Review
After observing the tremendous progress of Christians in the arts over the last 20 years, I still find many paralyzed in their thinking about, and practice of, creativity. British author, musician, and artist Steve Scott has been an experimenter in the Christian arts scene for almost three decades and, utilizing his experiences of Christian art in Russia and Indonesia, sets out in this collection of integrated essays to investigate the role of the Christian artist in the multicultural, postmodern world. Scott provides a clear and concise survey of the development of Western thought and religion to indicate the historical conditions of the modern predicaments of cultural, ethical, and epistemological relativism, artistic formalism and modernism, and the loss of foundations and tradition in postmodernity. Persuasively arguing that modern art has failed to confront the realms of culture and society, Like a House on Fire claims that contemporary Christian art must transcend ethnocentric interpretations of the Bible by employing the modes of communication practiced by Jesus, such as parable, metaphor, and image. Like Tolstoy in What is Art? Scott assumes the universality of Christian doctrine and the gospels in his attacks on contemporary art. While the reader is left wondering what specific works of art fall into the category of bad Christian art, Scott provides some wonderful examples of Biblical interpretation to demonstrate that Christian art must be attuned to context and content as well as form, style, and technique. --
From Independent Publisher
Product Description
Over the centuries, the work of painters, poets, and performers has often been the harbinger or catalyst of change, or perhaps only a reflection of the surrounding culture. Steve Scott believes the arts working within the context of the church can help us through the uncertain transition to the future. Cherished ideologies, philosophies, and modes of expression are being destroyed--yet out of this destruction comes the possibility for renewal of our cultures and lives.