Sister Wendy's Book of Meditations by Sister Wendy Beckett
Sister Wendy Beckett became a television sensation in the 1990s as an art historian and commentator. She had several documentary series on BBC and PBS. As a Roman Catholic nun, her perspective always had a spiritual and moral dimension to it. In this book, she meditates on four topics: silence, peace, love, and joy. Each topic has eighteen or nineteen subtopics or exemplars. She gives a short, one page meditation that is paired with a painting (or occasionally a sculpture) from any period in art history in any style from any part of the globe. She tends to use mostly European art (what she's most familiar with) though there's Asian and American art too.
She's very expressive and is able to find meaning and relevance even in works that leave me dubious about their artistic merit. The book is full of great nuggets of wisdom, such as "Those who are genuinely good always doubt their goodness." [p. 68] This line comes with the painting Amedee-David, Marquis de Pastoret, 1826 by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres. The Marquis clearly believes in his own worthiness and is a wonderful counterpoint to the Sister Wendy's reflection on peace.
If anyone thinks he's good, here's the man |
I read this as part of my Lenten focus on more spiritual reading and found this quite rewarding. It is a short book (160 pages) and goes by far too quickly. I want to read some more of Sister Wendy's work!
Highly recommended.
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