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  2. Gloria Feman Orenstein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gloria_Feman_Orenstein

    Reweaving the World, co-edited by Orenstein and Irene Diamond, posits an ecofeminist movement that brings together “the environmental, feminist, and women’s spirituality movements out of a shared concern for the well-being of the Earth and all forms of life that our Earth supports.” [10] In the book, Orenstein described “’ecofeminist arts’ function [as] ceremonially to connect us ...

  3. Archetypal pedagogy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archetypal_pedagogy

    Clifford Mayes, professor in the Brigham Young University McKay School of Education, has developed what he has termed archetypal pedagogy.Mayes' work aims at promoting what he calls archetypal reflectivity in teachers; this is a means of encouraging teachers to examine and work with psychodynamic issues, images, and assumptions as those factors affect their pedagogical practices.

  4. Matteo Pistono - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matteo_Pistono

    Matteo Pistono- Pashupatinath, Nepal in 2009. Matteo (Matthew) Pistono is a writer, teacher of meditation, and student of engaged Buddhism.He is the author of "Roar: Sulak Sivaraksa and the Path of Socially Engaged Buddhism" (forthcoming 2018), Fearless in Tibet: The Life of the Mystic Tertön Sogyal (Hay House, 2014) and In the Shadow of the Buddha: Secret Journeys, Sacred Histories, and ...

  5. Museum of Contemporary Religious Art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_Contemporary...

    The Museum of Contemporary Religious Art (MOCRA) is the world's first interfaith museum of contemporary art that engages religious and spiritual themes.MOCRA highlights the ongoing dialogue between contemporary artists and the world's faith traditions, as well as the ways visual art can encourage and facilitate interfaith understanding.

  6. Society for the Arts, Religion and Contemporary Culture

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society_for_the_Arts...

    The Society for the Arts, Religion, and Contemporary Culture, or ARC, was founded in October 1961 by three people: Alfred Barr, the art critic and founder of the Museum of Modern Art, the theologian Paul Tillich, and Marvin Halverson, an American Protestant theologian sometime of the Chicago Theological Seminary and the author of a 1951 booklet, Great Religious Paintings. [1]

  7. Theosophy and visual arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theosophy_and_visual_arts

    She painted "several series of impressive paintings exploring spiritual or sacred concepts". Her unique style united, in Tessel Bauduin's opinion, "geometric and biomorphic form with a free line". [60] [note 11] Af Klint considered abstract art to be the "spiritual precursor of a utopian social harmony, a world of tomorrow."

  8. Theological aesthetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theological_aesthetics

    Theological aesthetics is the interdisciplinary study of theology and aesthetics, and has been defined as being "concerned with questions about God and issues in theology in the light of and perceived through sense knowledge (sensation, feeling, imagination), through beauty, and the arts". [1]

  9. Spiritualist art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiritualist_art

    Spiritualist art or spirit art or mediumistic art or psychic painting is a form of art, mainly painting, influenced by spiritualism. Spiritualism influenced art, having an influence on artistic consciousness, with spiritual art having a huge impact on what became modernism and therefore art today.