it is always a delight to discover friends creative projects. i spotted on instagram a new collaboration between poet chris goan and illustrator si smith. chris penned a few books of poems and liturgies on proost, and si is probably best known for the wonderful 40 series of illustrations of christ's journey in the wilderness.
after the apocalypse is arranged in three sections - before, during and after written and drawn in and around the pandemic. you'll find yourself in the words and images - it's a landscape we all traversed. artists have a knack of being the kind of nerve endings of a culture or something - a sort of feeling their way on our behalf or something. the times we are living in have made it hard to feel genuinely hopeful but it does blend grief and sorrow with hope against the odds.
chis blogs at fragile tent and is someone who has really stuck with the blog format over the years and done an amazing job. you can see some illustrations from the book and poems if you scroll down - like i want to live on this post.
while i was looking to see what was there i really enjoyed chris' latest 4 posts which are explorations of theopoetics - spirituality through artful making. this is a link to the fourth - click on that and scroll down. well worth a read...
the book is available from seatree argyll - that's also the site for chris and michaela goan's creative projects working in pottery, words, wood. they both left jobs a few years back now to pursue a simpler life where they could explore their passions and creative interests and make a life from that. it seems to be going pretty well!
Thanks for the encouraging shout-out Jonny! The theopoetcs thing seems to gather lots of things that resonate with our journey through the alt worship/missional community (to name but two buzzwords!) Sometimes it is helpful to name an idea I think. Cheers!
Posted by: Chris Goan | October 24, 2022 at 10:20 PM
Indeed my first thought when I read it was that the construction of alt worship is an act of theopoetics. I teach on theological reflection and often said that our way of doing theology was through the making and articulation of worship.
Posted by: Jonny | October 25, 2022 at 09:10 AM