Picturing Silence: Stillness in Sound of Metal
By Editorial Issue 111
Stillness is hard. This is going to take practice.
Read MoreThe Way of the Critic: To Judge Is to Love
By Editorial Issue 110
Good criticism also helps us see why some art doesn’t work, or works poorly, activating the worst in us. When criticism is judgmental in the sense of being censorious, that too is in the service of art and our experience. The critic is showing us why we need and deserve better.
Read MoreThe Absolute Is Available to Everyone
By Editorial Issue 109
When the dots connect, you feel a pulse of intentionality in a universe that seems to be putting on this show just for you. I wonder if those of us who dwell in books are especially susceptible to such delights.
Read MoreHow to Visit a Museum: Disciplines of Availability
By Editorial Issue 108
I’m waiting for that strange experience when a picture speaks, sometimes in a whisper, sometimes with a shout, sometimes with a reverberating silence that pulls me to the edge of a precipice where I’m not sure whether I’ll fall or fly.
Read MoreHealing the Imagination: Art Lessons from James Baldwin
By Editorial Issue 107
Our society is grappling with a soul-sickness that is ultimately an infection of our imagination. An election may address symptoms, but how do we treat the underlying disease? How to heal the imagination? Perhaps this is what the arts are for.
Read MoreA Devotional Temperament: A Conversation with Garth Greenwell
By Interview Issue 106
One of the extraordinary accomplishments of the Confessions is to find a syntax that doesn’t deny impasse or dilemma, but that also doesn’t allow impasse or dilemma to become stagnant.
Read MoreSolitude as Art
By Editorial Issue 105
Like the strange paradox of social distancing, where we step away from our neighbors in order to protect them, so the artist loves the world by retreating from it. The art of solitude is ultimately social.
Read MoreThe Art We Live With
By Editorial Issue 104
While we creatives apprentice ourselves to various crafts, aspiring to art that is “fine,” we might also look for subtle ways to decorate our daily lives with new intentionality. There is a training of the soul in the arts we live with.
Read MoreThe Gift of Not Knowing
By Editorial Issue 103
Unknowing might be a way to relate to God anew. You might call this mystery.
In our information age, we need spiritual exercises of ex-formation.
Read MoreBesides, Before, Beyond Beauty
By Editorial Issue 102
I’m tired of beauty. Or rather, I’m tired of hearing the word “beauty” overused and misapplied.
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