Faith Cultivating Creativity

In the summer of 2022, ten 麻豆区 faculty members from a wide variety of disciplines gathered for an intense week together exploring the relationship between Christian faith and creativity. The seminar, 鈥淔aith Cultivating Creativity,鈥 sponsored by the de Vries Institute for Global Faculty Development, invited participants to reflect together on the role of creativity in life and learning. Prof. Lew Klatt of Calvin鈥檚 English department and Prof. Anna Greidanus of Calvin鈥檚 department of visual and performing arts served as co-leaders of the seminar.聽
Each day of the seminar consisted of a rhythm of devotions, group art exercises, poetry, wide-ranging discussions, and a shared meal. Chapters of Makoto Fujimura鈥檚 recent book, Art and Faith: A Theology of Making, provided framing themes for each day鈥檚 projects and conversations. For example, the first day鈥檚 theme was, 鈥淚f God is Artist鈥︹ Other days focused on motifs such as 鈥渕aking is loving鈥 and 鈥渋magination + tears,鈥 a key feature of Fujimura鈥檚 kintsugi art and his theological reflection upon suffering.聽
In working closely together, seminar leaders Greidanus and Klatt drew from their areas of expertise (visual art and poetry, respectively) to craft a faculty development experience that fused together careful consideration of key concepts with hands-on making that brought those concepts alive. As Greidanus put it, the experience joined together 鈥渕aking and the meaning of making.鈥 Klatt observed that one result of the seminar was an invitation to consider a new way of understanding God鈥斺淕od the Artist before God the Lecturer.鈥 He was also struck by Fujimura鈥檚 encouragement to Christians to think of redemption not merely 鈥渁s repairing or fixing but as metamorphosis and new creation.鈥澛
The faculty who participated in the seminar found it deeply impactful. Though from a diverse range of disciplines and with varying levels of experience in areas of art and design, the participants encountered meaningful insights for their lives as Christians and their work as scholars from the week鈥檚 contemplation of ideas along with an experience of the creative process. Julie Wildschut, an engineering professor, was 鈥渁mazed by the overlap between pottery and my materials science class for engineers. Anna [Greidanus] was talking about the earth and materials and the amazing transformation through heat. Her descriptions involved soils, conservation, chemistry, engineering, and art. It inspired me to see if there is a way to get my [engineering] students over to the art studio for a ceramics lab.鈥澛犅犅犅犅犅犅犅犅犅犅
Similarly, Dave Warners, from Calvin鈥檚 biology department, also reveled in the profound connection between the topic of the seminar and his work as a restoration ecologist. 鈥淎lthough often overlooked, imagination and creativity are essential components of doing restoration ecology well, and beauty is an elusive, though deeply desired goal. It鈥檚 not just about returning functional ecosystem services or cleaning up a polluted stream; it鈥檚 more about coaxing beauty out of a degraded landscape, similar to how a sculpture draws beauty out of a lump of clay.鈥澛
History professor Eric Washington was struck by the connection between art and his own discipline: 鈥淥ne of the definitions of history that I use is by John Fea, who defines history as the art of reconstructing the past. Just as creating art is a process so is history, especially the writing of history. Like working with clay as a source of a finished piece, historians have primary material that needs to be shaped and molded into a narrative.鈥 And philosophy professor Rebecca DeYoung appreciated the 鈥渃ontemplative鈥 mood of the seminar, observing that it was an appropriate counterbalance to 鈥渢he Reformed attitude of constant activity.鈥澛
In addition to being a challenging and refreshing experience for these faculty participants, the seminar promises to bear fruit for their ongoing work as teachers and scholars. Warners noted: 鈥淢y teaching will be enhanced by bringing in some of the pedagogical and content insights I gained from this week.鈥 Similarly, English professor Gary Schmidt said 鈥淎nd to have a week when we all felt nourished, and fed (body and soul) in such lovely ways--well, it really was spectacular.聽I know that this is going to affect my writing classes in terrific and exciting ways.鈥