Articles

Original Bliss: Paintings by Rod Pattenden

Sailing Back to Byzantium: Art of Michael Galovic

Sailing Back to Byzantium: Art of Michael Galovic. Melbourne: Yarra and Hunter Arts Press, 2024.

This lavish, large-format publication on the work of iconographer Michael Galovic is a welcome addition to the coverage of the arts and spirituality in Australia. It is a beautiful book, an art work in itself. In around 260 pages, it surveys the work of one of Australia’s most well-known painters of icons, covering traditional themes, innovative new work, and important commissions around the country.

Born in Belgrade, Michael Galovic arrived in Australia in 1990 and set about sharing his cultural knowledge through small exhibitions and workshops. The 2006 publication Icons and Art provided a visual overview of the first 15 years of his art production. This new and more generous publication covers the next 17 years, providing an overview of this important innovator and translator of the Orthodox tradition.

The book is divided into sections covering such themes as the Annunciation, the Son of Man, Theotokos, and angels, more innovative themes such as Uluru as an icon, and more experimental ideas that explore the nature of spirituality in multicultural Australia. These are supported by 24 short writing sections that address issues of technique, history, and theological themes. These are provided by the artist as well as a range of authors from art historical or theological perspectives. This enriches the book as a wider resource in understanding the role of the icon as a source of spirituality and the role that vision has in informing spiritual responses.

What is clear is the immense skill and labour that is needed to follow this ancient tradition and to make each work come alive through a fresh illumination rather than appearing as a tired copy. Galovic is a keen student of the past and pays great respect to traditional techniques. He has, however, also allowed himself to experiment with fresh ideas and approaches and has found inspiration in a wide variety of sources, including modern art and the art of Indigenous Australians.

The extensive range of commissions has allowed him to enliven the worshipping spaces of a wide variety of churches, chapels, and schools and to renew this tradition as a lively and contemporary form of seeing faith. This book provides rich resources for understanding this tradition and for appreciating this artist and his life’s work.

The book will be launched at an event in Sydney on Sunday, 28 July, at All Saints Church Ambrose St, Hunters Hill, at 4pm. It is available from the artist through his website. It would be a great addition to a personal library, a beautiful gift, or an important resource in a school or college library.

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REV DR ROD PATTENDEN IS AN ART HISTORIAN AND THEOLOGIAN FROM AUSTRALIA. HE HAS WRITTEN WIDELY ON THE ARTS AND CREATIVITY. HE LIVES AND WORKS ON AWABAKAL LAND.

Art and Transcendence

As religious affiliation declines, can art provide fresh ways of exploring the questions posed by theology? Might art – its creation as well as reception – lead to the discovery of new spiritual information? What do faith traditions lose when they overemphasize the written word and neglect the role of images?

Historically, faith traditions have focused on both the written word and images as sources of knowledge and meaning. Some would claim that words have taken undue precedence as theologies have developed, while images seem to have been left behind. Has this shift in focus left us wanting?

Art and theology have more in common than is seen at first glance. As George Pattison, a philosopher of religion, has argued: ‘Theology can learn from the particularity, the integrity, the will to wholeness and the pluralism of art’. Both theology and art can help us find new ways to engage with faith and discover reality, seen and unseen. Sometimes, our words fail us, and we need another option to reveal what we revere.

Two years ago, I received a Templeton Foundation Grant focused on ‘Art Seeking Understanding’. This video is a precursor to a larger related book project. In it, I do my best to tell my story, shedding some light on our cultural/religious stagnation.

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ALFONSE BORYSEWICZ IS A BROOKLYN-BASED PAINTER.

Sailing to Byzantium: an exhibition of work by Olga Bakhtina

Dates: 29 June – 13 August

Where: St John’s Anglican Cathedral, 373 Ann St, Brisbane City, Queensland

Opening: Thursday 11 July, 6.30–8.30pm. The opening night will feature classical music performances by Amalia Safonov (vocalist and flautist) and Artemii Safonov (pianist and composer).

RSVP: 0410 197 946

Sailing to Byzantium is an exhibition that blends the sacred art of the Early Renaissance and Byzantine periods with themes from William Butler Yeats’ poem. Hosted at historic St John’s Anglican Cathedral in Brisbane, this collection of recent paintings and sketches invites you on a journey through faith, history, and artistic expression. 

The exhibition’s title comes from W. B. Yeats’ poem, ‘Sailing to Byzantium’, which speaks of the quest for eternal beauty and spiritual transcendence. In the poem, Byzantium symbolizes an ideal world of artistic and intellectual perfection, a place where the soul finds peace beyond the physical. This idea connects deeply with the spiritual essence of early Christian art, where every detail holds profound religious meaning. 

As someone who has been studying the history of art extensively, I am captivated by the intricate, aspiring abstract designs and joyful colours of this historical period. The luminous golds, vibrant blues, and rich reds are not just decorative but symbolize divine light and the heavenly realm. Each piece in this exhibition is a modern tribute to the craftsmanship and spiritual depth of ancient iconographers and Renaissance masters, aiming to inspire faith and devotion. 

Through this collection, I hope to bridge the past and present and invite you to reflect on the enduring power of sacred art. By reimagining these traditional motifs, I aim to create a dialogue between the ancient and the modern, much like Yeats’ poetic journey to Byzantium. 

The exhibition invites you to embark on your own voyage of discovery and contemplation. I hope you will enjoy it! 

If you’d like to know more about my Christianity-inspired paintings, check out this article.

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OLGA BAKHTINA IS AN ARTIST WHO LIVES AND PAINTS ON JAGERA AND TURBAL COUNTRY.

three poems, or prayers, or psalms

camille-brodard-peOp2E3Zukk-unsplash

 

replanted
after Psalm 1

dig in deeper
to the river
running living water
my roots dive for
depth strives for
after dusty shallows
rocky fallows deserted
so I’m thirsting
from the working hard
to stay alive
and now it’s simple
to truly thrive
by the source
realigned with this replanting
though the uprooting
from familiar
mud dried up
shook the muck
from my feet and I
am replete
digging deeper
down
into
the river

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Prayer of a wilting tree
with Psalm 1

Is the stream in a lush
field of grasses and many trees
to surround this one replanted
for its hope for happiness?

Does the stream divert to the desert,
meet the tree half way in
this shift towards rebirth?

Holy One, if you are the stream,
I believe you will meet this
tree where I’ve fallen, my re-
planting a resurrection for restoration
of this wilderness with me.

And Holy One, if you are rich
earth, the field of green growth
in vital soil, I believe I’d like
to return, dig my roots in deep
and feed on your life-giving love
among the other replanted trees
you have rescued.

Show me what I need, Source
of Life, a stream to meet me,
in a distant field, or homecoming
to your good earth.
Amen.

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In the warming air
a psalm

Sun beams kiss the clouds white,
their linings, silver on a cobalt
canvas, pull cotton strings
to float my sinking heart.

That’s you all over, Creator,
isn’t it? Bouncing balloons across
horizons to evoke delight from even
the gloomiest of days;

it’s creation singing its silent
ode to you, is it not, turning
mourning cloths to dancing robes,
catching us all unawares.

It’s your notes the bees hum
when humans lose the tune;
your melody the wind runs
wild and free with the birds:

lift our hearts with yours,
all you trees, and fields crowded
with flowers singing – bring
us home into the Song.

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Image: Camille Brodard | Unsplash

Sarah Agnew is a storyteller, poet, and minister with the Uniting Church in Australia, in placement with Christ Church Uniting, Wayville, on Kaurna Land in Adelaide. Sarah’s poetry, liturgy, and other writing, including the Lenten Study with Psalms, Through the Valley, can be found at sarahagnew.com.au

Icon Exhibition

Book Launch: High Spirits

Paul Mitchell’s new book of poetry, High Spirits (Puncher and Wattmann, 2024), will be launched in the Westgate Baptist Community Hall (16 High Street, Yarraville, Victoria) on Saturday 25 May. Michael McGirr, author of the best selling non-fiction work, Books That Saved My Life, will do the launching. 3pm for a 3.30pm start. All welcome.

Premonition: Paintings and Drawings

Join us for the Opening Launch of Premonition, by Rod Pattenden on Saturday 17 February, from 2 pm.

This is Rod Pattenden’s second solo exhibition at ASW and promises to be another celebration of sensuous colour and form. Pattenden describes this new body of work as:

New paintings and drawings with a vivid presence and an uncertain future breaking in. Works in vibrant colour, small to large scale  with a range of stark large scale charcoal drawings.

Open Lecture: Art and the Christian in an Age of Mass Culture

Illustration by Patrick Bremer, in The New Yorker.

The Centre for Theology and Public Issues at the University of Otago has extended an invitation to an open lecture by Professor Ephraim Radner.

The lecture will be on ‘Art and the Christian in an Age of Mass Culture: A Theological discussion on a famous argument of Walter Benjamin regarding art and its reproduction’.

Time: Tuesday 13 February at 5:15pm – 6.30pm (NZ time)

Place: Archway 2, University of Otago, Dunedin, or livestreamed here.

Making art in a time of crisis

Rod Pattenden, Jason Goroncy, and Maissa Alameddine were recently interviewed by Meredith Lake for the ABC’s Soul Search program. We talked about art, theology, and other stuff, and about how art really matters in sustaining and developing what is most eloquent and wonderful about being human.

You can listen to the interview here.