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The use of fantasy in christian church sermons in the central Gauteng areaKrige, Alta January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (MTech. degree in Drama)--Tshwane University of Technology, 2006. / This study aims to express the inherent connection between fantasy literature
and the Christian church and how this connection can be employed in
Christian church sermons.
It is a utilitarian study, aimed to place the art of fantasy literature and the oral
interpretation thereof in service of, in this case, the church. The twenty-first
century church needs to find ways to minister effectively to the postmodern
person. Fantasy literature can help fulfil some of these needs.
Fantasy and Religion seems to have a natural connection. History shows
that the earliest fantasies had religious, and specifically Christian,
connotations. The inherent attributes of fantasy make it predisposed to
spiritual meaning. The combination of these factors makes it a useful genre
to help explain Biblical and Spiritual concepts.
This dissertation aims to show how the two divergent ideas of faith and
fantasy can be reconciled and how it is currently being done in churches in
Gauteng. A multiple or collective case study design has been used with a
purposive sampling method with a theoretical base. Semi-structured
interviews have been conducted with pastors and ministers from a variety of
churches, to discover to what extent fantasy is currently being used in church
sermons in Gauteng.
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The iconology of the Cappella Greca in the Cemetery of PriscillaHunt, Mary Stuart Quinby, 1945- January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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Images of the logos in pre-Constantinian Christian art : their origin and significanceThroop, R. Douglas (Robert Douglas) January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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Portraits of patrons in Byzantine religious manuscripts.Franses, Henri January 1987 (has links)
Byzantine religious manuscripts were commissioned by people from many levels of society. Several contain portraits of their commissioners, represented together with a holy figure. An analysis of these scenes, examining features such as the holy figures represented and their specific iconographic meaning, and the relation of mortal to divine, reveals many facets of Byzantine art, religion and society. This analysis indicates a major distinction between portraits representing the emperor, and those depicting all other patrons. Non-imperial portraits show deep personal devotion and piety. The manuscripts in which they occur were commissioned to honour the holy figure, and many request salvation in return. Imperial commissions, on the other hand, were not votive gifts. Their portraits stress the public, political, and occasionally religious role of the emperor as the elected of God upon earth, and head of state. These portraits are thus highly informative of several aspects of Byzantine life.
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"Such old monuments of superstition and idolatry" : the enigmatic appeal of religious imagery in iconophobic seventeenth century EnglandWarrington, Seanine Marie 15 August 2008 (has links)
The popularity of religious art in late seventeenth century Protestant England stands in apparent contradiction to the profound anti-Catholic sentiment that many current scholars argue characterizes the period. A close analysis of London auction catalogs from 1690 reveals that a significant number of all pictures listed for sale featured typically Catholic subject matter. Consulting both seventeenth century literature and current scholarship provides a rationale for this apparent contradiction. Factional conflict within Protestantism itself was often focused on the issue of religious imagery. Accordingly, it functioned as a means of articulating religious difference. While the radical Puritan mission may have involved abolishing all English "monuments of superstition," Anglicanism held biblical and hagiographic imagery to be an essential aspect of Christian worship. This thesis argues that Anglicans embraced religious imagery as a means of rejecting the Puritan cause and, in doing so, forged a unique Anglican identity.
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Principles of religious imitation in mediaeval architecture : an analysis of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem and its European copies from the Carolingian period to the late RomanesqueAngers, Philippe, 1968- January 2006 (has links)
This study concerns the concept of sacred architectural imitation, using the Platonic notion of mimesis which then later finds expression in the medieval idea of imitatio. In Religious as well as in artistic and architectural forms of expression, the notion of imitation is indeed a very central and complex issue. At the heart of this concept is the question of meaning, or, more precisely, the transference or translation of meaning; from original to copy, from prototype to reproduction. / In order to better illustrate and understand the principles guiding the notion of medieval sacred architectural imitation I have chosen to focus on five specific instances surrounding the replication of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem, arguably the most revered landmark in Christendom. / A close examination of the relationships which exist between model and copy will bring to the fore the dynamics which govern the process of mimesis by which meaning is reproduced in the architectural replicas. / From this comparative analysis will emerge a more universal picture of the medieval concept of religious imitation. Indeed, if anything, a preliminary survey of the great many imitations of the Holy Sepulcher spread throughout Europe reveals to the observer a surprising trend, namely a consistency of inconsistencies in their effort to "copy". / The present study will demonstrate that these seeming inconsistencies within the application of the mimetic process nevertheless reveal a somewhat unexpected structure. / From the pattern of these inconsistencies will emerge a clearer picture of the principles governing the transfer of sacred meaning via the method of imitatio during the Middle Ages.
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Re-examining Van Eyck: a new analysis of the Ince Hall Virgin and ChildHudson, Hugh Unknown Date (has links) (PDF)
The Ince Hall Virgin and child is a painting of the Virgin and Child in an interior that was attributed to Jan van Eyck by the leading historians of early Netherlandish art from 1854 to 1956. Between 1956 and 1959 the work was subject to a technical and art historical analysis in Europe, in the re-classification of the work as a copy by a follower of Van Eyck, and possibly a forgery. Subsequently, a number of art historians have suggested that not even the composition of the work is Eyckian, and that the work is a pastiche based on Van Eyck’s paintings. Nevertheless, some authors have doubted the arguments for these reattributions. Some authors maintain the attributions to Van Eyck, and others suggest that the work may be a copy. This thesis is the first comprehensive critical reappraisal of the scientific and art historical analysis to be conducted. In the first chapter it examines the provenance and bibliography of the work. / In the second chapter it examines published and unpublished documents relating to the technical analysis found in Melbourne, Brussels, London and Amsterdam, which have been brought together for the first time. It also contains an interpretation of the work’s infrared reflectography that was produced, for the first time, for this thesis. It is argued that, contrary to the 1950's analysis, there is no technical impediment to an attribution of the work to Van Eyck. Furthermore, technical analysis reveals numerous correspondences to Van Eyck’s works, in the pigments, paint layer structures, underdrawing style and pentimenti. In the third chapter the relationship of the execution, composition and iconography to Van Eyck’s paintings is discussed. It is argued that the execution, composition and iconography are closely related to Van Eyck’s works. In the fourth chapter the attribution of the work as an original painting of Van Eyck, a copy, a pastiche or a forgery is discussed. It is concluded that the balance of the available evidence suggests the attribution of the work to Van Eyck, or his studio, is justifiable. The possibility that the work is a free copy is not excluded, but is undermined by the numerous correspondences to Van Eyck’s materials and technique and its relationship to the versions of the composition by other artists.
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Re-examining Van Eyck : a new analysis of the Ince Hall Virgin and Child /Hudson, Hugh January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Melbourne,School of Fine Arts, Classics and Archaeology, 2001. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references(leaves: 116-141).
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The influence of the icon in contemporary Egyptian art /Joumaa, Jamal. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M.A. (Hons.)) -- University of Western Sydney, 2002. / "A thesis submitted for the fulfillment of a Master's Degree in Contemporary Arts" Includes bibliographical references (leaves 74-75).
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A resource guide of seasons and symbols for St. Andrew's Presbyterian Choir, Niagara-on-the-Lake, OntarioHoekstra, Gerzinus Epeüs. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (D.W.S.)--Institute for Worship Studies, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references.
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