A spate of 2025 shows points to wider institutional interest not only in art that engages mystical or occult frameworks but also in rereading art history through a more spiritually charged lens.
The foremost reason that artists create, and the rest of us value their art, is because art forms a priceless living bridge between the everyday psychology of our minds and the universal spirit of ...
An art piece titled "Prince of Peace" by artist Brooke Ochs, which is in the Spiritual and Religious Exhibition at the Springville Museum of Art, is pictured Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2023. A painting titled ...
Joseph E. Yoakum, "Poverty Hollar in Ozark Mts near Luck Green County Missouri" (1967), Collection of Karl Wirsum and Lorri Gunn CHICAGO — Joseph Elmer Yoakum (1891–1972) wandered the globe during his ...
This talk briefly surveys the ways that the natural centrality of spirituality across the spectrum of the liberal arts and closely related sciences could also be usefully integrated within university ...
September is here and with it all manner of interesting art exhibits. The Museum of Russian Icons in Clinton presents “Spirituality in Eastern Christianity: Images of a Living Tradition,” an ...
“A lot of people have been turning to art, needing space to process,” says the artist Edgar Fabián Frías, who, along with Hayley Barker, Julie Weitz, and Patrisse Cullors, has been discussing their ...
Spiritual and religious artwork hangs in the Springville Museum of Art for the 38th annual exhibition. Over 275 pieces were displayed. (Abi Falin Horspool) On Wednesday, Oct. 16, the Springville ...
When Jordan Booker, 22, found himself dealing with anxiety and overthinking, meditation proved a powerful salve. The activity offered the University of Houston junior spiritual benefits he hadn't ...
A hallway of children's artwork is featured in the gallery of spiritual and religious art at Springville Museum of Art. Only 200 of the 900 submissions were featured. (Haley McIlroy) The 39th annual ...
Hector Hyppolite’s ‘Femme nue avec oiseaux’ (1946), oil on canvas. Photo courtesy of the Betty and Isaac Rudman Trust Collection Don’t call these artists naive. It’s a patronizing term smacking of ...
The foremost reason that artists create, and the rest of us value their art, is because art forms a priceless living bridge between the everyday psychology of our minds and the universal spirit of ...