skip to main | skip to sidebar

Guardians

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Guardian for Virginia June!

Welcome to the world little one!
Posted by Kris at 10/11/2008 No comments:

Guardian in Spray Paint at Wofford

Posted by Kris at 10/11/2008 No comments:

50+ New Guardians Ready to Place in the World!







Posted by Kris at 10/11/2008 No comments:

Guardian for a Broken World

Posted by Kris at 10/11/2008 No comments:

Stocked and primed for more painting!






Posted by Kris at 10/11/2008 No comments:
Newer Posts Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

Guardian Flight Patterns

CommunityWalk Map - Guardians by Kristofer Neely

Blog Archive

  • ►  2009 (1)
    • ►  May (1)
  • ▼  2008 (43)
    • ►  November (7)
    • ▼  October (5)
      • Guardian for Virginia June!
      • Guardian in Spray Paint at Wofford
      • 50+ New Guardians Ready to Place in the World!
      • Guardian for a Broken World
      • Stocked and primed for more painting!
    • ►  September (28)
    • ►  August (3)

About Me

My photo
Kris
Spartanburg, South Carolina, United States
Neely is an interdisciplinary artist based in Spartanburg, S.C. He has envisioned and collaborated to create community-based art projects including the Hidden Voices book project, the Artist-In-Transit project, the Transparent Studio, www.NotSoSpartan.com, the Spark! Puppet Parade, and the Faces of Work project. Neely was named an Unsung Hero in 2005, by DHEC for his artistic and editorial work with the Hidden Voices project. His visual art was selected to be featured on the walking map of Spartanburg for 2008-2009. In his studio, Neely experiments with traditional materials and found objects to create visual art. His creative practice has ranged from documentary video, performance art, playwriting, personal essay, poetry, Web design, and experimental pedagogies. He considers his time in the studio to be a manual act of contemplative prayer. Neely currently serves as the Assistant Dean and Coordinator for Studio Art at Wofford College.
View my complete profile

Guardian for a Broken World

Why Guardians?

For God will command the angels concerning you
to guard you in all of your ways.

On their hands they will bear you up,
so that you will not dash your foot against a stone.

Psalm 91:11-12


Keep watch, dear Lord, with those who work, or watch, or weep this night, and give your angels charge over those who sleep. Tend the sick, Lord Christ; give rest to the weary, bless the dying, soothe the suffering, pity the afflicted, shield the joyous; and all for your love’s sake.
from The Book of Common Prayer

I began painting angels on strips of wood that were left over from a classroom project. I gave these pieces to friends and family when they were going through a time of grief or trouble. I place Guardians in the corners of my life where I have felt the most afraid or alone.

My family encouraged me to begin painting Guardians that could be given as gifts. My mother says, "All of us have at least one dark corner in our lives." These angel paintings were featured in This Threshold: Writing on the End of Life, published in 2007 by the Hub City Writers Project.

Winged guardians have a deep history in the iconography of almost every world religion. Angels have walked a thin line between necessary players in Judeo-Christian stories and problematic presences that were purged from the canon. Despite century after century of occupying the margins, a recent Time Magazine report indicates just how persistent guardian angels prove to be in the American consciousness.

More than half of all Americans believe they have been helped by a guardian angel in the course of their lives, according to a new poll by the Baylor University Institute for Studies of Religion. In a poll of 1700 respondents, 55% answered affirmatively to the statement, "I was protected from harm by a guardian angel." The responses defied standard class and denominational assumptions about religious belief; the majority held up regardless of denomination, region or education — though the figure was a little lower (37%) among respondents earning more than $150,000 a year...

The Baylor study tested other statements that might indicate a similar belief in the supernatural intruding into everyday personal experience — "I heard the voice of God speaking to me"; and "I received a miraculous physical healing." But far fewer people claimed to have had those experiences. This raises the possibility that guardian angels, which famously support an industry of sentimental accessories, are just so darned attractive that they exist in a charmed belief niche of their own...

What's interesting about the Baylor findings on guardian angel experiences is that they cross all boundaries. They have scriptural writ (in Psalm 91 and elsewhere). They are clearly experiential. And guardian angels are a prominent part of Catholic belief that happens to float freely outside of a sacrament. The cross-spectrum legitimacy of the notion of angelic interventions may free Americans to engage in the kind of folk faith that is part of almost any religious system but is not always officially acknowledged. 1


In my own experience, sharing these pieces is often personally problematic. For years, I marginalized these works as nicknacks, understating the powerful personal response that people had to the Guardians I paint. Recently I began releasing them into the world in places that have been significant in my life. I documented these ephemeral installations in a blog, and they were featured by The Wooster Collective almost immediately. I was interested and flattered by their description of my work, “a wonderful blend of folk art and street art.”

Versions of these images have also been accepted into numerous gallery settings from solo exhibitions to juried shows. I often doubt what these images will communicate about me in these settings because they come out of such an intuitive place in my spiritual consciousness and art practice. I am always fascinated by the responses my Guardians receive in these settings and the stories they evoke from others.

Painting is often a manual act of contemplative prayer for me. My prayers as I paint Guardians are often deeply rooted in personal pain, fear, and worry. I hope that these Guardians offer a brush with hope and comfort to the people who find them on the street, encounter them in a gallery, or entertain the presence of these paintings in their home.

I believe that the images themselves are far less important than the power of the rich global tradition they invoke and the divinity they can point towards right here on earth.


1 (Retrived on September 30,2008 from http://www.time.com/time/nation
/article/0,8599,1842179,00.html
?cnn=yes)