I have a Picasso on my bedroom wallāa cheap print of a Picasso, that is. Itās a realistic portrait from his āblue periodā called The Old Guitarist, depicting an aged man bent over his guitar. But donāt ask me to describe any of Picassoās cubist paintings in detail because, for the most part, those have never made sense to me, leaving only faint and generally negative impressions.
I confess Iām no art connoisseur and have little theory to help me understand what makes the Mona Lisa better than Dogs Playing Poker. Itās a matter of taste, I suppose, though some might say itās the difference between having some taste and having none. I wonāt get into that argument. For me, both paintings share with my favorite Picasso a quality that makes them at least comprehensible, whereas for me, something like Jackson Pollockās Lavender Mist lacks that quality altogether.
The former three pictures can be described as representational. They depict something recognizable, contain identifiable and fairly realistic objects, characters, or scenes. They might even suggest some sort of story. The Pollock I mentioned, however, is abstract. Specifically, it is a frenzy of splotches and crosshatches, quick lines in different colors and thicknesses, intersecting from all directions and layered in no decipherable pattern.
When I was younger I reacted strongly to paintings like Pollockās, almost taking offense that something so chaotic and, well . . . messy, got away with calling itself art. I felt art should be orderly, should somehow reflect my understanding of Godās beauty, symmetry, and harmony. But my biggest bias was an expectation of (nay, insistence on) a readable narrative. I wanted visual art to offer an easy answer to the question, āWhat is this about?ā or āWhat does this mean?ā
My prejudices remained largely undisturbed until recently, when I stumbled across a contemporary painterās explanation of the basic idea behind abstract art. One part especially caught my attention: that is, when the brain sees a realistically depicted subject or object in a painting, it processes what it sees, trying to connect it with familiar concepts and images. In many ways, he explained, the rational mindās preconceptions and familiar associations can be distractions, preventing deeper engagement. But when the mind is not distracted by patently meaningful images, the unconscious is freer to connect with the work on an emotional, possibly even spiritual, level.
That resonates with me. I like the idea that the unconscious, or the spirit within a gifted artist, can communicate directly with the spirit of the viewer. I speculate that the reaction a Christian viewer might have to abstract visual art, if he or she were undistracted and truly open to it, might correspond with the extent to which the artistās unconscious message lined up with biblical truth as affirmed by the Holy Spirit.
OK, maybe Iām reaching a little. But what if the very faculty that our creator gave us to hear from him when he speaks directly to our spirits is also given to us to discern the spirits in the created and crafted world around us? And what if my intellectāthat rational part of me that leaps to identify what it thinks it already sees and hears and knows to be trueāat times gets in the way of what Iām supposed to receive?
Of course, reason and intellect are Godās gifts too, and not to be disdained. But thanks to the indwelling Holy Spirit, sometimes we are simply given to know or feel something powerfully, beyond reason or intellect. So the next time we are compelled to dismiss what is before us as nonsense, whether a cubist portrait or a seemingly irrational step of faith, perhaps thatās the time to whisper a prayer and just keep staring. As we look deeper, much may remain mysterious, but we can trust God to make his truth manifest within usāand to grant us the grace to respond accordingly.
About the Author
Jennifer Parker is a writer and teacher from Mississippi currently based in Guangdong Province, China