Project of the Raphael Cultural and Artistic Research Association, Inc. (RCARA)
This Blog was created to increase understanding of Rudolf Steiner’s painting indications, the Training Sketches for Painters given by him, art therapy, plant colors, and the paintings and life works of Gerard Wagner.
Each Sunday look for a new sharing.
New Exhibition:
This Blog was created to increase understanding of Rudolf Steiner’s painting indications, the Training Sketches for Painters given by him, art therapy, plant colors, and the paintings and life works of Gerard Wagner.
Each Sunday look for a new sharing.
New Exhibition:
PLANT PAINTINGS BY GERARD WAGNER
This exhibition showcases reproductions of the art of Gerard Wagner (1906-1999), an artist who lived and painted in Switzerland for over 70 years.
Wagner pioneered a way of painting that is both a science and an art. Students are taught to feel the inner nature of each color and paint from the feeling of what a color truly is and what it ‘wills’ in an objective way. The ‘feeling nature’ of the human being is raised to spiritual perception in which the individual begins to lift the veil of the physical world and SEE the spiritual reality living behind the material world.
This is a training way that leads the human bring into the next stage of evolution: a fully alive and awake conscious human being.
This exhibition shows some of Wagner’s many explorations of the Sacred World of Plants.
See the following painting examples.
Wagner pioneered a way of painting that is both a science and an art. Students are taught to feel the inner nature of each color and paint from the feeling of what a color truly is and what it ‘wills’ in an objective way. The ‘feeling nature’ of the human being is raised to spiritual perception in which the individual begins to lift the veil of the physical world and SEE the spiritual reality living behind the material world.
This is a training way that leads the human bring into the next stage of evolution: a fully alive and awake conscious human being.
This exhibition shows some of Wagner’s many explorations of the Sacred World of Plants.
See the following painting examples.