Edge of Faith September 2017 | Page 6

The church is generally still pretty suspicious of the art world; and what goes on there has this kind of bohemian reputation. That hasn’t gone away. But I think the posture of the church in American life and culture with respect to art is still evolving or migrating or changing quite a lot. As you already mentioned, you belong to a church and it has an exhibit program and while most churches probably don’t do that, there are actually hundreds and hundreds of churches around the country now that have a gallery program and have an exhibit program and they want the visual arts to be a part of their worship I just published this book, but there is a whole bookshelf full of stuff out there now that you can pick up. Not to mention online stuff and confer- ences. It’s a much more rich environment and therefore it is more encouraging to artists who are Christian and it follows, of course, that they are making better works for the church. It’s a kind of ecosystem that’s tuned up. This is probably a good opportunity for me to put in a plug in for InterVarsity Press because your book is part of a series called, Studies in Theology in the Arts. Obviously we are coming along, right? As a young person, then, the question becomes, “If you are a Christian and you wanted to be an art- ist, who in the world would you look to?” and their education and their life together. When CIVA was founded, that would have been just very, very unusual. When churches start making those moves, the artists start feeling welcome in those kinds of churches. It feels like the vocation is valued. It just sort of makes sense. I would say almost 40 years ago when CIVA was founded, you just really didn’t even know where to look to find another Christian who might be engaged in the visual arts; certainly not with for- mal training and background. These days they are just everywhere and they are doing excellent work. There isn’t this sense of isolation and there isn’t that sense of “lostness” in terms of, “Where do I go and where do I find a resource?” Yes. In fact, it turns out that by the time I handed in my manuscript, that I had been working on for a very long time, they had just decided to go with that series. The first book in the series, Modern Art in the Life of a Culture, was written by two CIVA members and good friends, Jonathan Anderson and Bill Dyrness and the third book in the series coming out is actually the papers and major talks from the last conference we hosted two years ago. I have a chapter in that. As a whole, it is just a really rich series. I’m really hon- ored to be a part of it and I think it’s a pretty big deal. I am just so pleased that InterVarsity Press decided to take it on. David McNaught is the series editor and a member of our organization and just really has a passion for this. I don’t think there has been anything quite like this before. Certainly there are Catholic presses and presses like Baker who publish some really fine books on the arts. But not maybe a series quite like this. Back to your book. You get into a little bit of your history. You grew up in an evan- gelical family and you decided to be an artist and that was not necessarily what they originally thought you would want to be. You mentioned that you had three pri- mary barriers. I thought those were very interesting, so maybe you could elabo- rate on this. First, not having a mentor, which is kind of like what you have been discussing. Secondly, who are you going to relate to when you’re in the church but at the same time wanting to be an artist, what the church regarded or disregarded relating to the visual arts. Thirdly, that the art world wasn’t particularly keen on the religious beliefs. Could you talk a little bit about that and maybe even throw in some advice for the up and coming artist. I did grow up in an evangelical home. I sup- pose in my early days, I grew up in a church that would have been described as fundamentalist. When I talk about my evangelical background, though, I need to be absolutely clear from the beginning and say that my parents were always an encouragement to me with respect to pursu- ing the arts. I studied at the University of Wisconsin, Au Claire and then took an MFA at a small art school called Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Both secular schools. When I was in that space between BFA and MFA and was accepted at several MFA programs and was talking with my dad about what I should do, he, without reservation, encouraged me to just press on because I loved art and he thought I should pursue what I loved. There was family support and not resistance. Probably in the broader evangelical community there was this sense of, “Why would someone who could be a pastor or a missionary or do all these other things for God go off and do some- thing so worldly?” It was difficult to figure out how to respond to that sort of thing. It wasn’t often spoken aloud, but was sort of implicit in the conversation that there were all kinds of things that people can do with their lives and being a visual artist would probably be just about near the bottom. Why would a gifted, capable person choose something like that; to be part of the world and not be part of the church. That dichot-