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The role of the artist is exactly the same as the role of
the lover. If I love you, I have to make you conscious of the things you
don't see.
- James Baldwin |
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Film as dream, film as music. No art passes our
consciousness in the way film does, and goes directly to our feelings, deep
down into the dark rooms of our souls. - Ingmar Bergman |
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Who will write us new laws of harmony? We have no
further use for well-tempered clavichords. We ourselves are too much
dissonance.
- Wolfgang Borchert
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Creation is not a hurdle on the road to God, it is the
road itself.
- Martin Buber
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I was filled with such sweet panic and anguish of
longing for I had no idea what that I knew my life could never be
complete until I found it... It was the upward-reaching and fathomlessly
hungering, heart-breaking love for the beauty of the world at its most
beautiful, and, beyond that, for that beauty east of the sun and west of
the moon which is past the reach of all but our most desperate desiring
and is finally the beauty of Beauty itself, of Being itself and what
lies at the heart of Being.
- Frederick Buechner |
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There remains with us the feeling that all poetry
and all intellectual life were once the handmaids of the holy, and
have passed through the temple.
- Jacob Burckhardt |
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The invention of the arts, and other things which
serve the common use and convenience of life, is a gift of God by no
means to be despised, and a faculty worthy of commendation.
- John Calvin
In
reading profane authors, the admirable light of truth displayed in them
should remind us that the human mind, however much fallen and perverted
from its original integrity, is still adorned and invested with
admirable gifts from its Creator.
- John Calvin |
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Art, in a sense, is a revolt against everything
fleeting and unfinished in the world. Consequently, its only aim is to
give another form to a reality that it is nevertheless forced to
preserve as the source of its emotion. In this regard we are all
realistic, and no one is.
- Albert Camus |
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Christianity met the mythological search for romance
by being a story, and the philosophical search for truth by being a true
story.
- G. K. Chesterton |
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If we are to act as salt and light in contemporary society, we cannot
afford to bypass the darkened theatre and the silver screen.
- John Coffey |
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Good prose cannot be written by a people without convictions.
- T. S. Eliot |
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When you reread a
classic you do not see more in the book than you did before; you see more in you than there was before.
- Clifton Fadiman |
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What is an artist? A provincial who finds himself
somewhere between a physical reality and a metaphysical one. … It's this
in-between that I'm calling a province, this frontier country between
the tangible world and the intangible one which is really the realm of
the artist. - Federico Fellini |
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Unless you are at home in the metaphor, unless you
have had your proper... education in the metaphor, you are not safe
anywhere.
- Robert Frost |
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Altogether, I think we ought to read only books that
bite and sting us. If the book we are reading doesn't shake us awake
like a blow on the skull, why bother reading in the first place? So that
it can make us happy, as you put it? What we need are books that hit us
like a most painful misfortune, like the death of someone we loved more
than we love ourselves, that make us feel as though we had been banished
to the woods, far from any human presence, like a suicide. A book must
be the axe for the frozen sea within us. That is what I believe.
- Franz Kafka
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It is one of the greater triumphs of Lucifer that he
has managed to make Christians believe that a story is a lie, that a
myth should be outgrown with puberty, that to act in a play is
inconsistent with true religion.
- Madeleine L'Engle
Unless we are creators, we are not fully alive.
- Madeleine L'Engle |

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There are earnest people who recommend realistic
reading for everyone because, they say, it prepares us for real life,
and who would, if they could, forbid fairy-tales for children and
romances for adults because they ‘give a false picture of life’—in other
words, deceive their readers.
I trust that what has already been said about
egoistic castle-building [i.e. the reader lives vicariously as the hero
of the story] forearms us against this error. Those who wish to be
deceived always demand in what they read at least a superficial or
apparent realism of content. To be sure, the show of such realism which
deceives the mere castle-builder would not deceive a literary reader. If
he is to be deceived, a much subtler and closer resemblance to real life
will be required. But without some degree of realism in content—a degree
proportional to the reader’s intelligence—no deception will occur at
all. No one can deceive you unless he makes you think he is telling the
truth. The unblushingly romantic has far less power to deceive than the
apparently realistic. Admitted fantasy is precisely the kind of
literature which never deceives at all. Children are not deceived by
fairy-tales; they are often and gravely deceived by school-stories.
Adults are not deceived by science fiction; they can be deceived by the
stories in the women’s magazines. None of us are deceived by the
Odyssey, the Kalevala, Beowulf, or Malory. the real danger lurks in
sober-faced novels where all appears to be very probable but all is in
fact contrived to put across some social or ethical or religious or
anti-religious ‘comment on life’. For some at least of such comments
must be false. To be sure, no novel will deceive the best type of
reader. He never mistakes art either for life or for philosophy. He can
enter, while he reads, into each author’s point of view without either
accepting or rejecting it, suspending when necessary his disbelief and
(what is harder) his belief.
- C. S. Lewis, An Experiment in Criticism 67-8
"Creation" as applied to human authorship seems to me an
entirely misleading term. We make, we re-arrange elements He has provided.
There is not a vestige of real creativity in us. Try to imagine a new
primary colour, a third sex, a fourth dimension, or even a monster which
does not consist of bits of existing animals stuck together. Nothing
happens. And that surely is why our works never mean to others quite what we
intended: because we are re-combining elements made by Him and already
containing His meanings. Because of those divine meanings in our materials
it is impossible we should ever know the whole meaning of our own works, and
the meaning we never intended may be the best and truest one.
- C. S. Lewis
It
is the immemorial privilege of letter-writers to commit to paper things they
would not say; to write in a more grandiose manner than that in which they
speak; and to enlarge upon feelings which would be passed by unnoticed in
conversation.
- C. S. Lewis
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Art enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at
the same time.
- Thomas Merton
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It is the Heart that is not yet sure of its God that
is afraid to laugh in His presence.
- George MacDonald |

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The novelist with Christian concerns will find in
modern life distortions which are repugnant to him, and his problem will
be to make these appear as distortions to an audience which is used to
seeing them as natural; and he may well be forced to take ever more
violent means to get his vision across to this hostile audience. When
you can assume that your audience holds the same beliefs you do, you can
relax a little and use more normal means of talking to it; when you have
to assume that it does not, then you have to make your vision apparent
by shock; to the hard of hearing you shout, and for the almost-blind you
draw large and startling figures.
– Flannery O’Connor
We lost our innocence in the Fall and our turn to it
is through the Redemption which was brought about by Christ's death and
by our slow participation in it. Sentimentality is a skipping of this
process in its concrete reality and an early arrival at a mock state of
innocence, which strongly suggests its opposite.
- Flannery O'Connor
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There are certain cases of spiritual depression in
which reading can become a sort of curative discipline... reintroducing
a lazy mind into the life of the spirit.
- Marcel Proust |
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Far more than any other influence, more than school, more even than
home—my attitudes, dreams, preconceptions and preconditions for life had
been irreversibly shaped five and a half thousand miles away in a place
called Hollywood.
- Dave Puttnam, Producer, Chariots of Fire |
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We
must realize that we Christians are responsible... To look at modern art
is to look at the fruit of the spirit of the avant-garde: it is they who
are ahead in building a view of the world with no God, no norms. Yet is
this so because Christians long since left the field to the world, and,
in a kind of mystical retreat from the world, condemned the arts as
worldly, almost sinful? Indeed, nowhere is culture more 'unsalted' than
precisely in the field of the arts - and that in a time when the arts
(in the widest sense) are gaining a stronger influence than ever through
the mass communications.
- H. R. Rookmaaker
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The goal of glorifying God spares Christian artists ... from either
overvaluing or undervaluing their artistic experiences.
- Leland Ryken
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When we read the poem, or see the play or picture or hear the music, it
is as though a light were turned on us. We say: "Ah! I recognize that!
That is something which I obscurely felt to be going on in and about me,
but I didn't know what it was and couldn't express it. But now the
artist has... imaged it forth... for me, I can possess and take hold of
it and make it my own, and turn it into a source of knowledge and
strength.
- Dorothy Sayers |
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Christian art is by no means always religious art, that is, art which
deals with religious themes. Consider God the Creator. Is God's creation
totally involved with religious subjects? What about the universe? the
birds? the trees? What about the bird's song? and the sound of the wind
in the trees?
- Francis Schaeffer |
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The arts, cultural endeavors, enjoyment of the beauty
of both God's creation and of man's creativity — these creative gifts
have in our day been relegated to the bottom drawer of Christian
consciousness, despised outright as unspiritual or unchristian. This
deficiency has been the cause of many unnecessary guilt feelings and
much bitter fruit, taking us out of touch with the world God has made,
with the culture in which we live, and making us ineffectual in that
culture.
- Franky Schaeffer The modern Christian world and what is known as evangelicalism in
general is marked, in the area of the arts and cultural endeavor, by one
outstanding feature, and that is its addiction to mediocrity.
- Franky Schaeffer |
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Beauty is the infinite presented in the finite.
- Schelling
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The artist needs the theologian to check the
exuberance of his vision and rescue it from isolation and subjectivity.
The theologian needs the artist to enrich his thinking and rescue it
from aridity and irrelevance.
- Patrick Sherry
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The key to reading well, I believe, is to read
worldviewishly... Doing this helps us grasp not only the particular thoughts
and attitudes displayed on the surface of the text but helps us see as well
where the author is coming from and why he or she is saying what is being
said. It helps us place the author and text in a larger cultural context. The
main benefit of reading the best sort of literature, however, is not just to
know what someone else is saying and thus pick up information or perspective.
It is not even to reinforce one's own particular Christian understanding of
God or his creation. The main benefit, rather, is to help us understand who we
are as a human family in all our diverse and glorious yet fallen splendor.
- James Sire
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We know that all the arts are brothers, that each of them
illuminates another, and that a universal light results.
- Voltaire
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Imaginary evil is romantic and varied; real evil is gloomy,
monotonous, barren, boring. Imaginary good is boring; real good is always
new, marvelous, intoxicating.
- Simone Weil |
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Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give
him a mask, and he will tell you the truth.
- Oscar Wilde
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