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The Traditional Formation of the Artist is a Liturgical Formation for the New Evangelisation

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I am often asked by people about the sort of training that they should undertake in order to become an artist. In response I explain that in my understanding the training should involve not only obtaining the necessary technical skills but also the formation of the person in virtue so that they are capable of directing those skills well. Not many are surprised by that I imagine. However, many assume that if they are faithful and orthodox Catholics then they have the spiritual aspect already sorted out, and so all they need to think about is the skills. I am not so sure that this is automatically the case. What is needed, I feel, is an integration of the two and this doesn't usually happen spontaneously.

The traditional the training of an artist was meant to engender this integration. So the spirit of humility that develops a capacity to follow inspiration, should God choose to inspire him, is developed through being prepared to follow directions from a living Master and the copying with discernment of the works of Old Masters. Also, there is carefully directed study that gives a formation in beauty that develops the artists intuitive sense of right relationship and harmony. It is a liturgical centered training so those aspects that form the person are not imposed on him from without; but rather they are offered to him and freely accepted, in that they are the fruits of full and active participation in the liturgy. In saying this, it is important to remember also that we cannot instrumentalise the liturgy. Indeed it is the other way around,  - worship of God is always the primary goal and does not serve other ends. Accordingly, the ultimate purpose of any Christain education, including an artistic training, is mystagogical catechesis: a deepening of understanding of the mysteries of the faith in order to participate more fruitfully in the liturgy; by the transformation in the person that ensues they are in turn better able to fulfill their personal vocation and direct all their activities accordingly. This goal for Catholic education was stated in Sacramentum Caritatis and reinforced again by Pope Francis in Evangelii Gaudium by his reference to the need for mystogogy (although most commentators I have read seem to have missed this point). If the priorities are right, then through God's grace fruits will ensue in order to help the person in the fulfillment of his personal vocation, which in turn point us back to the liturgy, the source and summit.

So to give one small example: consideration of what we look at in prayer is important. I am often struck by how little thought many who tell me they want to paint sacred art give to how the dynamic of prayer when visual images are used. How can anyone paint images that helps prayer, if they not understand this; and how, I wonder can they understand it if they do not use visual imagery as part of their daily prayer? The main way to gain an understanding of this, I believe, is for the prospective artist to develop the habit of engaging with visual images appropriately during the liturgy. I have found that praying the liturgy of the hours at home with an image corner is fruitful here, because I have control over the images that I use.

Once the practice is incorporated as habit, then the artist will quite naturally paint images that nourish their own prayer (assuming that he has chosen the personal vocation that God intends for him); and if they pray well then that imagery will be beautiful. This suggests to me the ideal of worship should not only be very different from that which results from the abuses seen since Vatican II (as one would expect), but also should be very different from the period just before the Council too. After all it is the period before the Council during which most of the styles of very bad sacred art that we know and hate - whether sugary kitsch images or brutal modernist distortions originally came into our churches.

The fruits of a traditional artistic training in the formation of the person are such, I would say, that it would be useful too (with minimal adaption) for anybody, regardless of his personal vocation. And so would be of interest not just to artists, but to all people; (and especially those who are interested in the formation of children). It is a training in the via pulchritudinis and is the formation of the New Evangelisation, I suggest.

When I spoke recently in New York City for the Catholic Artists' Society this is the topic that I spoke about, and gave much more detail about what such a training might consist of. The link for the audio is here. (www.catholicartistssociety.org/david-claytons-lecture-forming-the-artist/)

I should say that I was very impressed with my hosts, the Catholic Artists' Society in their emphasis on the importance of the spiritual life of the artist and its integration with his art. After the talk, Compline was sung in the chapel and all were encouraged to stay and pray. Before it the Hour began, we were given the text and simple musical score and the leader explained to those who might not have any experience what we were about to do, stressed the value of the Liturgy of the Hours and explained to us how to sing. It worked very well. I loved the way that they encouraged people to take the handouts home and think about making this part of the prayer life of the domestic church.

The next event in this series is on December 14th and is a lecture by Alice Ramos of St Johns University.



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