This is a fascinating collaboration of compelling human stories by a well-known author with powerful contemporary paintings by a high-profile artist. Sara Maitland's compelling human stories give voice to Chris Gollon's powerful contemporary sequence of "Stations of the Cross" (painted from life and reproduced in the book in high-res colour images): a unique and potent collaboration. The Stations were commissioned for St John on Bethnal Green, a visually prominent London Anglican church designed by Sir John Soane, the neo-classical architect who also created the Bank of England and the Dulwich Picture Gallery. In 2001 the congregation made the extraordinary decision to commission a site-specific "Stations of the Cross", the traditional 14 pictures of the last day of Jesus' human life, used from the Middle Ages onwards for meditation and prayer.Perhaps unexpectedly, they chose a contemporary artist not best known for his religious works: Chris Gollon. By Easter 2008 the whole series was completed; the sequence was first used on Good Friday when the pictures gained considerable media attention. The commission for the Stations has taken 8 years to fulfil and they have been widely featured in national broadsheets, arts press and all denominations of religious arts press. The paintings are now reflected in a sequence of stories: first-person narratives by a well-known author who has been closely involved with the project.
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Offers voice to Chris Gollon's powerful contemporary sequence of "Stations of the Cross" (painted from life and reproduced in the book in high-res colour images).
The book is a sequence of stories, designed for Christians, based on Gollon's Stations of the Cross: 14 paintings commissioned for St John's on Bethnal Green, a church (designed by Sir John Soane) in the heart of London's East End. The opening chapter describes the history of the Stations of the Cross (and other artists who have created them), and the risky but brave collaboration between Gollon and St John's.; The 14 stories (to accompany the 14 traditional stations) are first-person narratives, similar in approach to the Women of the Passion sequence the author wrote for BBC Radio 4 for Holy Week 1990 and published in Angel and Me (Continuum). Like the Stations, the stories are contemporary in style and emotion but not a-historical. They are unashamedly (given the context) 'medieval' in the sense that they use the legendary stories about the characters as well as the specifically Biblical ones (eg the 13th century legend that Veronica was the woman with the "issue of blood" whom Jesus cured and who now returns the service by wiping his face).
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Mention is The Times, March 2009
A fascinating collaboration of compelling human stories by a well-known author with powerful contemporary paintings by a high-profile artist.
Both the author and the artist have received high profile media attention for their work.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780826405685
Publisert
2009-03-16
Utgiver
Vendor
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
136

Biographical note

Sara Maitland was born in 1950. Her first novel Daughter of Jerusalem won the Somerset Maugham Award in 1979. Since then she has written five more novels and has published five collections of short stories.