Archive for May, 2010

Urban Tapestry

Louisville, KY showed up on one of my favorite art blogs today. I always check out the Wooster Collective website for keeping up with street art projects from around the world. Today some familiar faces were on there. P.A.I.N.T. is a public arts project by the local Center For Neighborhoods. For this project, some local artists worked with kids in the Park Hill neighborhood to make an “urban tapestry.”

Here’s the video:

Making Things New

“I am making everything new!” – Jesus, in Revelation 21

Lately, I’ve been understanding the Sojourn arts ministry as a way in which we can join Christ in making all things new.  As artists, we can take the materials that we find in the world and we reform them, or renew them, into other things that hopefully make the world a more beautiful place.

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When God made the world, he didn’t leave too many ‘blank’ places.  Yes, there are deserts and polar ice fields and the state of Kansas, but even those places are not really blank.  They are surprisingly full of life and color and texture.  However when people make things, we often leave blank spots.  The wall behind the stage at the East campus was one such place.

Thanks to Julie Gross and some other Sojourners, that wall, and thus the whole feel of the room, has lost some of its cold blankness.  The stripe pattern is made from sheets of wood veneer which have been dyed and stained the different colors.  The colors tie together the different wood colors from the rest of the room and the layout of the stripes breaks up the monotony of straight lines and right angles while not standing completely apart from the existing room.  While there’s no biblical reference to the shape or content of this wall design, the project is deeply theological and worshipful because it attempts to make things new in light of God’s apparent distaste for blankness.

So, this Sunday the East Campus will be greeted with both a new stage background in time for mothers day and the opportunity for free family photos.

On top of that it’s also Commitment Sunday, where we all financially commit to give to the church over the coming years so that renewal can continue throughout Sojourn and throughout the city.  Our church depends upon the Holy Spirit, grace and prayer, but it also depends on money to keep ministry moving forward.  And of course the truth is that both inside and outside the church, when money is tight, the arts are one of the first things to go.  So, for the sake of the whole church, the city, and for the sake of Sojourn Visual Arts and the 930, please consider how you can financially commit to Sojourn over the coming years.

Let's Go Trolley Hopping

This Friday, May 7.  6:00 – *8:00

Meet in front of Paul Paletti’s  (713 E Market, be there by 6:15, hint: parking is a mess)

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On the first friday of each month all the galleries downtown open up in the evening.

It’s fun you should come.

By the way, if you’re on facebook, become a fan of Sojourn Visual Arts.  You can RSVP there or just show up.

Art In Shelby Park This Saturday (5/8/10)

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A picture from last year’s Art in the Park

This Saturday from 12-3 we’re partnering up with SEED to hold a fun family-friendly event in Shelby Park.  We’ll be creating one large panoramic image of Oak St.  on multiple panels.  Each kid will paint one panel and then we’ll screw them all together and let some adults put on the finishing touches.

I hear there’s going to be a cookout too, and some basketball.

Who’s going to join us?

If you want to come and help get the kids painting, let me know – mwinters@sojournchurch.com