Signs and Wonderings – A Disciple’s Journey
Mens Christi (Mind of Christ) Sonrise The Sower Signs and Wonderings Writes of Passage
By Tom Wachunas
…The man without the Spirit does not accept
the things that come from the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him,
and he cannot understand them, because they are spiritually discerned. The
spiritual man makes judgments about all things, but he himself is not subject
to any man’s judgment: “For who has known the mind of the Lord that he may
instruct him?” But we have the mind of Christ.
1 Corinthians 3:14-16
EXHIBIT: Signs
and Wonderings – A Disciple’s Journey, art by Tom Wachunas / Through
July 23 at Patina Arts Centre, 324 Cleveland Avenue NW, downtown
Canton / OPENING on FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 5:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. / Viewing hours:
Thursdays 12:00-8:00 p.m./ Saturdays 12:00 to 9:00 p.m./ Sundays 12:00-4:00
p.m. / ALSO on First Friday, JULY 1, 5:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m
THANK YOU, Alaska Thompson, Director of Patina Arts Centre, for your support and great work in making this exhibit happen!
https://www.facebook.com/patinaartscentre/
These days, none of
us needs to settle for merely imagining the ethos of human society as confused
and conflicted, fraught and frustrated. With fists clenched and eyes clouded by
tears, we writhe in our cultural wrecking and reckoning. This has been our
earthbound reality for a very long time.
These days, Charles
Dickens’ anaphoric “it was…” in the classic opening of his A Tale of Two
Cities surely lives on as a haunting, potent anthem of our NOW. It IS the
best of times, it IS the worst of times, it IS the age of wisdom, it IS the age
of foolishness, it IS the epoch of belief, it IS the epoch of incredulity, it
IS the season of Light, it IS the season of Darkness, it IS the spring of hope,
it IS the winter of despair…
Most of my art of
the past 20+ years has been in the form of painterly mixed- media assemblages -
what I have often called ‘spiritual tableaux.’ They illustrate – sometimes literally,
sometimes metaphorically - a continuing realization and loving embrace of
Biblical and Christocentric content.
This exhibit presents many tactile narratives,
written in a language of the heart. Here is a codified archaeology of my soul
as it continues to straddle or cross boundaries, at once daunting and joyous,
between struggle and surrender, between the accessible and the unknowable,
between the mundane and the mystical. Ultimately, these pieces symbolize
aspiration, inspiration, faith, and discovery.
And so it is that once
upon a time I came to truly know that Jesus Christ was not a fiction, not a
liar, not a lunatic. He was exactly who he said he was, and still is:
God incarnate.
These days, He
calls, I follow. And stumble. A lot.
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