Austin CIVA

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Jim Janknegt
  • Male
  • elgin/Austin
  • United States
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Jim Janknegt added an event
April 18, 2009 from 8am to 5pm
Saturday, April 18 2009, 9:00 am - 5:00 pm Featuring 23 Artists selling and displaying the fine and applied arts including mosaics, paintings, icons, bronzes, wrought iron, fabrics, watercolors, collages, wood, photography, prints, jewelry, mixed me…
April 9, 2009

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At 8:40am on September 6, 2009, www.makemoneywith-google.com said…
I just made $643 this week working from home for google. I cant believe how easy this is. Im recommending this to everyone, check out this guys google blog makemoneywith-google.com
At 2:51pm on April 18, 2008, Helen W said…
You're welcome. :)

Don't expect me to buy more art, I too am a "starving artist" with little extra money and normally decorate my walls and those of my family and friends with my own art.

I am so aware of the tendency of many artists to market their art to other artists. That's like a shoemaker marketing his shoes to other shoemakers instead of to the peoole who need shoes and can't make their own.
At 6:55pm on April 17, 2008, Carol McCall said…
Hello, Jim!
I enjoyed meeting you at the TC Symposium at FEFC couple weeks ago. Am waiting for the right moment to share the postcard of your Rich Man painting with my daughter. Wish I could be in Austin now to attend your Davis show. Proud of you, my Christian artist friend.

The baby is my friend's new little boy, two weeks old now. It's all the pic I had on my new computer. Hope all is well with you.
At 2:54pm on April 9, 2008, Matt McCoy said…
I read what you wrote about the Transforming Culture Symposium, loved your analysis of it, it's where I heard of CIVA and so here I am. I'd love to visit with you sometime about why people didn't buy more art while they were there. I find that very strange...
At 9:06am on April 4, 2008, Glen Barbier said…
Jim, I was glad to visit with you at the Transforming Culture Symposium. It's good to be connected here as well.
Shalom,
Glen

Profile Information

Type of Art:
Painting
Artist's Statement:
The day my junior high art teacher taught us the difference between looking and seeing changed my life. She assured us that most people go through life without really seeing what they are looking at. I have found this to be true on multiple levels. As an artist, one attempts to represent three-dimensional space using only two dimensions. When one stops and slows down the process of looking, the discovery is made that things aren’t what they seem. For instance to represent a cube the artist does not draw a series of connected squares. We all know that cubes are made up of squares but to represent a cube visually one must draw trapezoids. I think this is what Picasso meant when he said the artist must lie in order to tell the truth.

Likewise Jesus tried to get people to hear the truth not by using propositional statements but rather through teaching in parables and metaphors. As in the distinction between looking and seeing Jesus was aware of the difference between listening and hearing. A parable unlike an allegory remains open ended. Those who have ears to hear can get to the heart of the matter. Those who don’t or won’t hear only get the literal meaning and the heart remains unmoved.

Over ten years ago I became convinced that my time spent, as an artist would be best used trying to paint the intersection of faith and life. I began to paint interpretations of Jesus’ parables, a series on which I am still working. I have recently begun another series of paintings, meditations on the mysteries of the rosary.

Previously I had spent ten years painting the urban landscape, a nighttime vision filled with neon lights, buildings, cars, and angst. I figured I was being, in Walker Percy’s words, “a diagnostician-honestly looking into the heart of contemporary America.” In actuality I was also expressing my own sadness and sense of dislocation.

After my wedding in 1989, my wife and I lived in a suburban neighborhood similar to the one I grew up in. I began to transition from painting urban landscapes to suburban ones and it is obvious that my mood had changed. I now saw myself as a celebrant, extolling, in my suburban landscapes, the simple joys of domestic life. Slowly, biblical imagery began to appear in these suburban settings.

One day, after we had moved from the city to the country, I realized that what I really wanted to paint was pictures of more substance-paintings that confronted Jesus’ life head on. It was like an Einstein thought experiment had occurred: What if I only had time left to paint a few more paintings. What would I paint? It seemed trivial to not attempt to paint something of significance, something having to do with the great biblical narrative of the salvation of the world. So I began to paint subjects that were overtly Christian, interpretations of Jesus parables, and scenes from the life of Jesus. Painting them in a style that is contemporary, but with allusions to art history.

Not to long ago I ran across a quote from
ART TO HELP HUMANKIND CROSS THE "THRESHOLD OF HOPE" by Carlo Chenis
http://www.vatican.va/jubilee_2000/magazine/documents/ju_mag_010919...
"Art is sacred if it is above all beautiful, that is, intrinsically splendid, because it is fully intelligible, so that it makes first the artist and then the person who enjoys it want to cross over into infinity. This art is religious if it produces a longing for the divine, namely, if it leads one to transcend one's own self in order to meet God and with him one's neighbor. This art is Christian if, through the adventures of the spirit, it recounts what happened between God and man in the history of salvation, if it rises to God like a sweet and profound prayer, if it makes "God's glory" visible, though in a hidden manner, in the celebration of the divine mysteries."

This quote expresses my sentiments exactly. As a Christian and an artist I have great freedom to paint almost anything and in any manner: still life, landscape, narrative, or completely abstract and non-objective. What I have found is the freedom to delve into the vast and unlimited source material of the life of Jesus. His life has been transformed into the liturgical life of the church and incarnated in the life of the saints. I cannot imagine a richer source of subject matter for an artist. My hope is that my paintings can help the viewer look deep into the heart of the gospel and hear afresh the good news of Jesus.
Website:
http://www.bcartfarm.com

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Jim Janknegt's Blog

Jim Janknegt

Exhibit opportunity

The Catholic Diocese of Austin, with St. Edward’s University, would like to invite artists to participate in its twelfth show, Celebrating Sacred Art 2009 – Expressions of Family. Although not a requirement, we encourage artists to create one piece to exhibit that has a family (Holy Family, nuclear family, faith family, etc.) theme. If a finished piece is not possible with this short notice, perhaps a sketch of a proposed family themed project could be included. All artists, new as well as those… Continue

Posted on November 24, 2008 at 1:06pm —

Jim Janknegt

A Little Leaven



I finished a painting over the weekend: A Little Leaven based on the parable found in Matthew 13:33 "The kingdom of heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed into a large amount of flour until it worked all through the dough." I did this as a commission for Trinity Presbyterian Church in Nashville, TN. If the scheduling works out I may be heading to Nashville for the presentation of the painting to the church.

Any suggestions… Continue

Posted on September 15, 2008 at 2:10pm — 2 Comments

Jim Janknegt

Jesus Carries His Cross and Rides a White Horse





I finished two paintings over the weekend. The two paintings actually make up a unit, not exactly a diptyich as they are meant to hang one over the other. The top painting depicts Jesus carrying his cross down a deserted, urban street. The painting is a commentary on how consumerism hinders our acceptance of the suffering and and need… Continue

Posted on July 14, 2008 at 11:52am — 1 Comment

Jim Janknegt

Hand Triptych (The Visitation with Sacred Heart of Jesus and Immaculate Heart of Mary



I had the privilege of doing a commission for John and Rebecca (formerly Haskins) Hand for their wedding. The painting was included in their nuptial mass. They choose the Visitation of Mary to Elizabeth as the subject along with the Immaculate Heart of Mary and the Sacred Heart of Jesus on either side. The mass fell on the feast of the visitation. The center panel was placed up in the front of the church and the two side panels w… Continue

Posted on June 2, 2008 at 9:22am —

Jim Janknegt

reJesus website shows how I make a painting

The reJesus website finally put up the documentary of how I made the Rich Fool painting. There are various images of the painting and five videos of me talking about the creative process of making a painting. Check it out here.

Posted on May 22, 2008 at 9:29am —

 
 

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