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    makoto fujimura

    Explore " makoto fujimura" with insightful episodes like "Makoto Fujimura (Artist)", "Water into Wine | a sermon", "The Gospel is a Song", "Art at the edge of time: Makoto Fujimura, plus the 2021 Blake Prize" and "S4 E11 | Making Art in a Broken World with Makoto Fujimura" from podcasts like ""Mere Christians", "saint benedict's table", "saint benedict's table", "Soul Search" and "Love Is Stronger Than Fear with Amy Julia Becker"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    Makoto Fujimura (Artist)

    Makoto Fujimura (Artist)

    Jordan Raynor sits down with Makoto Fujimura, Artist, to talk about what the New Jerusalem’s 5,600 miles of precious stones tell us about our work, how the ancient art of Kintsugi preaches a powerful sermon of the gospel, and what lessons we can all take from “slow art” as we master our varied vocations.

    Links Mentioned:

    Water into Wine | a sermon

    Water into Wine | a sermon

    A sermon by Jamie Howison from  January 16, 2022, with the readings for the evening  being 1 Corinthians 12:1-11 and John 2:1-11.  The sermon references the reflections of Makoto Fujimura on the art of Kintsugi, which you can see more about by clicking here

    Subscribe to the show wherever you listen to audio and recommend this episode to your friends. We invite you to rate us or write a review of what we are doing on Apple Podcasts. Reviews help others join the conversation.

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    This podcast is created at saint benedict’s table, a congregation of the Anglican Church of Canada in Winnipeg, where we’ve been making great audio since 2006. Listen to other recent episodes on our website and see our entire catalogue of well over 500 shows on our hosting page.

    Our Mission

    To provide rich and stimulating audio resources to the wider church and engage topics and issues relevant to the concerns and questions of the larger culture in which we live.

    The Gospel is a Song

    The Gospel is a Song

    A sermon for the Third Sunday in Eastertide by Jamie Howison, on Luke 24:36b-48, offered on April 18, 2021.

    Subscribe to the show wherever you listen to audio and recommend this episode to your friends. We invite you to rate us or write a review of what we are doing on Apple Podcasts. Reviews help others join the conversation.

    * * *

    This podcast is created at saint benedict’s table, a congregation of the Anglican Church of Canada in Winnipeg, where we’ve been making great audio since 2006. Listen to other recent episodes on our website and see our entire catalogue of well over 500 shows on our hosting page.

    Our Mission

    To provide rich and stimulating audio resources to the wider church and engage topics and issues relevant to the concerns and questions of the larger culture in which we live.

    Art at the edge of time: Makoto Fujimura, plus the 2021 Blake Prize

    Art at the edge of time: Makoto Fujimura, plus the 2021 Blake Prize

    On this Easter Sunday as Christians remember the death and resurrection of Jesus, we are joined by internationally renowned artist Makoto Fujimura as he reflects on suffering, humanity, time, and creativity. And we travel to the Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre in Western Sydney, to take a look at the 66th Blake Prize exhibition — one of Australia’s longest running and most prestigious prizes for religious and spiritual art.

    S4 E11 | Making Art in a Broken World with Makoto Fujimura

    S4 E11 | Making Art in a Broken World with Makoto Fujimura

    What is the role of art in bringing hope and healing to the fractures of our world? Makoto Fujimura, a leading contemporary artist and the author of Art+Faith, talks with Amy Julia about creating beauty through brokenness, the art of waiting and making, and how the theology of God’s new creation transforms communities of Christ.

    Show Notes:
    Makoto Fujimura is the author of Art+Faith: A Theology of Making, and his “art has been featured widely in galleries and museums around the world, and is collected by notable collections including The Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo, The Huntington Library as well as Tikotin Museum in Israel.” Connect online:

    On the Podcast:

    "I consider what I do to be prayer and theological work as much as aesthetic work, so I’ve always felt the presence of God in my studio, in the practice of making."

    "It becomes essential conversation for us to find our thriving. What does it mean to be a human being today, let alone a Christian? The arts fundamentally can bring us to a deeper conversation."

    ”We are not going back to pre-pandemic normal. It’s a new world. It’s a world in which we have all suffered—and we have all shared in the suffering—and, therefore, we have an opportunity to create communities that would both nurture and protect those broken places and really be able to share because of our brokenness...A Kintsugi master even amplifies or exposes the fractures but does it in a beautiful way. And can we do that as communities, especially communities of Christ?”

    "Waiting is such an important part of art. You cannot have music without pauses. You cannot have choreography without the body stopping. And so being still, finding that still point of the turning world, as TS Elliot writes, is very much at the heart of every art form."

    "If we are not making, we are consuming."
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    Thank you to Breaking Ground, the co-host for this podcast.

    Head, Heart, Hands, Season 4 of the Love Is Stronger Than Fear podcast, is based on my e-book Head, Heart, Hands, which accompanies White Picket Fences. Check out free RESOURCES th

    Connect with me:

    Thanks for listening!

    On Making: Awareness, Abundance, and Art with Makoto Fujimura

    On Making: Awareness, Abundance, and Art with Makoto Fujimura

    World-renowned artist Makoto Fujimura, author of “Art + Faith: A Theology of Making,” draws from his deep well of reflections on creativity and the spiritual aspects of “making” in this poetic, inviting conversation with Jenn Giles Kemper. Experienced in the Japanese art of Kintsugi (mending broken ceramic with lacquer and gold to create something new) Makoto (Mako) talks with Jenn about what he’s learned about the very nature of our Maker God through this process of being “not only restored, but made new.”

    On this episode of Sacred Ordinary Days with Jenn Giles Kemper, Mako explores:

    • Why art is an outpouring of God’s grace
    • How the trauma of living near Ground Zero on Sept, 11, 2001 has been reflected in all of our lives during the 2020-21 global pandemic
    • The generativity of humanity
    • How art asks more questions than it answers
    • His journey in Christ through different denominations and traditions
    • How art is a gift but not a commodity, and how that reflects God’s grace

    About the guest: Makoto Fujimura, an artist, arts advocate, writer, and speaker, is the founder of the International Arts Movement and the Fujimura Institute, and co-founder of the Kintsugi Academy. He lives in Princeton, New Jersey and is a leading contemporary artist whose “slow art” has been described by David Brooks of the New York Times as “a small rebellion against the quickening of time”.

    Mako’s art has been featured widely in galleries and museums around the world, and is collected by notable collections including The Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo, The Huntington Library, and the Tikotin Museum in Israel. He is one of the first artists to paint live on stage at New York City’s legendary Carnegie Hall as part of an ongoing collaboration with composer and percussionist, Susie Ibarra.

    We’re proud to carry his books Culture Care and Art + Faith in our spiritual formation bookshop.

    Reflection point: In Art + Faith, Mako writes that “To be effective messengers of hope we must trust our inner voice, our intuition that speaks into the vast wastelands of our time.” When is a time you have not trusted your inner voice? What was at stake? And in the episode, Jenn mentions that Mako says that the book of Psalms, God’s poetry, gives us an ecosystem of metaphors and a garden of words to describe the thriving offered to us in the New Creation. What would it look like for you to spend some time in a Psalm this week? What might God have to tell you through the Psalm you read, as it relates to new creation?

    Links:

    About Sacred Ordinary Days with Jenn Giles Kemper: Sacred Ordinary Days with Jenn Giles Kemper explores faith where it hits the pavement of work, relationships, creativity, and real life. Inspired by Jenn’s curiosity and faith (and her work as a minister and spiritual director) we’re crafting a show to help you meaningfully explore your own life with Christ — and ultimately lead you to become more wholly human and more fully faithful. On Tuesdays, join us for a conversation with folks whose words, work, and witness have shaped our team’s understanding of God and practice of faith. (Plus, we’re featuring lots of good music, prompts for your reflection and practice, and plenty of invitations into a community of kindred spirits!)

    Listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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