The Developing Life

Monday, December 19, 2005

Salvation to all that will is nigh;
That All, which always is All everywhere,
Which cannot sin, and yet all sins must bear,
Which cannot die, yet cannot choose but die,
Lo, faithful virgin, yields Himself to lie
In prision, in thy womb; and though He there
Can take no sin, nor thou give, yet He will wear,
Taken from thence, flesh, which death's force may try.
Ere by the spheres time was created, thou
Wast in his mind, Who is thy Son, and Brother;
Whom thou conceiv'st, conceiv'd; yea thou art now
Thy Maker's maker, and thy Father's mother;
Thou has light in dark, and shut'st in little room,
Immensity cloister'd in thy dear womb.

John Donne Seventeenth century

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Saturday, December 17, 2005

Advent

At our church we had an Advent Art Show, and since I called on all our artists to provide artwork for the church, I decided I should at least participate. I bought some paints, and for the first time since kindergarten finger painting, I attempted to create a painting (this time I didn't use my fingers)!

The series is made up of five paintings, one for each week of Advent, and one for Christmas Eve.

They are:

Top Left / Week 1 / Hope - "O come, o come Emmanuel"
Bottom Left / Week 2 / Love - "Pure unbounded love Thou art"

Top Right / Week 3 / Joy - "And Heaven and nature sing"
Bottom Right/ Week 4 / Peace - "Far as the curse is found"
Center / Christmas Eve - "Born that man no more may die"

Click on the picture to Enlarge. Scroll down for descriptions.


Top Left / Week 1 / Hope - "O come, o come Emmanuel"
The image is of the Christ in the womb, over his back is the faint image of the Star of David, both signaling his prophesied coming, and hinting at the poetic line, "O come, o come Emmanuel and ransom captive Israel."
Below the infant is the Hebrew for "Emmanuel" - God With Us.

Bottom Left / Week 2 / Love - "Pure unbounded love Thou art"
I must confess I have had a very difficult time trying to think of any visual representation of love other than a heart. I scoured hymn lyrics looking for any visual picture of love in an Advent sense. But there is no vivid imagery of love. It is described, but there are no vivid pictures. So I succumbed, and painted a heart. I thought I was going to just tolerate this painting, but the way I did the brush strokes catches the light like brushed aluminum. As you turn the painting, the light follows the curves of the heart. All the highlights you see on the heart are just the way the light catches it. I am rather pleased with that, if nothing else. The hymn lyric for this painting is "Pure unbounded love Thou art," from "Love divine, all loves excelling." The Hebrew is "Taher" meaning Pure.

Top Right / Week 3 / Joy - "And Heaven and nature sing"
This piece is called "And Heaven and Nature Sing," It is for the third week of Advent "Joy." And after finishing this part, it has given clearer direction to the final piece. I'll tell you how, once they are all up. The Hebrew at the bottom left is "Ranan" which means "Sing for Joy."

The flash from the camera brought out a little more color than is immediately noticeable of the actual painting. It looks almost solid black from a distance. You have to get right on it to notice what this photo displays so readily.

Bottom Right/ Week 4 / Peace - "Far as the curse is found"
It turns out Peace is just as difficult a concept to portray as is Love. This painting is based on the line from "Joy to the World," "He comes to make His blessings flow, far as the curse is found."

The Hebrew word etched in the paint is "Nagar," translated "Flow."

Center / Christmas Eve - "Born that man no more may die"
This is based on the line in "Angels We Have Heard on High," that says "Born that man no more may die." The Greek word written at the bottom is "Etecthe" which is the form of Born that is used in the angel's pronouncement to the shepherds in Luke 2:11.

This painting is designated for the Christmas Eve Vigil, and stands in contrast to the previous four weeks. Where they were dark in color, this is vibrant. The four weeks had a Hebrew word etched into the paint, whereas this (the event that began of the New Testament) has a Greek word written on it.

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Born That Man No More May Die.

I finished up the fifth and final piece in my Advent series. This is based on the line in "Angels We Have Heard on High," that says "Born that man no more may die." The Greek word written at the bottom is "Etecthe" which is the form of Born that is used in the angel's pronouncement to the shepherds in Luke 2:11.



This painting is designated for the Christmas Eve Vigil, and stands in contrast to the previous four weeks. Where they were dark in color, this is vibrant. The four weeks had a Hebrew word etched into the paint, whereas this (the event that began of the New Testament) has a Greek word written on it.

Click here to see all five paintings as they were meant to be viewed.

Thursday, December 15, 2005

Far as the curse is found!

Well, here we have it, the latest installation in the "Advent" series.
It turns out Peace is just as difficult a concept to portray as is Love. This painting is based on the line from "Joy to the World," "He comes to make His blessings flow, far as the curse is found."
The hebrew word etched in the paint is "Nagar," translated "Flow."

Far As The Curse Is Found

This is the fourth of five paintings based on the Advent season. The four weeks of Advent are, Hope, Love, Joy, and Peace. The final piece will be unveiled on Christmas Eve, and is the culmination of this series, just as Christmas Eve brings the culmination of our hope!

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

In Other News

It's Official, Adobe owns the designing world. Apparently, the way Adobe deals with competition is buyout. Adobe has been the industry standard in image editing for several years. More recently the InDesign platform ousted QuarkXPress's firm domination of the desktop publishing market. And most recently, Adobe purchased Macromedia, its primary competitor in the webdesign market. we should expect to see some interesting developments from Adobe in the near future.

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