The Language of Art, a New Way to Communicate
(ANS
– Rome – May 24, 2022) – This is the 5th of 6 articles
by Fr. Gildasio Mendes, general councilor for communications, on “St. Francis de
Sales Communicator: Inner Pilgrimage, Wisdom in the Art of Communication.”
Francis had received a profoundly humanistic education and lived in an academic environment that bore all the vitality and cultural fruitfulness of the Renaissance. He studied Latin and Greek. Through his knowledge of literature, he developed and created his own language, a simple, practical, and affectionate style of writing. In the Renaissance, art had a great impulse and influence on the fabric of culture. Inspired by the art of antiquity, the Renaissance was a fertile field for the growth of new ideas and projects.
Through
his abilities and personal interest Francis de Sales was able to appreciate literature,
poetry, painting, and music, thus expressing his great artistic sensitivity and
integrating beauty, discipline, and the meaning of art within his cultural and spiritual
formation.
Francis
lived this artistic experience within his spirituality. He shows in some passages
of his writings how he was drawn toward painting, literature, music, and poetry.
This was not simply an academic or cultural taste. Art touched his way of thinking,
feeling, praying, and writing.
Fr.
Morand Wirth has the following to say:
Images
taken from artists served him first and foremost to illustrate his aims; however,
one senses in Francis de Sales a real appreciation for the beauty of the work of
art as such and at the same time the ability to communicate his emotions to his
readers. He would say, for example, that “the symmetry of a splendid painting cannot
bear the addition of new colors” (C 152) and that “in canvases and frescoes representing
a large number of characters in a small space, there is always something left to
see and notice, shadows, profiles, bends, twists” (S II 33). Moreover, is painting
not perhaps a divine art? The Word of God is not only on the plane of hearing, but
also on that of seeing and aesthetic contemplation: God is the painter, our faith
is painting, the colors are the Word of God, the brush is the Church (C 145).
Francis
de Sales also loved singing and music and emphasized the importance of beautiful
music in the liturgy to encourage personal and liturgical prayer. Wirth notes:
It
is known that he had hymns sung during catechism classes, but we would like to know
what was sung in his cathedral. He wrote in a letter after a ceremony in which a
text from the Song of Songs was sung: “Ah, how well all this was sung yesterday
in our church and in my heart!” (L IV 269).
As
a writer, an artist of the word, St. Francis experienced artistic beauty through
letters, liturgy, music, and poetry. Francis also wrote some religious poems. In
1598 he wrote a poem on the Transfiguration (with a literal, not poetic translation
for each stanza).
We have seen, Lord,
this face so clear
Infinitely clearer
than the shining sun
When in broad daylight
it shines brightest
And
the universe looks on like a shining eye.
But if such is
the body, how much more brilliant
The glory of thy
heart, wonderful heart,
With a happiness
filled, great and abundant,
Which
from its first birth made it glorious.
Heart so full of
splendor that it spreads out
Above its own clothes
it makes to shine so as to see
So radiant and
white, that snow so shining that
Heaven
cannot show to our eyes.
Oh! who then will
doubt that he still radiates
Over his servant
clothed in humility
Who amid worldly
travails honors him always
Remains
united to him as his garment?
Come now, ye who
admire with what immense glory
Shrouded is the
head of your God, and of happiness so great
Know that the dear
price of so much glory
Can
be paid by humility alone (O I 106-107).
Applying
his perspective on art to spirituality, St. Francis opens up a pathway in which,
through the construction that writing is, in the choice of words with their meanings,
colors and sounds, relating words to their symbols, the linguistic skills that link
emotions to words are developed.
Francis
de Sales was also a great storyteller! As we know, narrative is a way of communicating
characterized by talking about things and experiences through letters, stories,
literature, and tales, using images, metaphors, mythical, religious, and cultural
elements to communicate a message.
Storytelling
prefers simple, human language, deeply touches the imaginative, cognitive, and emotional
aspects, encouraging the reader’s or listener’s involvement in the plot and the
story being told.
Unlike
a conceptual text, which depends on formulations with logical premises and conclusions,
narrative follows a more informal, figurative, and symbolic language, allowing the
person to become involved and be part of what is communicated, starting from his
own experience and upbringing.
St.
Francis, in his spiritual accompaniment, certainly knew how to use the art of listening
– listening to the individual’s own story and experience of God.
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