
Courtesy of AceJet (a design blog).
Northlanders Go to the Big City
I found it nearly impossible to take notes while Jeremy Begbie was speaking. At times it was better to close my eyes and lean back, letting the power of his thinking to wash over me, wave-like, expecting it to change me in a ways I could not understand at that moment. Other times I was able to grab a line and put it down, knowing it would act as a rudder for me, probably for the rest of my life.
Professor Begbie struck me on three levels. First, he was earthy – witty, wry, charismatic and personable. Humble too. On the three occasions I spoke with him he insisted that I e-mail ‘with any thoughts or suggestions.’
Secondly, he is clearly a genius. He treated his audience not to a show of knowledge, rather he allowed us to move in his same plane of intellect and understanding, even though I didn’t ‘understand’ at all. His talks reminded me of my French teachers, both of whom were Parisian. I was only 12 but instead of the verb repetition American students would have learned, I was existing in a world of rapid fire French and it was expected that I would learn not words, but language. We, the audience, can understand Jeremy Begbie because he expects us to; to him we are peers.
Finally, he was not just a theologian, but a believer-artist, moved by the spirit, both in his thinking, his speaking and his art. Punctuating his points he used his expertise as a classical pianist, playing Rachmaninoff, Bach or the theme to Psycho and the Simpsons.
In his first keynote, The Shock of the New, he spoke on the avant-garde spirit, calling artists to be agents of the new. He showed works of avant-garde art describing these artists as not just people who lived on the edge or desired to be cutting edge but as people who truly desired to be born again. Can you imagine thinking of avant-garde artists in this way? But to hear Begbie talk about it, it made perfect sense. The avant-garde desires to go ahead, to change culture; it may be that they deeply believe that humans have it in themselves to create anew. Fantastic.
He spoke of ‘the grid’, something that architect Daniel Libeskind spoke of always working against ‘the tyranny of the grid!’ The grid is not found in nature, and yet it became the avant-garde basis of art for much of the 20th century. I don’t know why I loved that, but I did. I loved hearing about the tyranny of the grid.
Another moment I dearly loved was when he spoke of the Babylonian exile and how the children of
To this kind of despair Begbie reminded me to trust, "Trust that Beauty has a future."
What did he say that you can remember? That you received? Are there thoughts you have processed? What was meaningful to you? Remind us & let it inspire us.
---aliceb
The purpose of Redeeming Culture: Creating the World that Ought to Be the annual conference of the International Arts Movement was to gather major thinkers and artists who could act as a catalyst for a dialogue that would engage the culture that is and create the world that ought to be. Speeches, panels, tours and performances led participants into conversations and meditations immersed in deep questions of humanity, faith and culture.
The conference for most of us was more affective then effective. And this seems to be by design. We did not come away knowing the 10 steps to better worship planning or an action plan for creating a better outreach. Rather we sat at the feet of the modern masters -- great artists, gifted writers, brilliant thinkers. We will see the effect of this conference for decades as it seeps into our work, worship and relationships.
The purpose of this blog is to not only continue the conversation but also to be a touchstone for those of us who attended and those who were inspired by our reports. Come back here and read through the posts and comments to reconnect with the spirit of the conference, the spirit of innovation and responsibility we felt for those several days.We began our immersion with a panel discussion between Mako Fujimura (artist and founder of IAM), Gordon Pennington (Marketing Strategist) and Joshua Trent (Chief of Staff Office of Refugee Resettlement). The pre-show to the first plenary was a juried art exhibition, a short theatrical vignette, and an invocation. During his invocation Ian Cron brought to our attention the idea of The Redemptive Question. This concept wove through our conversations and the sessions through out the conference.
How prepared we were to hear from the gentle genius of Mako or the challenges of Joshua Trent, or the frenetic, insightful brilliance of Gordon Pennington, who can know. But immediately we dove into a conversation that had clearly been going on between these culture shapers for some time.
GP – This is an information immersive Culture. Who owns the culture?
Art historically: affirmation, dissent, propaganda.
If you think you have a right to be recognized, to be at the table, you don’t. You must earn that right (through skill and excellence) and veven then, you may not be recognized.
JT – American Culture: What do we have to offer? What are we exporting? Is it redemptive or not?
MKF – Stewardship of our culture. What is the cultural unity?
Artists are listening more to the culture than to their materials. Listen to your materials.
De Tocqueville said America is good. What is it now?
The post modern culture a bold culture without any tenets. Allowed art to be re-branded by and for Man and not by and for God. As an artist can I be under His authorship in creating?