My Son, the Artist

The music plays, and Keegan dances. He dances to Tchaikovsky and Veggie Tales. He dances to jazz and to Kid’s Praise. He dances to his maracas. He dances to the jingles on his toys. He dances to the motor of the blender and to the click of the refridgerator.

To Keegan, everyday sounds aren’t random noises; they’re music. And music calls for dancing.

Perhaps influenced by John Cage (best known for his 4’33” piece) or the composers of musique concrete, Keegan rejoices in the sounds around him. Or perhaps he hears the praise of the trees clapping their hands, the mountains and hills bursting forth in song for their Creator.

And I learn from my son that being an artist isn’t just about the craft we practice. It isn’t just in words on page, paint on canvas, notes on staff. Being an artist is a way of life. It influences how we see the world around us and how we respond to it. It consumes our waking up and going to bed.

Being an artist means recognizing the music and story and beauty of everyday life, of seeing how God takes the ashes of our pain and uses them to sculpt new life. It means participating in God’s redemption of his people and his earth.

While words on page are fewer these days than in my past life, I am artist. I dance to the music around me. I tell stories to my son. I make beautiful the space in which my family walks.

I am artist.

The Master’s Artist: Doxology

I’ve reread the two essays included in the booklet, Art and the Bible by Francis Schaeffer. Good timing. Before, I read it more intellectually, philosophically. This time, words of comfort refreshed my desert soul: God sees me. God sees my art.

Lately, I’ve been writing in relative silence. I may be relatively unknown to the world, to agents and publishers and readers, but I am not unknown to God. In this space of being known, I’m free to create as doxology.

I write because, like Paul, who interrupts his theological treatise to the Romans with a song of praise, I cannot help but to respond to God with art…The search for beauty becomes doxology to God.

Read the rest of Doxology at The Master’s Artist.

The Master’s Artist: On Raveling and Unraveling

My post is up today at The Master’s Artist. It’s about a non-perfectionist who learns to seek excellence and beauty.

Concern for the beauty of the thing mitigated the frustrations of fixing my mistakes. Perhaps not a single soul besides me would notice this mistake, but it would deface the elegance of the wrap.

Read the rest.

Art House Blog: A Fondue Feast

My post, A Fondue Feast, is up today at Art House America’s blog.

A taste:

Artists play communal fugues. We take a theme sounded by one and invert it, reverse it, transpose it. We play with this theme, echoing it and transforming it. We mark it with our unique personalities and cultures, then hand it on to the next artist.

Read the rest here.