John Miller's PowerPoint presentation, Reconstructing a Public Sphere, focuses on a specific location, Battery Park City and the adjacent World Trade Center in New York. It is both a photographic essay and critical text -- and despite its title, Miller's most autobiographical work to date.Microsoft's PowerPoint, the heir apparent to the 35-mm slide projector, sadly now "the staple of comedy skits," is subverted by Miller's narrative of personal memory and experience: he ponders the park's civic history and public art projects, as well as his evacuation from the area in the wake of 9/11.Upon returning to the park fifteen years later, Miller questions how public space develops from reconstruction--and the function of the public within it. Akin to the effects of photography, he considers how public space redacts local history as much as it conjures subjective memory.
In these lectures presented at Westminster Theological Seminary, Jack Miller integrates theology, literature, and modern culture as he discusses five of the most important European modern novelists of our time: Camus, Golding, Greene, Kafka, and Tolstoy. Best known as a church planter and mission founder, here he wears the scholar's robe to diagnose the causes of modern aches and pains and apply the healing power of the gospel. At one time a Marxist, Jack treats the novelists and their revolutionary friends with sympathy and respect. Along the way the reader learns the Reformation roots of the novel as a genre, the basics of literary analysis, and how to dialogue with a Marxist. Jack provides a Christian perspective on many of our current issues: the lectures on Camus and Tolstoy and the lecture on the "Theology of Revolution" lay bare the skeleton of modern revolutionary thought and provide a gospel response filled with grace and courage.
I Stand, I Fall, a comprehensive survey of work by John Miller, coincides with the first American museum exhibition dedicated to the influential conceptual artist. Through almost 150 images, this catalogue comprehensively traces Miller's use of the figure throughout his career in order to incisively comment on the status of art and life in American culture. The book features a range of media, including painting, sculpture, drawing, photography, installation and video; never-before-seen works from the 1980s; new large-scale sculptures; and the artist's most ambitious architectural installation to date - a vast and immersive mirrored labyrinth that went on view at the ICA Miami's Atrium Gallery. I Stand, I Fall, surveys Miller's use of the figure in order to examine themes of citizenship and politics, and the conventions of realism in contemporary art. Organized chronologically, the exhibition begins with his drawings and paintings from 1982-1983, the majority of which have never been presented publicly. Influenced by the pastoral genre of painting and American social realism of the 1920s and 30s, these deadpan, even grotesque, works explore issues of urban and suburban Americana, public space, and the human. Published retrospectively after the exhibition John Miller: I Stand, I Fall at Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, 18 February - 12 June 2016.
Words create our world, our perception of fact, our reality and our fantasies. Words describe our behavior and our relationships, words make us laugh, put meaning to our lives and let us express our sorrows and our fears. Words can be our allies or be turned into weapons. Choose the words you will use before using them and this will be a kindness to yourself and others. You neve r know whos listening!
Words are your identity, your road traveled, the foundation of your thoughts and your relationships. Words describe your past, present and future. All of your being is translated into words. Once put into motion, words cannot turn back. Words impact on your life and form history. The Words you choose to use are your signature. What words you use and how do you use them?
USE A WORD TO EXPRESS LOVE. USE A WORD TO CREATE PEACE. USE A WORD TO PRAISE. USE A WORD TO ENCOURAGE. USE A WORD TO COMFORT. USE A WORD TO HEAL. NEVER USE A WORD TO HURT.
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