Arts Chaplaincy Projects

10: Joe James Ford

 

https://artschaplaincy.net/projects/wp-content/uploads/ST2021-JF.mp3

Parasite 89mn

 


@jose.konst


Stations 2021



Welcome

Arts Chaplaincy Projects is a partnership between University of the Arts London & the Diocese of London, connecting arts practitioners with spiritual communities

Current Projects



    Religion & Art Talks

    with José Carlos Diaz, Adrian Rifkin, Tina Beattie, Jarel Robinson-Brown






    St Paul’s Chelsea

    Chelsea Fine Art students researching in St Paul’s Cathedral






    Three Questions

    If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am only for myself, what am I? If not now, when?




Archived Projects



    Back To Life

    MAFA Chelsea site-specific exhibition in St Saviour’s Pimlico






    Religion & Art Forum

    a series of practice-led conversations, held in collaboration with Goldsmiths College






    Stations 2021

    An art project for Lent, leading to an online exhibition for Easter, with 36 artists showing 140 works






    The Spiritual Exercises 2

    a project building on connections made during The Spiritual Exercises, with 72 artists working in 24 collaborations






    The Spiritual Exercises

    An online exhibition mediating memory and longing via the parameters of the present, featuring 100 artists






    Chelsea Mardi Gras

    Two exhibitions in Chelsea College of Arts and St Saviour’s Pimlico, Glimmer music festival with 🏳️‍🌈 communion, + pancakes in the Parade Ground






    Palo Santo

    A project exploring the potential of craft-based practices for communal healing, working between London and Peru






    Heathrow Chapel Lightboxes

    A collaborative art project to celebrate the 50th anniversary of St George’s Interdenominational Chapel at Heathrow Airport






    Central Saint Martins in the Fields

    An exhibition of work by ten recent art and design graduates from Central Saint Martins in the Crypt of St Martin-in-the-Fields, reconnecting the college and the church that founded it






    My Devotion

    A series of talks across UAL focusing on the relation between creative and spiritual practices, with Faisal Abdu’Allah, Bonnie Camplin, Lucy Newman Cleeve, Sophie Gorton, Sarah Lightman, and Justin Senryū Williams




Contact

Last chance for free tickets to ‘Symbolism and S Last chance for free tickets to ‘Symbolism and Sacramentality in Art: Medieval and Postmodern Representations of the Little Garden of Paradise’ by Tina Beattie,  a live online talk today Monday 6pm UK time. This is the third of a series of Religion & Art talks held in conjunction with Goldsmiths College. Link in bio.

@christabel_press Tina Beattie left her post as Professor of Catholic Studies at the University of Roehampton in August 2020. She continues in her role as Director of Catherine of Siena College, based at the University of Roehampton. Much of her research focuses on the relationship between the Catholic tradition and contemporary culture, particularly in areas to do with gender, sexuality and reproductive ethics; Catholic social teaching and women’s rights, and theology and the visual arts. She has a keen interest in Marian theology, art and devotion, and in the relationship between medieval mysticism, sacramental theology, and psychoanalytic theory. More recently, she is engaging in research into environmental theology in the context of Pope Francis’s 2015 encyclical Laudato Si’, approaching environmental issues from the perspectives of literature, poetry, art, music, gender theory and sacramentality.
Religion & Art Talks Tina Beattie: Symbolism and Religion & Art Talks

Tina Beattie: Symbolism and Sacramentality

20 June 6pm UK time via Zoom

Free tickets now available via link in bio

Tina Beattie left her post as Professor of Catholic Studies at the University of Roehampton in August 2020. She continues in her role as Director of Catherine of Siena College, based at the University of Roehampton. Much of her research focuses on the relationship between the Catholic tradition and contemporary culture, particularly in areas to do with gender, sexuality and reproductive ethics; Catholic social teaching and women’s rights, and theology and the visual arts. She has a keen interest in Marian theology, art and devotion, and in the relationship between medieval mysticism, sacramental theology, and psychoanalytic theory. More recently, she is engaging in research into environmental theology in the context of Pope Francis’s 2015 encyclical Laudato Si’, approaching environmental issues from the perspectives of literature, poetry, art, music, gender theory and sacramentality.
Opening tonight 💫 @chelseaual with Aya Al-Than Opening tonight 💫
@chelseaual 
with
Aya Al-Thani
Caroline Ashley 
Kimmo
Sachiko Shimojo
Simon Barclay
Sofiya Marynyak
Synshar Pde
Yayu Amanda Williams

St Paul’s Chelsea is an open research project with students drawn from the Black Lives Matter discussion forum at UAL Chelsea working with the art collection at St Paul’s Cathedral, which includes many historical monuments from the period of Empire. Participants have constructively and critically engaged with this legacy within its contemporary context, led by Mary Evans, artist and Chelsea College of Arts BA Fine Art course leader, working with Dr Paula Gooder, theologian and Canon Chancellor of St Paul’s Cathedral, and Simon Carter, Head of Collections and researcher for Pantheons: Sculpture at St Paul’s Cathedral, c.1796-1916. The project is coordinated by Mark Dean for Arts Chaplaincy Projects, and is bound by a commitment shared with the University and the Cathedral to equality, diversity, and social justice, especially in matters of education and community engagement.

@artschaplaincyprojects


© 2022