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Art's response: `dum spiro spero'.


THOSE LATIN WORDS, "while I breathe, I hope" are the title of an art exhibition whose opening I recently participated in.

David Opheim, a priest I have known since his seminary days, has become, in recent years, a painter and sculptor of consequence. His exhibition, held in a Toronto church in January, consisted of 25 works, almost equally divided between painting and sculpture, all created in the four months between Sept. 9, 2001, and this January. The volume of work produced in so short a time is breathtaking.

Each work of art is accompanied by a meditation, but for me the title is also a rich source of meditation. In the foreword to the booklet accompanying the exhibition, I used these words:

"To reflect, in paint and sculpture and word, on the time following Sept. 11 is challenge enough, but to do so under the rubric RUBRIC, civil law. The title or inscription of any law or statute, because the copyists formerly drew and painted the title of laws and statutes rubro colore, in red letters. Ayl. Pand. B. 1, t. 8; Diet. do Juris. h.t.  of `hope' is to challenge radically the received wisdom of our time and of our political masters. David dares to do so as an echo of St. Paul's
This article refers to the Canadian electoral district, for other uses see Saint Paul (disambiguation), Cathedral of Saint Paul, St. Paul's Church
St.
 challenge that `in hope we were saved. Hope that is seen is not hope. For who hopes for what is seen? But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience' (Romans 8.24,25).

"The stark artistry and the simple words make it clear that this hope is nor chauvinistic bluster or superficial optimism. It is the hope of which Archbishop Desmond Tutu Noun 1. Desmond Tutu - South African prelate and leader of the antiapartheid struggle (born in 1931)
Tutu
 spoke in the worst days of apartheid: `I am not optimistic op·ti·mist  
n.
1. One who usually expects a favorable outcome.

2. A believer in philosophical optimism.



op
, I am hopeful.' I rejoice to share in this event, a sign of the power of ... an artist among us and a gift to an aching world."

The enduring character of the artistic response to life often strikes me as parallel to the enduring character of the hopeful response. A couple of thoughts, one from an article I recently read, and another from my own experience, encourage me in these reflections.

The Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster The Archbishop of Westminster heads the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Westminster, in England. The incumbent is the Metropolitan of the Province of Westminster and, as a matter of custom, is elected President of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales, and therefore , leader of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales The Catholic Church in England and Wales is part of the worldwide Catholic Church.

The Catholic Church is the Christian Church in full communion with the Bishop of Rome, currently Pope Benedict XVI.
, recently commented gloomily about the state of religious practice in Britain. He said that Christianity "as a backdrop to people's lives ... has now almost been vanquished."

A visual arts visual arts nplartes fpl plásticas

visual arts nplarts mpl plastiques

visual arts npl
 journalist responded that if the cardinal looked at exhibition attendance rather than polls, he would see other dynamics at play. By far the most popular exhibits in 2000 in Britain were Seeing Salvation (the figure of Christ portrayed through history) and Botticelli's Mystic Nativity Nativity
See also Christmas.

Neglectfulness (See CARELESSNESS.)

Nervousness (See INSECURITY.)

Bethlehem

birthplace of Jesus. [N.T.
. (I went to Seeing Salvation and can attest to how crowded it was!) As well, modern religious art in Britain draws large crowds of young people.

As long as our faith has the capacity to inspire artists, then the polls may not matter so much. Art, like spiritual creativity of every sort, carries the aura of the eternal, aims to use the material to suggest, invoke, even dare to represent, that which is eternal. Just as the church does, in word and sacrament.

When the world responds to Sept. 11 with reactions ranging from vengeance and bloodlust blood´lust

n. 1. a desire for bloodshed.

Noun 1. bloodlust - a desire for bloodshed
desire - the feeling that accompanies an unsatisfied state
 to despair and powerlessness, a Christian artist invokes hope.
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Author:Peers, Michael
Publication:Anglican Journal
Date:Mar 1, 2002
Words:520
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