RENEWAL IN LITURGICAL ART

Renewal in Liturgical Art- Encompassing Differing Worldviews in One Faith

A world view is a pattern of ideas and beliefs. Everyone seeks answers to the questions of “why are we here? What is the meaning and purpose of life? Is there a difference between right and wrong? Is there a God?  Do our actions have consequences?  Is there a connection between this visible world and an invisible one?  Our world view helps us to make sense of our being, our God, our purpose in this world.  The Christian worldview has a narrative of all history, as told in the Old and New Testaments.  

What is our world view as Christian artists and Iconographers?  For each of us this may be defined differently with fine nuances, depending on our denominational affiliations.  The Eastern and Western Churches evolved from the same beginning, yet have grown to have differences in art, liturgy, theology, etc.

So, finding common ground, much as our forefathers and mothers all experienced in the early church, is a worthy goal for Sacred Art makers of today.

Christian Renewal

The renewal of the mind involves a transformation of the way a person thinks and lives, which can be achieved through the power of the Holy Spirit as we reflect on God’s word. By being transformed in this way, believers can discern what is good, acceptable, and perfect according to God’s standards.

“Don’t copy the behavior and customs of this world, but let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think>”. Romans 12:2

I’ve researched some very good books on related subjects and have gathered some thoughts for you.  I include at the end of this article titles and authors of each book mentioned here.

Liturgical Art Renewal

Our goal, as iconographers, is to help others to see the sacred more deeply proclaim the Gospel more faithfully and pray together more honestly, using our eyes, our hearts, and our minds. And our hands.

An icon mediates or contains the Holy Presence

“The artist’s task is not merely to record but also to present the result of the encounter as it is shaped by that disciplined imagination…One can be in a kind of dialogue with the thing being observed or between the thing imagined and that which is produced. 

Christian worship is aided immeasurably by our sense of sight.  In worship we see each other and gain a glimpse of what it means to be the body of Christ.” Beauty, Spirit, Matter, Icons in the Modern World., Aidan Hart

“The spirit which knows God naturally comprehends divine beauty and seeks to delight in it alone. . .To contemplate divine beauty, to delight in it and partake in it is a requirement of the Spirit and is its life and heavenly life.” Theophan the Recluse (1880)

The icon is a radical way of seeing and therefore suggests a radical way of acting. When we look at an icon we are seeing as a saint sees.

An icon is not merely a painting of a religious subject but a crystallization of a whole culture, a culture which worships God and therefore venerates the material world that He created as a gift.’

Art is something essential to the shaping of faith and religious experience.

Sacred art is always abstract, in that word’s literal sense. In that it draws out the essence of its subject.  It uses stylistic abstraction to suggest these invisible realities….Sacred art typically reveals the union of the inner with the outer, the invisible with the visible.    Iconographic depictions of great suffering, such as the Crucifixion, keep this suffering united to love and hope.  They show that the suffering is genuine, but they also show that this suffering is on the road to the Resurrection.  An icon always joins opposites.

An icon brings the good news into the world by showing the face of Jesus Christ: God became man.  Moreover, through Christ, the icon reveals to us the true image of humanity transfigured and deified; it is the image of the kingdom of heaven, the kingdom that is to come and that will restore the harmony now marred by sin…if an icon depicts a saint, its real purpose is to bring us face to face with someone in whom God’s goodness shines forth.” Irina Yazykova

“Eyes of fire perceive each thing as the outer sign of an inner fact, or the local sign of a distant power.  For such eyes nothing is lonely matter, all things are caught up in a mysterious, ultimately divine whole that challenges understanding over a lifetime.  Eyes of flesh focus on the thing itself, eyes of fire on facts but still more intently on their participation in a larger meaning by which they are raised.” An Art of Our Own, the Spiritual in Twentieth Century Art,  Roger Lipsey

Books and Related Links

  • The Substance of Things Seen, Art, Faith, and the Christian Community by Robin M. Jensen
  • An Art of Our Own, the Spiritual in Twentieth Century Art,  Roger Lipsey
  • Beauty, Spirit, Matter, Icons in the Modern World, Aidan Hart
  • Eyes of Fire, Christine Hales

An Excellent Series of Talks at the Cathedral of All Saints Divine, Albany NY, by Brynna Carpenter-Nardone :

Lots to think and pray about! That’s all for this month,

May God continue to renew your minds in Him, and bless the work of your hands,

Christine Hales

newchristianicons.com online.iconwritingclasses.com

Origins of Christian Art, Part I

One of the difficulties with creating icons or works of art depicting Jesus is that we don’t really have any eyewitness drawings or paintings from people who actually saw him while he was alive. 

Legend has it that Saint Luke was commissioned to paint a portrait of Mary and the Christ Child and that was the first eye witness portrait of Jesus.

We know that early Christian art had to be symbolic because until 313 when Constantine legalized Christianity, Christians were being killed and persecuted for their faith so it was dangerous to be carrying or sharing images of Christ.

Ancient Panel paintings derived from the Egyptian panel paintings of gods and goddesses, therefore, the very early Christian panel paintings have similar compositions and figures replacing images of Egyptian gods with Christian imagery . As Christians found NEW WAYS OF VISUALIZING THE DIVINE, specifically in mosaics, Icons, and mural paintings for monasteries, icon panel paintings began to flourish.

The theological significance that Christians gave to their icons was in many ways more exalted than the ancient Egyptians had given to their sacred images.  As the Christian movement spread, naturally, each culture depicted Jesus as looking like them. To the Chinese, he looked Chinese, to the Indians, he looked Indian, to the Africans He is black, and so forth. The icons of early Christianity were expressions of beliefs and Biblical stories.

Early Christian artists were concerned with representing Christ, God made man.  “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth; we have beheld his glory, glory as of the only son of the Father.  Early Christians had faith that they saw God through Christ.

The early panel paintings of Roman Egypt, and through them, the early icon panels, are the seeds of the development European painting.  This influence can be seen as late as post Renaissance artists like Michelangelo, Raphael, and a whole host of more modern artists like Rembrandt, El Greco and many more.  

 While Icons exemplified a new understanding of the liturgy, with the central focus on the Eucharist, this not something you could say about religious paintings after the renaissance. Part II of this blog will cover sacred art and icons from the 7th century onward.

In the fourth century there was a move away from statuary. Icon painting, illumination, and mosaics  became the primary methods of representing the Divine.  Icons proliferated at this time, with many different styles of depicting Christ.

The fifth century is the age of great visions in Church decoration, and by the end of the century, Icons were impacting church decoration in a major way. At this time there arose many versions of Christ on portable panel paintings and evidenced in the Church of the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul,

CHRIST IN GLORY.  In the image of Jesus we have a vision of Christian spirituality and the universal, the human, the life of the spirit.

PANTOCRATOR The image of Jesus bridges worlds, between the human and the divine, between heaven and earth.

GOOD SHEPHERD– A long lasting Symbolic image of Christ

Sacred Geometry

Sacred Geometry:   Greek artists and mathematicians believed the golden ratio to be the unifying principle of the universe and to be responsible for the beauty within design and sound.  It’s a deep subject that I won’t go into here, but I have written about it in more detail in my book, “Eyes of Fire”, for those who are interested. 

For now, I will tell you that the golden ratio produces an order of such great intelligence that it was considered sacred by those who knew it.  An important aspect of the golden ratio is that it has an integrated relationship with unity.  The circle, often found in nature, is many times used in art to represent God. It is a form without beginning or end.

Iconoclasm

By the seventh century, theological debate arose over the belief that the icon was incarnational- its holiness deriving from the fact that because God had assumed physical matter, the icons could be a valid representation of God’s presence also. The iconoclastic controversy arose at this time with heated debate and at times whole sale destruction of icons if they were perceived to violate the second commandment. It requires the second council of Nicea in the ninth century to resolve this issue. Icons were intimately connected with the origins and growth of Christianity itself.

A lot has been written about this period of iconoclasm, and it is a controversy that seems to repeat itself in the Reformation in Europe in the 1500 and 1600’s.  For the 6th and seventh century destruction of religious images preceded the split between the Eastern and Western churches, each of whom developed a unique approach to religious art from that period onward.  The Roman Church preferred statuary and romantic paintings as church decoration and the Eastern Church developed a flattened, symbolic use of visual images in the Icons.

It’s interesting to note that the Celtic Church in Ireland, Scotland, Wales and Brittany also had an ultimately disunifying encounter with the steady movement forward of the centralized Roman Church by the 7th century. Monastic life under the rule of St. Columba was much more stringent than the Rule of Saint Benedict and became increasingly unpopular.  The Synod of Whitby in 664 sought to resolve the conflict and this resulted in a steady decline of the Celtic church.

I’m not a historian by any means, and I only study history in relation to the development of art and culture, but the simultaneity of these two conflicts is interesting.  Please comment below with perceptions or redirects that may make a contribution to our understanding of the conflicts involved in creating religious art.  Many of you are from Russia, Ukraine, Greece, and other countries with perhaps a different perspective of the history of Christian art.  It would be fascinating to pool together our knowledge and perceptions over the course of time and be able to share that with our communities and coming generations of sacred artists.

Next month will be Part II, moving forward from the Nicean Council and Saint John of Damascus’ brilliant defense of icons to  present day developments in religious imagery that builds up the church.  I feel that a thorough understanding of the history of Christian art will be an invaluable aid to those of us creating icons and religious imagery today.

I have written and published a book called “Eyes of Fire”, How Icons Saved My Life As An Artist” available on Amazon that also brings together knowledge and understanding of art and the Art Spirit through the ages, with a bias towards Byzantine iconography.

That’s all for this month, May God continue to bless the work of your hands and give you holy inspiration to create icons and religious paintings that build up His holy church.

Christine Hales

Lectio Divina and Icons

This Monastic spiritual practice of prayer, Scriptural reading, and meditation, although usually undertaken with a Bible and a prayer journal, can also be used very effectively with Icons as well.  Sometimes this is called “Visio Divina”.  Because Icons are meant to be Holy Scripture in visual form, they add a level of understanding and identifying with the Scripture and are particularly helpful with visual people in meditation.

Many icons easily lend themselves to this practice of meditation, for example, many of the Festal Icons of the Orthodox Church: The Nativity of Christ, The Baptism of Jesus, the Annunciation, The Resurrection, Crucifixion, Lamentation, Pentecost, The Entry into Jerusalem, and several others beautifully illustrate Holy Scripture and provide meditation opportunities for the liturgical year.

Crucifixion Icon by Christine Hales
C

Crucifixion Icon written by Christine Hales

One of the main purposes of Lectio, or Visio, Divina is to promote a personal communion with God while also studying Scripture. It’s not primarily intended as a theological analysis of Biblical passages but rather as a means of personally entering into the scene or Biblical passage and asking God what He wants to teach or show you in this prayer and meditation.  It can be a very personal interpretation that sheds light on areas of our lives that need us to grow in our understanding of them.

Transfiguration Icon Written by Christine Hales

The roots of this kind of Scriptural meditation go back to Origen in the third century  who thought of Scripture as a Sacrament. The practice was handed down through many generations of Christian leaders, including St. Augustine of Hippo. Saint Benedict of Nursia  encouraged his monks  to practice Lectio Divina in the sixth century.  During the twelfth Century the practice of  Lectio Divina was simplified to include four main parts:

     First, The Reading of a Scriptural passage (or, choose an Icon AND a Scriptural Passage).

     Second, meditate on the passage and the icon.  I suggest that using journaling thoughts and prayers to be very helpful tools in this process.

     Third, pray, talk to Christ, ask questions, pour out your heart to Him, ask for His direction.

     Fourth, Contemplation and Meditation.  Spend time in silence with the Icon before you and allow the peace of the silence to be a space where you can just rest with God.  Again, after contemplation, journaling is very helpful.

Saint Benedict Icon Written by Christine Hales

Saint Benedict created a Rule for his monastics that included three main things:  Liturgical Prayer, manual labor, and Lectio Divina- the slow, careful reading of Scripture, meditating and pondering of the meaning.

In the twelfth Century, Saint Bernard of Clairvaux thought that Lectio Divina guided by the Holy Spirit the keys to nourishing Christian spirituality.

Russian Orthodox Icon of “Entry into Jerusalem”, fifteenth century

As time went on, many other monastic orders emphasized the importance of Lectio Divina to the spiritual life and this has continued with the second Vatican Council in 1965 and then again in 2005 with Pope Benedict and then Pope John Paul II, who used a questions and answer format: “One condition for Lectio Divina is that the mind and heart be illumined by the Holy Spirit, that is, by the same Spirit who inspired the Scriptures, and that they be approached with an attitude of ‘reverential hearing.”

     In our times, Lectio Divina has spread to lay people and has been widely adopted in the Anglican Tradition as well. 

The famous Henri Nouen was instrumental in bringing meditation with icons to the fore in Western Christianity, reminding us that for well over a thousand years Icons were the liturgical art of both the West and East, in the undivided  Church.  His book, “Behold the Beauty of the Lord” is a classic and details his deepening experience of living with four icons in particular.

Face of Christ Icon by Andre Rublev 15th century

“WhIle staying at L’Arches in France, someone had put a reproduction of Rublev’s icon of the Holy Trinity on the table of the room where Henri was staying. “After gazing for many weeks at the icon,” Henri wrote in Behold the Beauty of the Lord, “I felt a deep urge to write down what I had gradually learned to see.’”  Quote from an online article by Jim Forest, a good friend of Nouen’s.  

Icons played a major role in Nouen’s spiritual life and development, no doubt with the accompaniment of prayer and reading of Holy Scripture. There are many books on the subject, for example, “Lectio Divina-the Sacred Art-Transforming Words and Images Into Heart Centered Prayer” by Christine Valtners Paintner, PHD, “Meeting God in Scripture: A Hands on Guide to Lectio Divina”, by Jan Johnson, and many more.  Connecting this ancient practice to Icon writing and praying with icons is helpful in growing our connection with God through our work.

Blessings, until next month,

Christine Simoneau Hales 

Newchristianicons.com

Celtic Christianity and Icons

Book of Kills, Madonna and Child

Recently, while teaching an online Icon writing class, I shared some prayers and quotations I have long cherished from Esther De Waal’s excellent book, “Seeking God, The Way of Saint Benedict.”  Afterwards, I started reading again her book, “The Celtic Way of Prayer” which inspired me to compare and contemplate Byzantine culture and Icons with Celtic Spirituality and Celtic icons.

The Celtic Way of Prayer

She explains that the Celtic way of prayer is a way of praying that embraces all of ourselves, allowing us to pray not only with words, but with our hearts, feelings, and body.   A lot of Celtic prayer is poetry, reaching out to God using symbols and images, and imagination either verbally or mentally or physically in some other way.  Here, I was thinking of how we pray while writing icons, and how writing icons allows us to pray also with our whole selves.  In this sense, writing icons becomes a journey that we take with Christ, allowing Him to guide and show us our true selves in Him.

The Four Evangelists, Book of Kills

Praying/writing/painting icons involves our hands and our minds, and our very breath becomes a prayer as we work. Celtic Christianity originates from a time when the separation of the Eastern and Western churches had not yet been thought of.  Back in the ancient, early days of Christendom, the Book of Kells was a visual testimony to the Celtic Christian faith in rich symbols, colors, shapes and patterns in much the same way that icons were in the eastern countries.  These images touch a deep part of our being with their intricacies, woven imageries and words proclaiming the Gospel in all its mystery and beauty.

Book of Kells

Monasteries were home to both the Book of Kells and ancient Eastern icons, making clear to us that there need be no separation between praying, living and working. Writing icons is a process of uniting our thoughts, hands and breath in prayer and praise to God, allowing our worship of God to flow into the art work.  Clearly, the Book of Kells is just a different way of expressing visually the same process as icon writing.

Book of Kills

Continual prayer and work become our Opus Dei, and we are blessed to experience a monastic grace as we work on icons.  However, the Celtic way is to celebrate this rhythm of prayer and work in ordinary life, removing the dichotomy of holy vs secular life.  As the ancient Celts were largely outside the purview of the Roman Empire, they were free to develop a very strong connection with nature, sun, sky, water, land, fire as elemental forces in their Christian spirituality.  In part, due to this deep connection with nature, they early Celtic have a universal, primal tone in their prayers and worship.  The Celtic connection between God, man, nature, animals, birds, and other wild creatures allows for a holistic world view that permeates our senses in ways that are beyond our ability to rationally understand. 

In this way, the mystical communion of saints enter into our world, through our remembrance of them in song, prayer, and art, helping us to maintain our understanding of our place in time, and our significance in God’s eternal plan. We become aware that  everything we engage and encounter is relational, and we exist in the same relational way with God.

The Byzantine culture and worship is well known for its ability to involve us through all of our senses in the beautiful churches that have multitudes of icons, music, and incense.  Similarly Celtic spirituality uses our perception of nature to engage our senses as we worship.

“O Father! O Son! O Spirit Holy! Be the Triune with us day and night, On the machair plain or on the mountain ridge, Be the Triune with us and His arm around our head, Be the Triune with us and His arm around our head”. From “The Celtic Way of Prayer, Esther DeWaal.

As this is the American Association of Iconographers, and thus, a culture made up of a myriad of nationalities, it’s interesting to contemplate the Irish, or Celtic form of Icon writing as well as the more well known forms of Byzantine, Greek, etc.

Book of Kells

I hope this has been thought provoking and please do keep all iconographers lifted in prayer as we continue the important work of understanding and creating icons for our time.

Some Useful Links:

Betsy Porter hosts an online meeting for iconographers one Sunday afternoon a month, covering topics interesting and informative for iconographers: NEW ONLINE ZOOM CLASSES, Sunday October 17, November 14, and December 12, 2021, 2 to 3 PM Pacific time. We will look at each other’s work and discuss iconography. No charge, but donations to the church are always welcome. For a link, contact me at 510-517-5360 Betsy Porter, betsyhartporter@yahoo.com

Dorothy Alexander hosts an icon writing workshop in Santa Barbara, California. It’s a drop in workshop where you can bring your own icons to work on and enjoy fellowship, usually once a month. Email: dotalexander@westmont.edu

A lovely new book about Andrey Rublev, “Andrey Rublev, The Artist and His World”, by Robin Milner-Gulland not only gives a detailed picture of the world Rublev created in, but is also beautifully illustrated with color prints. The result is one of the most detailed and innovative books on the subject that I’ve seen. I highly recommend it to all interested in understanding more about Rublev and the importance of his work artistically and spiritually.

May God continue to bless the work of your hands,

Faithfully,

Christine Hales

New Christian Icons

Icons and Community

“Between us there is but a narrow wall,

And by sheer chance; for it would take

Merely a call from your lips or from mine

To break it down, and that without a sound.

The wall is builded of your images.”

R.M. Rilke, the Book of Hours

Community can be difficult and takes time.  When I started this blog and the American Association of Iconographers back in 2014 I wasn’t sure what direction it would take.  I recognized a need for an American School of Iconographers- people who were learning from the Greek, Russian, Romanian and English iconographers who are actively teaching this ancient art world wide, but who would eventually, through much study, practice, and guidance, begin to evolve a style of icon writing that was uniquely their own.  

Last Supper Icon by Christine Hales

Last Supper Icon written by Christine Hales

It has to do with identity and all the things that influence the healthy growth of identity.  Our primary identity is in God, and we all have that in common.  But even a cursory study of the history of iconography shows that different styles have developed over many places and times.  And, theoretically, this growth needs to continue.

Creative community is vulnerable to many difficulties, but with God’s help, I believe we have begun to attract some highly creative, open minded iconographers who are willing to put aside individual differences in order to encourage and further this important opus dei in their fellows.

St. Benedict wrote his famous “Rule” in the sixth century to serve as a guide to forming and maintaining a community dedicated to glorifying God with their work, rest, and worship.  Saint Benedict’s model for the monastic life was the family with the abbot as father and all the monks as brothers.

Saint Benedict Icon written by Christine Hales, based on the fresco of Fra Angelico

Saint Benedict’s Rule organises the monastic day into regular periods of communal and private prayer, sleep, spiritual reading, and manual labour – ut in omnibus glorificetur Deus, “that in all [things] God may be glorified” (cf. Rule ch. 57.9).

Some adaptation of this rule might be beneficial to those of us seeking to form community as iconographers, albeit a global virtual community.  The FB group page (American Association of Iconographers) would be a good place to share ideas on this.

Early 19th Century Icon, Russian “Union of Love” (Sourced from Temple Gallery Catalogue Christmas 2004)

The FB group for the American Association of Iconographers is open to all who care to join with the spirit of unity, peace, and kindness.  It is intended to be a place where iconographers can share their experiences, ongoing projects, questions, or relevant links and articles that will serve to widen the education and perspective of iconographers today.  More recently, it seems, iconographers have wanted to use that platform for self promotion.

TO address this issue, I am offering to create a separate page for this website that will list members, show a photo, give their website, and a short description of their work. 

Membership in the AAI has always been and will remain without financial cost, but to join at the level of being represented worldwide on a separate page to other people interested in icons, there will be a fee of $35 to cover the costs of maintaining that page.

If you are interested in participating on this level, please email me at: chales@halesart.com to begin.  Meanwhile, keep taking the icon retreats, drawing classes, and religious studies, and reach out with emails and FB comments and be willing to share your gifts and to help others.

“Resurrection and Feasts” Russian, Late 17th Century, (Sourced from Temple Gallery Catalogue, Christmas, 2004)

May God continue to bless the work of your hands, and guide your thoughts, plans and actions to all that is pleasing to Him, Almighty God.

Christine Hales

newchristianicons.com online.iconwritingclasses.com Icon Prints

How To Gesso Icon Boards

Painting Icons using egg tempera paints requires that we use a solid, stable support that is also absorbent for the many layers we need to result in the jewel like appearance of icons.

Traditionally, poplar boards have been used that are coated in rabbit skin glue (as a sealer) and then between 8 – 14 layers of natural gesso, sanded in between layers.  The result should be a polished, smooth surface that is also highly absorbent.  Natural gesso is not the same as the acrylic gesso most people are familiar with.  Natural gesso is made using rabbit skin glue and chalk or marble dust.

Today there are many more modern materials that iconographers are experimenting with in part because the process of preparing an icon board is lengthy and requires a lot of physical effort and time.   Natural Pigments makes a product, “easy Gesso”, that seems much easier to use and works well, especially for beginning students.  https://www.naturalpigments.com/mediums-grounds/gesso-primers/gessoes/easy-gesso.html

Also, I tend to use Baltic Birch Wood panels because I feel they are less prone to warping than more traditional woods.

Below I will provide an explanation of how to prepare and gesso an icon board that I trust will be helpful.  If you should choose to experiment with other materials and find success, do write to me and I will add that to this list.

Icon Board Materials

Baltic birch panels of various sizes, a sauce pan and another container for mixing the gesso. I use recycled plastic or glass containers about the size of a large yogurt container. Distilled water, measuring spoons, measuring cup, wood spoon to stir, oxgall liquid, glycerin, marble dust or chalk, rabbit skin glue, 2″ bristle paint brush from the hardware store, 3 grades of sand paper- 300, 600, 1200 grit. Muslin or linen large enough to overlap the icon boards’ dimensions by 1 inch all around.

Set up your workspace with a long table covered with a painter’s drop cloth. I like to use one that I can dispose of when the whole process is finished because it will get quite messy.

Steps to Gesso Icon Boards

Linen drying on the boards, having been soaked in rabbit skin glue.

  1. Measure 2 Tablespoons of Rabbit Skin glue into 2 cups of distilled water, stir well. Let sit until glue is completely absorbed and expanded- 2-4 hours.
  2. Place glue mixture in a container that rests in a saucepan , double boiler is good), containing 3 inches of boiling water and let the glue melt. Be careful it doesn’t get too hot- do not boil the glue mixture! 135 degrees Farenheit is too hot!!
  3. Next, using the 2″ Bristle brush, coat both sides and edges of each board with the glue. Let each side dry about 2-4 hours. This will prevent the board from warping and will keep out atmospheric moisture in the future.
  4. When the boards have dried, the next day, you can mix up some more glue This you will use to, first, coat the dry icon boards with it. Second, dip the pre cut linen into this glue mixture and spread evenly on the board. Smooth out wrinkles- I use plastic gloves.
  5. Next day, use a mat knife to trim edges of over lapping linen.

Time to trim the edges of the linen- when they are completely dry.

Making the Gesso

  1. Now it’s time to make the gesso itself! Make the glue- 2Tbs rabbit skin glue added to 2 cups of water – as before. Let soak, then warm until completely dissolved, as above.
  2. When the glue is ready, using a sieve, gradually add approx 3 cups of whiting – chalk or marble dust. I also add 1 teaspoon of oxgall liquid and 1 tsp of glycerin. These are dispersion agents and they are optional. I use Kremer Chalk from Champagne K 58000, and/or marble dust K 58500. I often make a mixture of chalk and marble dust but you can use just the chalk as well.
  3. When this is ready, start putting layers of gesso on the boards, letting them dry in between layers. It doesn’t take too long for each layer to dry- in the summer it might take 1/2 hour.

Sanding the Boards

  1. After 3 or 4 layers, I usually give the boards a rough sand to take off any bumps or rough spots. This can be done with a wet sanding method described in the video below, or with regular sandpaper. The wet sand method is my choice, usually. Don’t forget to coat the edges of the board. After 6 layers I sand again. Then, a final sand after the last 2 layers. You can make anywhere from 4-8 layers. Use the finest sand paper for the final sand and you will get a beautiful smooth surface ready to paint on!

There are several videos on you tube showing different approaches to gessoing an icon board. You might want to watch this, or one like it, all the way through before starting. Icon boards video by Paul Stetsenko. Or, if this is too much bother, you can always order an icon board!! I have included some new sources on my website on the student resources page.

Happy Icon Painting!

May God bless you and guide you in all of your endeavors in this Holy ministry.

Christine Hales

Christinehales.com My Icon Print Website

Our Lady of Guadalupe

One of the most important icons of the western world is Our Lady of Guadalupe, sometimes called the Virgin of Guadalupe.

While the history of the apparition and subsequent miracles are fodder for speculation, there are certain facts that all agree on.

A series of five apparitions occurred in December of 1531 within the Basiclic of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City.  This basilica is the most visited Catholic shrine in the world, and the world’s third most visited sacred site.

According to legend, the Virgin Mary appeared four times to Juan Diego, an indigenous Mexican peasant, and once to his uncle, Juan Bernardino.  The first apparition occurred on the morning of Saturday, December 19, 1531.  Juan Diego experienced a vision of a young woman at a place called the Hill of Tepeyac.  The woman spoke to Juan in his native language, Nahuatl, and identified herself as the “Virgin Mary, mother of the very true deity”.  She asked for a church to be erected at that site in her honor.  Juan Diego then told the  Archbishop of Mexico City what had happened.  Unsurprisingly, Juan wasn’t believed.  Later that same day, Juan Diego saw the second apparition. The young woman asked him to continuing pressing the Archbishop for a church to be built.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Icon written by Christine Hales

The next day, a Sunday, when Juan Diego spoke to the Archbishop a second time, the Archbishop asked for a truly miraculous sign to prove her identity.  Later that day, the third apparition appeared when Juan Diego returned to Tepeyac Hill. He again encountered the same young woman and told her of the request for a miraculous sign. She agreed to provide this the next day.

By Monday, Juan Diego’s uncle, Juan Bernardino, became ill and Juan Diego had to care for him.    Unfortunately, the uncle’s condition worsened and In the very early hours of Tuesday, Juan travelled to find a Catholic priest to hear his uncle’s confession and minister to him on his deathbed.  On this journey, Juan Diego traveled around the place of is previous encounters with the young woman because he was ashamed by not meeting her as promised the previous day.  But still, the young woman found him and asked where he was going.  This was the fourth apparition.  When Juan Diego explained what had happened, she gently reminded him that he should have sought her assistance.  She asked “ No estoy yo aqui que soy tu madre?”  (AM I not here, I who am your mother?  She assured him that his uncle was now recovering and told him to gather flowers from the top of Tepeyac Hill.  This hill was normally barren in December.  Juan obeyed her instructions and found Castilian roses, not native to Mexico, blooming there. The Virgin arranged the flowers in Juan’s tilma (cloak), and when he opened his cloak later that day for the Archbishop, the flowers fell to the floor, revealing the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe.

The next day, Juan Diego found his uncle completely healthy, just as the Virgin had told Juan.  Juan Bernardino said that he had also seen her praying at her bedside and that she had instructed him to tell the Archbishop about his miraculous cure and that she had told him she wanted to be known as the Virgin of Guadalupe.

The Archbishop kept the mantle in the church where it attracted many visitors.  On December 26, 1531, a procession formed to transfer the miraculous image back to Tepeyac Hill where it was installed in a small chapel.  During this procession, the first miracle occurred when a young native who was accidently mortally wounded was completely healed when brought before the Virgin’s image with many prayers and supplications.

The Virgin of Guadalupe is known as the Queen of Mexico, the Paton saint of both North and South America, and titles given by Pope John Paul II, “Empress of Latin America and Protectress Of Unborn Children”.

It’s so interesting to hear the stories behind icons. Please contact me if you have other examples to share. (chales@halesart.com).

INTERESTING LINKS FOR ICONOGRAPHERS

Greek Iconographer, George Kordis, gave this talk on “Tradition as Creativity” at Saint Vladimir’s Seminary in April 2022: . https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jg6ts-8Kiaw

This link is to a video by iconographer Antonis demonstrating two methods of blending while painting in egg tempera: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hnaImXOEvuI

This is a link to an EWTN tv show called Living Divine Mercy, it features an interview and video about my icons.

That’s all for this month. If you would like to take my online Icon writing class January 17-20, 2023, please click here for more information.

Blessings, Prayers, and Best Wishes for a God Filled New Year!

Christine Simoneau Hales

christinehales.com

Gold Leaf Gilding

Icon in progress with Kolner Method

Greetings Friends and Fellow Iconographers:

I’ve been studying and painting Icons for almost thirty years! Since I first began, the field of iconography has changed so much! There are so many more books on the subject, both “how to”, books about the history of icons, and how to pray with them. This is great news for all of us, I’m sure.

New Gilding Materials

At the same time, many, many, new products used for icon writing have come on the market. I invite any of my readers who has experience with these new products to please write about it so it can be shared and published here. Only in this way of sharing our experience can we hope to add the best quality to our icons and I know that we all want to bless the Lord with our most excellent work.

With this in mind, I’m currently preparing to teach an online icon writing class that, in addition to teaching how to paint an icon using egg tempera, will focus on how to gild using the Kolner Instacoll Gilding System. Many iconographers love this method because of its relative ease in application but particularly for its very shiny surface when it’s finished. I have experimented extensively with it and am happy to share some of the technical information I have observed.

Different Methods of Application

Shellac

First, applying one or two coats of shellac to the area to be gilded is most beneficial. The natural gesso is a porous surface, and even for other gilding methods, it is suggested to coat the surface with shellac thinned with denatured alcohol. I used a mixture that is 1 part blonde shellac flakes to 4 parts denatured alcohol. (This mixture can be stored in a cool dry place for several weeks only, so only mix the amount you think you will need.) You will find technical articles about this on the web- here is one.

Kölner Instacoll System

Next, I applied the Kolner Instacoll System BASE in two thinned layers. I thinned it a little with a drop or two of distilled water. This needs to dry completely- 1-3 hours between coats. It’s really important to avoid making brushstrokes if you want a very smooth gold surface. (You can clean your brushes with soap and water). The first coat must be completely dry before applying the second coat.

Next, I applied the Kolner Instacoll System ACTIVATOR. You can use a brush or a soft cloth to apply this to the base when it’s dry. You want a thin, even film over the base and it needs to dry before applying the gold leaf.

You can use either patent gold or loose gold with this system. I used patent gold leaf and a cotton ball to firmly push the gold leaf onto the surface. This takes some practice. Overlapping the gold leaf when applying it helps to give a smooth seamless look to the finished gold. After the whole surface to be gilded is covered, press down firmly again all the gold, using cotton balls- never touching the surface with your fingers.

Icon in Progress with Burnished Kolner Gold Application

Now for some gratification! When it’s all applied and pushed firmly into the surface, take a cotton ball or soft cloth and burnish gently to remove all the loose gold bits. As you do so, the most beautiful gold leaf shine appears !

As a note, I also experimented with the Kolner KGGG System FOND and Colnasize, but I prefer the above method as it is slightly easier and doesn’t require sanding.

Of course there are many other methods of gilding for icons- the oil method with different application and drying times, the water gilding method and The Dux water based size method. With experience, each of us arrives at our preferred method of gold leaf application. I hope this article has been helpful. Feel free to register for my online class in October to see this demonstrated!

INTERESTING LINKS:

This is a very good and short (7 1/2 minutes) talk on “Why Icons Look The Way They Do” by Archimandrite Maximos Constas, interviewed by Fr. Josiah Trenham.

THAT’S ALL FOR THIS MONTH. Be blessed and bless others,

Christine

ChristineHales.com Christine’s Icon Prints New Christian Icons

Virtual Icon Gallery Exhibition

Greetings Friends and Iconographers:

This month I am presenting some writings and images from a beautiful exhibition of Eastern European icons dating from the nineteenth to sixteenth centuries that is hosted by a non-profit gallery of icons located in Žilina (Slovakia). The Gallery of Icons (OZ IKONY) in Žilina is found at: https://ikony.hour.sk/en/

Christ Pantocrator, Albania, seventeenth century, Courtesy, OZ IKONY

Gallery of Icons – OZ IKONY

The gallery was established in 2015 as the result of a private collection of East Christian icons. During the last 7 years of existence, the gallery has collected about 300 icons from Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Cyprus, Greece, Romania, Bulgaria, North Macedonia or Albania. The icons are dated from the 14th until the beginning of the 20th century. Among the main activities of the gallery, I can name the presentation of the icons from various regions of Eastern Christian cultures, the conduct of research on icons and providing space for and organizing of conferences, lectures and concerts. The aim of the exhibition is to present the spiritual and artistic beauty of Eastern Christian icons and to create a living bridge between the East and the West. 

In March 2021 the gallery celebrated its 5th anniversary. The current exhibition called The Mysterious Face of Jesus Christ is the fifth in a row after the exhibitions dedicated to the themes of The Old Testament ProphetsThe Church FeastsThe Icons of the Mother of God, and Wisdom Hidden in Icons.

The 5th exhibition is opened from the 15th of September 2020 until June 2023. There are 25 artistically and historically valuable icons on display. Most of them are exhibited in Slovakia for the first time. There are Russian and Greek icons, one Romanian, Macedonian, and Albanian icon, and one icon from Mount Athos among the exhibits.

The Only Begotten Son and the Word of God, Russia, nineteenth century, Courtesy, OZ IKONY

American Association of Iconographers’ Goals 

Even as this is a newsletter to foster the development of American iconographers, we all owe a debt of gratitude to our Eastern Orthodox brothers and sisters who, through the centuries have produced so many beautiful and deeply spiritual icons worth imitating and learning from. The aim of this exhibition is to create a living bridge between the East and the West, which is closely aligned with the goals of the American Association of Iconographers.

Membership to the American Association of Iconographers is without financial obligation to its members and is open to all friends and lovers of icons around the world.  It is an ecumenical, primarily Christian group of icon collectors, scholars, icon writers and those whose mandate is education in the liturgical arts.

We invite members to contribute educational articles that might benefit all who love icons.  Email: christinehales@me.com for submission details.

The Saviour Depicted up to His Shoulders, Russian, sixteenth century, Courtesy OZ IKONY

Quotes from Milan Lach SJ, Bishop of the Eparchy of Parma, Ohio

“St John of Damascus (+749) once said: “When someone asks you about your faith, take him to church and show him the icons.”  … Icons are liturgical objects. They speak- communicate.  Persons depicted on icons are already in the Heavenly Kingdom.  They are transformed by uncreated light and participate in the life of the Most Holy Trinity.

Icons are not merely art, as Western culture would perceive it.  They are more than art.  Through an encounter with the person of Jesus Christ, the Most Holy Theotokos, and the saints depicted on the icon, we can have a personal experience with the living God.

The icon is a tool of evangelization, through which the Church proclaims the living Jesus Christ.  To His person is dedicated this exhibition of twenty five beautiful  icons, here at the Gallery of Icons in Zilina.”

You can visit the 5th exposition in the virtual gallery: https://ikony.hour.sk/en/virtual-gallery/

I hope this virtual exhibition enriches your understanding and scope of possible models for future icons. Sending prayers for God to bless the work of your hands and minds, to the service of His Holy Church.

Kind regards,

Christine Simoneau Hales, Artist, Iconographer

www.newchristianicons.com

The Crucifixion, Russia, 1800, Courtesy, OZ IKONY

Icons by Father Sophrony

Recently I have been reading a book by Sister Gabriela about Father Sophrony that includes many of his drawings and icons. I’m inspired by his approach and work and want to share that with you here.

While attending art school in Russia in the 1920’s, one of his teachers was Vassily Kandinsky. Soon after, Sophrony moved to Paris where he exhibited his paintings and was not interested in pursuing a Christian life. This changed drastically and in 1926 he entered the Monastery of Panteleimon on Mt Athos where he remained until finally settling in Essex, UK at the Monastery of Saint John the Baptist.

Father Sophrony Drawing

To learn more about Father Sophrony, please read Sister Gabriela’s excellent books: “Being, The Art and Life of Father Sophrony”, or “Seeking Perfection in the World of Art”, or “Painting As Prayer: The Art of A. Sophrony Sakharov.”

I include here several quotes from the “Painting as Prayer” book that I know will be inspiring to all of you as well:

“An artist is a person who believes with deep conviction in the rightness of what he creates; who devotes his entire life to art for mankind. Only in such people does the Divine spark burn, brightly an unquenchably. And this is what’s most important in art.”

Drawing by Father Sophrony

Kandinsky

This is a quote in the book attributed to Kandinsky: ” the artist must not consider himself master of the situation, but the servant of nobler aims- a servant whose obligations are majestic, distinctive, and sacred. He must nurture himself and plumb the depths of his inner life, he must conserve his inner life and develop it lest his outer talent becomes empty, like a lost glove, the empty and vain likeness of a hand.”

Painting as Prayer, Book by Sister Gabriela

“The Icon is an art which expresses the spiritual world in form and color. It is made with a stylistic language of its own which introduces the person looking at it into another sphere of being, another world of perception. Intentionally it follows a different logic of perspective and reality, placing emphasis on the inner life because its main purpose is either to depict the face of God or convey the soul of the saint or the essence of the scene being depicted. Deliberately this makes it somewhat abstract. The artist seeks divine inspiration for their work and in order to receive this, rather than some other influence, he needs a humble and prayerful attitude, recognizing that he is not master of the situation.

Inspiration from on high depends to a considerable extent on us- whether we open our heart so that the Lord- The Holy Spirit Who ‘stands at the door and knocks’ does not have to enter forcibly.

The iconographer will try to free himself from all that hinders or is contrary to the action of Divine Inspiration. This requires both humility and asceticism, but as ascetic feats may lead to pride, and thus deter grace, it is humility that is the essential part. This keeps him both open to others and their suggestions and open to grace. It preserves a rigorous questioning and checking in prayer with his conscience and with the ideal which is the humble example of Christ.”

Orthodox Journal Article

I first learned about Father Sophrony’s work from an excellent article on the Orthodox Journal. Here is the link .

“For me, the most fascinating part of the study was the subject of Father Sophrony as an iconographer.  His approach to iconographic practice is described and this section is rich in quotations and comments of great interest.  Sister Gabriela writes that by having “absorbed the iconographic tradition through observation and living with it, while leading a strict ascetical life…one’s understanding goes deeper, beyond the external aesthetic aspect.”  “…he understood iconography in its essential form, as an inspiration for prayer, and a “springboard”, as he called it himself, to eternity.  In this sense he was free from any attachment to any specific school or iconographic movement.  His sole interest was to render the icon as authentically as possible.”  As a result of this it is apparent that “One cannot classify his icons into any particular style or school.  He took what he found best from each.  His only concern was the icon itself, how best to express the given situation.”

 In summation Sister Gabriela writes of Father Sophrony’s life that “This is the search for Christ, the yearning for close contact with Him and, within this, striving to portray His face in a correct and worthy manner, both in the inner life and in iconographic panting.”

Additional Link to Icon Gallery in Slovakia

I have recently seen a lovely online exhibition of Eastern European Icons at The Gallery of Icons. Here is the link.

That’s all for this month. Please email me with suggestions for future articles on understanding and appreciating icons.

Blessings and prayers,

Christine Hales

newchristianicons.com

onlineiconwritingclasses.com