Domestic Arts (II)

From Feb. 11-15, 2013,Transpositions hosted a symposium on the Domestic Arts.

Too often the domestic arts have been overlooked in the dialogue of theology, aesthetics, and aesthetic practice. Being accustomed to them, as they fill our landscape and do not immediately invoke a sense of uniqueness, we at times forget that the common objects of our daily experience can be as deeply theological and revealing of Divine perspective as those objects and spaces, such as churches or icons, that we particularly ascribe such qualities to. It is our hope that in exploring what could be considered normal spaces in search of the sacred, we shall discover a sense of Presence and continual call to worship amidst the ordinary. The diverse voices of the writers for this series ranged in consideration of sacramental, symbolic, and iconographic engagement and shall paint a broad picture of engagement with the Divine in the domestic sphere.

The Symposium Ran:

Monday — Jennifer Allen Craft, Domestic Arts and a Sense of Place

Tuesday — Christina Gibson, Liturgy and Housework

Wednesday — Steve Schuler, Reclaim, Restore, Redeem

Friday —  Bethany Bear, To Feel Even as I Once Knew

Author

  • Jim Watkins is the assistant editor and a regular contributor at Transpositions. Originally, Jim is from southern California and southeastern Texas, but sometimes he feels most at home in the landscape and coffee shops of the Pacific Northwest. He met his wife Emily at Wheaton College in Illinois, where he studied Studio Art (concentration in painting). For his PhD research, he is examining the relationship between divine and human creativity from the perspective of divine kenosis.