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Last Updated: Friday - 09/24/2010Week of April 10, 2006Kurelek's Passion in paintDVD makes Prairie artist's 160-painting series available to all
By GLEN ARGAN
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- The Chief Priests and the Scribes by William Kurelek; courtesy of Niagara Falls Art Gallery, William Kurelek Collection |
In 1975, a book of the 160 paintings was published and in 1981 the film made.
The 28-minute film is a simple venture, showing close-ups of various aspects of the paintings while narrator Len Cariou reads St. Matthew's account of Christ's passion, death and resurrection.
It will provide the viewer with a different way to meditate on the passion. For those who found Mel Gibson's movie The Passion of the Christ too gruesome to watch, Kurelek's paintings provide an alternative. Kurelek does not sugarcoat the Passion - Jesus' suffering is there writ large.
But the different medium - a still painting as opposed to an action-packed drama - at least makes Kurelek's Passion less upsetting. For some, it may even be too static.
Kurelek had an apocalyptic view of contemporary society - he was the first Toronto resident to apply for a permit to erect a bomb shelter to provide protection from nuclear war. That aspect comes through in these paintings as it does in much of his work.
His depiction of Jesus' prophecy of the end of the world is, as Globe and Mail reviewer Kay Kritzwiser described in 1970, "all purple fire and Kurelek at his brimstone best."
Kurelek intended these paintings to provide a religious education. Take the time to meditate on them - from the evocative scenes in Gethsemane to the two Marys running from the empty tomb - and you may discover aspects of the faith and of yourself that you had not previously contemplated.
The DVD can be ordered on the web at www.christfilm.com.
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