An inherited recipe compliments a darkening evening.
Stories from personal and family history, told through the art of two manger scenes.
An overview of events worth penciling in to your 2007 and 2008 calendar.
Confessions of a chronic dabbler.
How acts of creativity become holy, become prayer.
The Good News of holy week can be an awfully scary story.
A workshop presented at Practicing Resurrection at Russet House Farm, August 11-12, 2006.
An art installation reflects on ethnic and religious identity.
The clandestine motivations of storytelling can find us either apathetic or engaged.
Reflection on a nighttime ritual that fills various kinds of needs.
Reflection on the lost art of getting gussied up.
A series of images documenting a state-by-state art installation project.
Short reviews of The Lives of Others, Laura Veirs’ Year of Meteors and The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada.
Musical performance art with Tim Fite and re-visiting a classic with Hitchcock’s Rear Window.
Artwork in the home reminds a couple of where they’ve been and whom they wish to remember.
A conversation between married partners about the ideas behind the art that decks their walls and shelves.
A mother’s hobby becomes a subtle lesson in creativity and community.
An interview with Monique Sliedrecht, artist-in-residence at Freswick Castle in northern Scotland.
On creating an in house art house with a classic film.
A list of experiences to savor after fifty.
From the life and influence of Bob Dylan chronicled in I’m Not There to Mike Judge’s take on the future of the U.S. in Idiocracy.
A review of the film The Diving Bell and the Butterfly about rediscovering life after a paralyzing stroke.
A talk and slide show from the author's recent photography exhibit.
Can a concert be more healing than a visit to the doctor?
An artist explores her journey of expression and faith.
An interview with Peter Hicks of the band Aradhna.
On how a requisite page became a blank canvas for an entire congregation.
A reflection on I’m Not There, a new film about Bob Dylan.
How art became a way to feel at home in many different homes.
Venturing into the graphic novel genre was a surprise both pleasant and difficult.