Two
of the people in our household – Hebe and Alice – work as freelance artists.
They
do all sorts of things. There’s a wonderful bed-and-breakfast establishment in
our town called St Benedict, belonging to two Orthodox friends. The inside of
the house is very richly decorated, and various parts of it have been painted
by Alice and Hebe. Like the panels of these folding doors,
and
this mirror - painted from the back (so fiendishly hard to do; they had to layer the flowers from foreground to background, counter-intuitive. Then gild over the whole back with white gold):
That
house has a tiny jewel of a chapel nestled into a corner of the garden. To made
it into a thoroughgoing Orthodox chapel, it recently had a dome added to it
that came to Alice and Hebe to be painted. But before that, a canopy where a
lantern will hang. This is how it arrived, with just Alice's (or Hebe's) first pencil sketch on it.
Then half finished.
Here
it is looking suitably atmospheric by candle light once finished.
Just
now, Alice and Hebe have Pope John Paul II and St Vincent Palotti in their
studio. This work is for St Mary Star of the Sea in Hastings Old Town. I think they
must have a special devotion to St Vincent there, because a commission from a while back was also of him. The statues arrive at our house looking ghostly –
here’s St Vincent Palotti when he got here:
Here
he is now, with Pope John Paul in the background, waiting patiently for his
turn.
Hebe
says when she is painting saints they draw near to help her. She says Our Lady
is the best – she joins in to make the statue really pretty, every time. Here's a Mary they did:
But
Hebe says the worst one is Jesus. He looks at what she’s doing and says with
cheerful approval, “That’s fine!” And she asks him – “Should I make the colour
a bit warmer – more detail round the eyes?” And he just says, “No, it’s fine!”
It’s
a wholesome occupation. Reverent and focused, requiring a quiet eye and a
steady hand, imagination switched on and powers of observation firing on all
cylinders.
Your artists-in-residence are amazingly talented. I suspect it is BECAUSE they seek the Creator in the works of their hands. Thank you for brightening my day with your photos of their work.
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ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing this special part of your world. I am in awe. I have painted on glass and think the mirror is amazing and beautiful.
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ReplyDeleteI like to think "It's fine" is what Jesus would also have said to that old lady in Borja who tried to restore the Ecce Homo painting.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/spanish-town-saved-by-botched-restoration-of-century-old-christian-ecce-homo-fresco-of-jesus-9928738.html
Hahaha - yes!
ReplyDeleteI miss my icon afternoons, quiet plain chant in the background, the pause before the work and the intercession of the image, such peace. Hebe and Alice are blessed in the work they do and in the talents they share xx
ReplyDelete:0)
ReplyDeleteHave you posted pictures online of the icons you made, San?
These are amazing! Congratulations to your artists in residence!
ReplyDeleteOh, my! The mirror is so impressive...
ReplyDeleteI am silenced by the thought of their bond/commuication with the saints.
And the words of Jesus jumped off the screen to bless ME!
The words you use to summarize their "wholesome occupation" are art in themselves.
God bless your household today.
Thanks, Rosie xx
ReplyDeleteThanks, Rebecca. Yes, we need blessing - we are off for a couple of nights camping with Buzzfloyd, Little Sardine and The Blur. Should be fun. Just one of us left at home to keep the cats company and be a Constant House Angel. Can't believe how much stuff we need for two nights away in a tent - or in the case of the Badger and me, a tipi. Because we sent our tent to the refugees at Calais, who actually needed it to live in, not just to lark about! xx
I love the little Orthodox chapel in the backyard.
ReplyDelete:0) xx
ReplyDeleteAlice and Hebe's gifts are astounding, really. Every single photo was a delight to study and marvel over.
ReplyDeleteYou are brave to go camping. I would need help up off the ground after a night's sleep in a tipi. (Yes, I always thought camping seemed like more work than a vacation should, but I'm trending toward laziness the older I get, so....)
God bless you all... xoxo
Ah, yes, I too am observing in myself the creeping inactivity of growing older. I keep thinking 'I really must do something about this . . . ' Your knees wouldn't like floor sleeping, I suspect. As it turned out, there were rats in our tipi, so I slept in the car. xx
ReplyDeleteI finally figured out how to write the comment. I just finished book 8 of the Hawk and the Dove. I am a Benedictine Sister in Indiana, USA . I live with about 55 sisters. Many of us have read your series. thank you so much. Each book calls me to live more deeply the call i have to live in community. The books are almost like retreats--calling us to deepen our commitment.
ReplyDeleteI am going to restart the series. I also get renewed joy. Thanks. If you are ever in Indiana, please come by.
Sr. kathleen Yeadon, OSB
Hooray! Well done for getting in, Sr Kathleen! I know, Google blogger's security fence can be hard to get over - lots of people find it so. In the early days of this blog I left it open and easy for people to comment, but quickly discovered if you do that people use the comment boxes to plant advertising, some of it very unsavoury. So now all comments go through me and need the check.
ReplyDeleteIt makes me so very happy when a sister or brother writes to say my stories have blessed them. Thank you so much. Please say hello from me to the sisters in your community. Book 8 is 'The Beautiful Thread'. Do you have book 9 ('A Day and A Life')? I'll send you a copy, in case not. God bless your day and your work and your community, and thank you so much for taking the time and trouble to get in touch. xx
Sr Kathleen - thank you so much for your second message. I popped a parcel in the mail for you today. Actually I didn't get your message until I came back from the Post Office, so I sent you a copy of A Day And A Life - pass it on to whoever would like. But when I was packing it up the thought occurred to me that you might enjoy the Lent book - so I put that in too. And then, hooray, when I got home I found your message saying that's what you'd like, so job well done Holy Spirit!
ReplyDeleteIf you comment here again giving me your email address (you can do email? Some of our sisters here don't get to have email except strictly on monastery business) I'll write back to you about the things you asked regarding the novels. If email's not the way forward I'll send a regular paper letter to the address you put in your recent comment.
I didn't send the books by superfast post, but they should find their way to you in due course. God bless you and all the community. x