The following images are courtesy of Eric Nykamp, the artist, and Eyekons, an online source for religious art:

Judy Woman with a Calla Lily
When I Consider
We are All Daughters of Eve
Excellence
Remember Your First Love
The Reconsideration of Growth
In the Spirit of Prayer

 

© 2006 Eric Nykamp | Eyekons

 

An online source for religious art:

 


Eric Nykamp is a painter, a musician, a social worker, a teacher, a writer and a new father. Eric has a great interest in the relationship between art and psychology. He teaches a Sunday School class for artists and recently received a grant to turn his class curriculum into a book. He plays piano in his church’s very funky praise band and is very active in MANNA, a local group of Christian artists. But perhaps his greatest role is that of father to Jasmine and Lily, the two beautiful, young daughters that he and his wife Yee Lam have.

In his own words:

I am an artist. I am created by God and God creates me. He made me just as I am, a work in progress always on display. I create because I can and because I must. When I create, I am close to God, because I am both doing what I was created to do and because at that moment I image the Creator God. My daily life is inextricably intertwined with my art. It is the inspiration for my art, and my art is a mirror of my life. My paintings are the footprints of my daily walk with God.

In a similar way my artistic life and spiritual life often parallel each other greatly. When I am feeling creative, I feel closer to God and am more likely to be spending time with God. One day I was reflecting on this point and I realized that what seemed to connect the two was discipline. The discipline to be diligent in my art was the same discipline that would help me to routinely seek God’s will for inspiration from my relationship with God; my sketching and painting become a time of “visual devotion.”

It is during these visual devotions, however, that God communicates to me about my daily life. The struggles I have creating in many ways speak to the struggles I have with myself, with others, and with the world. My artistic wrestling is made of the same stuff that my daily struggles are. There is no separation just as the spiritual and material world are interconnected. We are made, body and soul, in the image of God. God is our creator and He dances with our spirit to the drumbeat of our imagination. The process of making art itself has allowed me to be open-to listen if God wants to communicate something to me. Sometimes, I would draw or paint for hours with no such awareness. Sometimes I would go for months without any such connection. But through the practice of regular art making I was routinely developing habits of being open to the movements of God. I have come to call this artistic prayer-the prayer of non-verbal creative expression. This ‘visual prayer” is what my art is about.

 

CBE

© 2006, Christians for Biblical Equality
122 W Franklin Ave, Suite 218, Minneapolis, MN 55404
PHONE: 612-872-6898   FAX: 612-879-6891


 


Judy Woman with a Calla Lily, by Eric Nykamp.

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