April 2012 April 2012 - Sunday: Sacred Arts Festival at Glencairn Museum
Stained Glass Artist J. Kenneth Leap | Ken Leap, noted stained glass artist and Vice President and Education Chair of the American Glass Guild, has been leading workshops at Glencairn and researching the history of the stained glass windows created for Bryn Athyn Cathedral and Glencairn since 2006. During Glencairn Museum’s Sacred Arts Festival this weekend Leap will conduct glass painting workshops using authentic 12th-century techniques. Participants will apply glass pigment to designs adapted from Glencairn’s collection of medieval stained glass. The painted glass panels will then be fired in an ultra-fast kiln. No previous artistic experience is necessary to participate in these workshops. |
Sacred Stories: Scripture, Myth, and Ritual Stained Glass Tour and Demonstration | The Bryn Athyn Experiment: Replicating Medieval Glass Sacred Arts Festival WheatonArts Stained Glass Workshop at Glencairn Ben Odhner, Violin |
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This Sunday’s Sacred Arts Festival will feature family-friendly activities and demonstrations of religious art in the making, including the work of skilled artisans who use ink, paint, henna, stained glass and stone to create expressions of faith. Visitors can also try their hand at creating their own designs with a quill pen and ink or at a stained glass workshop.
The Philadelphia native is an adjunct faculty member at Villanova University teaching icon writing and, from January through April 2013, will be artist-in-residence at Burren School of Art in Ireland. VonMedicus studied at Mater Misericordia Academy, the Baldwin School, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the Prosopon School of Iconology. Her work was published in a 2008 book, “Letters from Heaven: An Illuminated Alphabet,” and her icons are found in both churches and private collections.
The Sacred Arts Festival also features the work of henna artist Jumana. Visitors can get temporary henna tattoos for $2, $5, or $10 per design. Other demonstrations include a working replica Gutenberg-style printing press by Kirsten Gyllenhaal; manuscript illumination by Sarah Dressler; and stone carving by Bryn Athyn Cathedral stone carver Jens Langlotz. Visitors to the Festival can view a new exhibition, “Sacred Stories: Scripture, Myth, and Ritual” running at Glencairn through June. The exhibition examines how religious people recreate sacred stories by bringing them to life in rituals that have transformative power. “For instance,” said Glencairn curator Ed Gyllenhaal, “the myth of Osiris, a legendary king murdered by his brother, was re-enacted through the ritual of embalming, which transformed the mummy into a reborn Osiris.” Admission to the Sacred Arts Festival is $8; $6 for seniors and students with ID; free for members and children younger than four. Glencairn will offer a $20 family rate on admission for up to four individuals per household, with half price charged for additional guests in the party.
Visitors to Glencairn also can take a cell-phone audio tour of highlights in the Museum’s collection, visit the Castle Café and ride an elevator to the top of Glencairn’s nine-story tower for a panoramic view of the area. The Bryn Athyn College Sacred Arts Program, held this June and July, is a series of four-day intensive courses in stone carving, glass painting, and metal forging taught by master craftsmen. Participants will watch demonstrations, experience hands-on workshops, examine original medieval pieces, explore buildings in the Bryn Athyn Historical District (a National Historic Landmark), and attend illustrated talks and concerts. The idyllic setting and magnificent resources offer an unparalleled learning experience. A complete archive of past issues of Glencairn Museum News is available online here. |
