Reprint

Religion and Art

Rethinking Aesthetic and Auratic Experiences in 'Post-Secular' Times

Edited by
June 2019
102 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03921-032-9 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03921-033-6 (PDF)

This is a Reprint of the Special Issue Religion and Art: Rethinking Aesthetic and Auratic Experiences in 'Post-Secular' Times that was published in

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

How can we think of the “aura” of (sacred) contexts and (sacred) works? How to think of individual and collective (esthetic/religious) experiences? What to make of the manipulative dimension of (religious and esthetic) “auratic” experiences? Is the work of art still capable of mediating the experience of the “sacred,” and under what conditions? What is the significance of the “eschatological” dimension of both art and religion (the sense of “ending”)? Can theology offer a way to reaffirm the creative capacities of the human being as something that characterizes the very condition of being human? This Special Issue aspires to contribute to the growing literature on contemporary art and religion, and to explore the new ways of thinking of art and the sacred (in their esthetic, ideological, and institutional dimensions) in the context of contemporary culture.

Format
  • Paperback
License and Copyright
© 2019 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
sacred; art; freedom; beauty; art; aesthetic; haptic; iconology; iconography; book(s); reading/readers; Jerome; Magdalene; Vermeer; aura; retro-avant-garde; aesthetics; mysticism; digital imagery; photography; concepts: image; art; aesthetic; post-secular; wonder; Franciscan theology; intentionality; sensory experience; Augustine; rhythm; harmony; sentience; ratio; culture; faith; secularism; aesthetic experience; wonder; art; beauty; theurgy; Gerhard Richter; contemporary painting; Strip; chance; belief; skepticism; authorship; abstract painting; Cologne Cathedral window; n/a

Related Books

October 2022

Religion and Art in the Renaissance

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
September 2024

Affective Art

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
November 2024

Religion and Change

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
March 2022

Art, Shamanism and Animism

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
October 2023

Material Culture and Religion: Perspectives over Time

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities