East’ Explores Mizrachi, Asian Influences ...
      • Art Review: Mary Carlson: ‘Paradise’
      • Theatre Review: ‘Early Shaker Spirituals,’ Plain-S...
      • Muslim World Poet Project Brings Artist to Detroit...
      • William Blake at Australia's National Gallery of V...
      • Christians Need More Engagement in Culture Through...
      • In the City of Angels: Jews Up All night With God
      • Exhibition at Capitoline Museums in Rome Lauds Mic...
      • Religious Art Treasures Uncovered at Church in Lou...
      • Shavuot: BAJC Marks Jewish Holiday and Gay Pride M...
      • Church Reignites the Painting of Abstract Expressi...
      • Calligraphy Paintings by Javed Qamar Open Until Sa...
      • Former Buddhist Art Collection of Baron Antoine Al...
      • Mystical Buddhist & Hindu Paintings Suddenly Appea...
      • Television: ‘The Leftovers,’ Small Town Loss After...
      • Refiguring Chinese Religious Art: Buddhist Devotio...
      • The Sacred Objects of 9/11
      • Crowds Flock to Neue Galerie in N.Y. to See Art Co...
      • Korea's Flagship Museum Reopens Silla Hall
      • Theatre: The Wooster Group Presents ‘Early Shaker ...
      • Killing in the Name of Buddhism
      • Around the Art World in Six Minutes: Artnet's Prof...
      • Thailand's Semidivine Buddhist King Bhumibol Endor...
      • Monday's Madonna & Child from 16th Century at Auction
      • Wedding Planned for Rabbi Who Conveys Torah Topics...
      • Pope Lays Wreath at Tomb of Zionism’s Founder
      • Pope & Patriarch Pray Together in Jerusalem's Holy...
      • RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK
      • Stained Glass for the 21st Century: St Paul’s Inst...
      • Anthropologist and Photographer Reinterpret "Patti...
      • Why the de Unger Family Decided to Move The Keir C...
      • Hazem Mahdy’s Moments of Pure Self-Expression
      • Liberian President Visits Museum of Islamic Art
      • Bill Viola Video Installation Finds Permanent Home...
      • Atanu Roy's Illustrations of Magical Indian Mythology
      • New Art by Artist Negar Ahkami at Jen Bekmann's 20...
      • For Artist David Kern, the Past Pushes Artist to N...
      • Video of Bill Viola on his Commission for St Paul'...
      • Islamic Calligraphy Int’l Center to Open in Malaysia
      • Bill Viola: Martyrs (Earth, Air, Fire, Water), St ...
      • Korea Gives it's Iron Buddha New Status Because of...
      • El Paso Museum of Art Announces Retablo Exhibition...
      • Will Tourists Follow Pope Francis into the Dangers...
      • Sculpture of Devotion from the Brooklyn Museum at ...
      • Movie Review: ‘Belle’ Centers On a Biracial Aristo...
      • Matt Kenny Explores the Psychological Poetry of NY...
      • Former President's Mandela and Walesa to Receive t...
      • As Pope’s Visit Nears, Hate Crimes a Concern in Is...
      • Hallelujah! Why Bill Viola's Martyrs Altarpiece at...
      • Tripada Murti Form of Shiva Reminds Hindus of the ...
      • Shridhar Iyer’s Paintings Transmit a Very Strong a...
      • Gifts of Jewish art From the Jewish Heartland
      • Walters Art Museum Awarded $913K in Grants
      • Asia Society Exhibit Spotlights Hindu Deities
      • Oklahoma's Sherwin Miller Museum of Jewish Art Bre...
      • Canada's Sikh Community Celebrates Holyday of Vais...
      • Islamic Art Exhibition Head to Kremlin, then to Un...
      • Curator Yasmin Sharabi Tests the Boundaries of Art...
      • Colossal Buddha's Outlasting Dynasties, Now Emergi...
      • ArtPrize 2014: If You Paint it, They Will Come – t...
      • Two Staten Island Congregations Participate in 4th...
      • I Know What You Did Last Sunday: Only 40% of Ameri...
      • RELIGIOUS ART | NEWS OF WEEK
      • Thousands Expected in Texas to Mark Opening of Har...
      • Witnesses to History: Buddhist Towers in China's C...
      • V&A Museum's Exhibition of Islamic Art to Tour Russia
      • S. Sudayadas Has Mastered the Art of Freezing a Mo...
      • Family and Church Fued Over Thomas Eakin's Portrait
      • In Art Installation: ‘Rachel, Monique,’ Sophie Cal...
      • Mateo Hevezi 's "Spirits Among Us" Explores the Wo...
      • Little Boy Blue: A&O Prize Honoree Norbert Krapf's...
      • Catholic League Mocks Sotheby's Auction of ‘Piss C...
      • Naomi Polonsky Considers the Influence of Visual A...
      • Layers of Buddhism by Artist Shampa Sircar Das
      • Imran Qureshi's First Project in an American Art M...
      • Pope's Favorite Painting Returns to Chicago After ...
      • Buddhist Artifacts go on Display for Cambridge's F...
      • Sept. 11 Memorial Museum at Ground Zero Prepares f...
      • Tom Duncan's Chilling Sculptural Assemblages Now O...
      • From From King David to Apostle Simon Peter: Black...
      • Reverend Howard Finster's Paradise Gardens Continu...
      • Samba Spirit at MFA, Boston, With Exhibition of Af...
      • Sharjah Museum of Islamic Civilisation: Trove of t...
      • Happy Birthday, Buddha! World Celebrates Vesak Day
      • Temple Offers Buddhist Enlightenment Through Manga...
      • Today – May 13, 2014 – is Narasimha Jayanti – Nara...
      • In Good Faith: The Birth of Buddhism in India on D...
      • Tragic and Timeless: The Art of Mark Rothko in Sai...
      • Minneapolis Leads Nation in Exploring the Cultures...
      • Monday's Madonna & Child Celebrates Buddha's Birth
      • Review: Norton Simon's 'In the Land of Snow' is an...
      • Bill Viola’s Art is a Religious Experience
    • ►  April (23)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

tripal h
View my complete profile