Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Artistic Devotion

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City is enormous. It is easily the size of two Wal-Marts, stretching four blocks on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, backing onto Central Park. The collection housed in its endless galleries is extraordinary – paintings, sculpture, jewelry, tapestries, media of all kinds, works of art spanning thousands of years from the ancient to the contemporary.

I immersed myself in this extraordinary collection for three days during my recent Study Leave. I had planned my trip to focus on art with, not surprisingly, a religious theme: devotional artwork, art created to tell stories from the Bible, decorate churches, or simply to glorify God.

It is hard for us to imagine a world in which most people did not know how to read, only the clergy had access to the Bible, and books were exceedingly rare and precious, composed and created entirely by hand. It was this world that spawned many magnificent works of art.

Paintings of Jesus abound, telling of his birth, his ministry, his betrayal, his crucifixion, and his resurrection. Artists painted on boards and canvas, created works on tapestries, and sculpture in marble, wood, and other stone. Artisans worked with precious metals to create altarpieces, reliquaries, and other pieces used in worship.

The galleries in the Metropolitan Museum of Art can overwhelm with their size and their scope, but my focus on this trip was limited to a specific time period and specific art. Still, I did walk through galleries with paintings by familiar names: Renoir, Matisse, Van Gogh, Monet, Rembrandt, Vermeer, and others. They too, though, often found inspiration in stories from the Bible. 


I also visited the Morgan Museum, which has one of the world’s finest collections of Reformation-era Bibles, as well as Bibles created even before the invention of the printing press in 1450. Did you know, by the way, that we have a Gutenberg Bible right in our own backyard, at the Library of Congress, on display in the main hall?

I stumbled upon an interesting exhibit at the Onassis Cultural Center in midtown Manhattan, which featured artwork from the earliest years of Christianity. It was fascinating to see the evolution of the image of the cross from a fiercesome executioner’s tool to a devotional totem carved into tombstones or worn as jewelry.

Even as we look to the end of another school year and celebrate with our newest group of excited graduates, my time in New York was a wonderful reminder that our learning never ends. And my exploration through the many different galleries also reminded me that there is no limit on the ways in which we can express our devotion and our faith in the One who created beauty – and called it good, very good!

Grace & peace,
Pastor Skip