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Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Posted by Mollie

Golden SummerWhen I first read Eric Gorski’s piece on evangelicals and art last week, I thought it was another home run for one of my favorite religion reporters. But I’m always praising Gorski — and Stephanie Simon of the Los Angeles Times, among others — and I thought it might be best to let the piece pass. But so many GetReligion readers — from a wide religious spectrum — have commented favorably on the article that I want to make sure we highlight it.

Gorski begins by telling the story of Makoto Fujimura, an abstract painter and elder in a Presbyterian Church in America congregation.

There are no crosses in Makoto Fujimura’s paintings. No images of Jesus gazing into the distance, or serene scenes of churches in a snow-cloaked wood.

… After the 2001 terrorist strikes on the World Trade Center, three blocks from Fujimura’s home, his work explored the power of fire to both destroy and purify, themes drawn from the Christian Gospels and Dante’s “The Divine Comedy.”

“I am a Christian,” says Fujimura, 46, who founded the nonprofit International Arts Movement to help bridge the gap between the religious and art communities. “I am also an artist and creative, and what I do is driven by my faith experience.

“But I am also a human being living in the 21st century, struggling with a lot of brokenness _ my own, as well as the world’s. I don’t want to use the term ‘Christian’ to shield me away from the suffering or evil that I see, or to escape in some nice ghetto where everyone thinks the same.”

By making a name for himself in the secular art world, Fujimura has become a role model for creatively wired evangelicals. They believe that their churches have forsaken the visual arts for too long — and that a renaissance has begun.

The story makes the case that Fujimura is part of a larger movement: galleries in churches, seminaries opening centers devoted to the arts and films being made by graduates from evangelical film schools. He speaks with observers of culture and Christianity and compares the new movement with Christian artistic efforts from the past. Rather than aping the culture as much of contemporary Christian music does or selling accessible but artistically unimaginative paintings like, well, Thomas Kinkade, the new movement is about making good art first and foremost, the story contends.

The story is not terribly long but does get some important details — and history! — into the piece. Gorski notes that some evangelicals are uncomfortable with abstraction:

“The Bible is full of abstraction,” said Fujimura, an elder at a Greenwich Village church he helped start. “Think about this God who created the universe, the heavens and the earth from nothing. In order to have faith you have to reach out to something, to a mystery.”

It isn’t always an easy sell.

Evangelical unease with the visual arts dates to the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century. Andy Crouch, editorial director for Christianity Today’s Christian Vision Project, which examines how evangelicals intersect with the broader culture, notes that Protestantism traces its origins to an era when noses were snapped off sculptures in a rejection of Catholic visual tradition while the word of God was elevated.

Attitudes began to change in the 1960s and 1970s, when Christian theologian Francis Schaeffer and Dutch art historian Hans Rookmaaker challenged believers to emerge from their cocoons and engage the culture, including in the arts.

Just a great piece overall. One of the things that makes being a reporter in this day and age so interesting is that sources can also publish their interactions with reporters. One of the people Gorski interviewed for his article mentioned their conversation back in June. He says that Gorski was asking about an arts conference he’d learned about weeks before when he was attending the Southern Baptist Convention’s annual meeting.

The Austin blogger/arts pastor David Taylor says the conversation was good and lasted for 40 minutes. And what’s interesting is that he doesn’t show up in the article at all. Or, rather, he isn’t quoted in the article. Their discussion seems to have helped shape — in some capacity or another — Gorski’s well-rounded study of a very broad trend.

Image is Makoto Fujimura’s Golden Summer.

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7 Responses to “How great thou art”

  1. Dale says:

    A good article, but Gorski doesn’t make any reference to Image, an excellent quarterly journal that includes features on the visual arts as well as fiction and poetry. Image is also an example of increasing ecumenical cooperation between evangelicals and Roman Catholics. The editors, Greg and Suzanne Wolfe, are Roman Catholic; they are professors at Seattle Pacific University, an evangelical school. I think it’s worth a mention because Image been around for a while (18 years), and doesn’t get the attention it deserves.

    A search on the Image website shows that it has featured Fujimura, the artist Gorski highlights as an example, many times over the years.

  2. David says:

    It was a good conversation. I’ve had good ones and not so good ones with reporters and I appreciated Gorski’s approach. He let his sources speak. And in doing so, thankfully he allowed them to identify the particular lines of an evangelical community of artists that is growing at both a theoretical (theological and philosophical) and practical (excellence and prominence) level.

    I have to say, our religion reporter here in Austin, Eileen Flynn, does an admirable job covering the religion beat around town. She’s earned the respect of libs and fundies, die-hards and all those who are proud to keep Austin anti-religiously “weird.” A couple of years back the Austin American Statesman surprised me with an invitation to give their staff the low-down on “all those evangelicals.” Fascinating conversation that.

    Anyhoo, kudos to Gorski. I told him to check back in the year 2056. We might have a few juicier things to share about the not-so-naked anymore public square, the no longer anti-sacramentalist Protestant artists, and the possibility that “Evangelicals making great art” may no longer be an oxymoron.

  3. pligg.com says:

    How great thou art » GetReligion

    Get Religion reviews a LA Times article about a Presbyterian artist.

  4. don says:

    I got a plastic Jesus standing with little children from a friend of mine. It has real fabric for his clothes. And you can tell it’s serious art, and not a toy, because the arms don’t move.

    I wish I could believe there is real change coming in the arts in Christian circles. But the most telling words in Gorski’s article were “artistic evangelicals, though still relatively small in number, are striving to be creators of culture rather than imitators.” The article implies that resistance to Fujimura’s work comes from the church. I wonder if its the whole culture that has become the captive of injection molded “art.”

  5. Think Christian » Blog Archive » The evangelical artistic renaissance says:

    […] Is the evangelical world experiencing something of an artistic renaissance? An article by Eric Gorski looks at the increased attention being paid to creativity and art in evangelical churches, seminaries, and films. The article highlights painter Makoto Fujimura as “a role model for creatively wired evangelicals”—he’s an elder at his church whose striking abstract paintings are informed by his faith, but . Gorski goes on to discuss the broader trend towards increased artistic engagement through the church. Very interesting stuff; also see this commentary over at GetReligion. […]

  6. MSNBC article on art and Evangelical Christianity « The Aesthetic Elevator says:

    […] UPDATE: Think Christian found this same article on 17 August reposted on Forbes’ website. Commentary on the article also at Get Religion. […]

  7. The Aesthetic Elevator says:

    @ don: A couple anecdotes. One, 70% of Fujimura’s sales come from non-Christians. He told me this himself while vising little Siloam Springs, Arkansas in April.

    Secondly, I’ve had it pointed out to me a couple of times that interest in the visual arts in the church is probably not really much more or less than among non-church goers. This is fairly beleivable, though there’s no way to put numbers to such an idea one way or the other.