Art and Religion
Building on the pioneering legacy of the Graduate Theological Union’s interdisciplinary study of faith traditions and the arts, the program is devoted to this study in its many dimensions, including the historical, theological, and aesthetic. Students pursue this study through an emphasis on the history of art and faith traditions or through philosophical and theological aesthetics.
Objectives
The program in Art and Religion engages doctoral students in a dynamic
scholarly learning community, focusing on critical reflection on the arts
as a locus of religious meaning. The program prepares students to find
where art and faith traditions meet in academic, religious, and art institutions. Students who complete the program will be able to interpret
the language of religious symbolism embodied in the arts and they will
acquire expertise in discerning how the interrelationship between art
and religion impacts history, culture, spirituality, and ritual. Our graduates
are able to teach, research, and write in the areas of art and faith traditions,
especially the visual arts, or aesthetics.
Admission Requirements
Persons applying for the program are expected to have an MA, or the academic
equivalent, in art history, theology and art, or aesthetics.
Language Requirements
Students must have proficiency in two languages other than English. One
of these must be German, Spanish, or French. Plans for acquiring sufficient
language proficiency are established on an individual basis by the student
in consultation with the academic advisor.
Course work
During this phase, students pursue pre-dissertation coursework, research
and writing of papers, as agreed with the academic advisor. Furthermore,
students are expected to take the doctoral seminar as well as upper division
(4000-6000 level) courses or seminars with GTU and UC Berkeley faculty
in the history of western art, aesthetics, and theology. In addition,
the student defines and gains expertise in a field of specialization,
as a preliminary step towards the dissertation. The student will write
two substantial research papers (one methodological in emphasis) to fulfill
the research readiness requirements; and, if necessary (consulting with
the advisor), the student will do additional qualifying seminar work.
Comprehensive Examinations
Written Examinations A) The student will write a research paper of 30
to 40 pages on some subject dealing with the major focus of his or her
discipline (either aesthetics or history of art and religion). B) The
student will be expected to write a composition, in a closed book examination
of 3 hours, on question/s given by the committee that deal with the student’s
major focus of his or her discipline. C) The student will write another
research paper of 30 to 40 pages dealing with the minor focus of his or
her discipline (either aesthetics or history of art and religion) or an
allied field approved by the Area. D) The student will do a critical paper
on a specific art form or do a creative project designed to display the
student’s knowledge of an art form within the context of theology.
Oral Examination
The oral examination will follow the written exams and involve the following:
A) Questions and Analysis on the part of the student’s Committee
regarding what was stated in all of the written exams. B) Any new questions
the Committee might want to pose to the student in order to determine
his or her comprehensive grasp of the discipline. C) A review of a critical
paper on a specific art form or of a creative project designed to display
the student’s knowledge of an art form within the context of theology.
Dissertation
The program’s course of study, research, writing, and examinations
culminates in a dissertation focusing either on the philosophical or theological
aesthetics of an art form, or on the visual arts within the religious
and cultural context of a selected period in the history of Western art
and religion. Dissertation proposals conform to the general rubrics of
the GTU doctoral program.
CORE DOCTORAL FACULTY IN ART AND RELIGION
ALEJANDRO GARCÍA-RIVERA
• Associate Professor of Systematic Theology, JSTB
Theological aesthetics; human suffering; soul and neuroscience; creation and evolution.
MIA M. MOCHIZUKI • Assistant Professor of Art History and Religion,
GTU/JSTB
Reformation and seventeenth century Dutch and Flemish art; impact of
iconoclasm and exploration on the early modern image; art theory and
criticism.
MICHAEL MORRIS, OP •
Professor of Religion and the Arts, DSPT
Christian iconography; biography; oral history; film studies; art history;
hagiography.
RONALD Y. NAKASONE • Professor-in-Residence, CARE
Buddhist art and aesthetics; interfaith aesthetics; Buddhist medicine; aging and spirituality.
CONSORTIAL FACULTY
JANE DILLENBERGER • Professor Emerita of Theology and the Arts,
GTU
The visual arts and Christianity, early Christian to the present, including
the United States.
Philosophical aesthetics.
CHRISTOPHER RENZ, OP •
Academic Dean and Adjunct Professor, DSPT
Poetry and spirituality.
AFFILIATED FACULTY IN THE CENTER FOR THE ARTS, RELIGION, AND
EDUCATION
MEL AHLBORN • CARE (Studio Art)
CAROL ANNE BERRY • CARE (Studio Art)
STEVEN E. BERRY • CARE (Communications)
JOAN CARTER • CARE (Theology/Worship and the Arts)
HARRY CRONIN, CSC • CARE (Theater and Film)
DANIEL DAMON • CARE (Church Music)
DIRK DAMONTE • CARE (Arts in Youth Ministry)
CARLA DeSOLA • CARE (Dance)
GORDON DRAGT • CARE (Arts Ministries)
ERIC ELNES • CARE (Arts Ministries)
CHINA GALLAND • CARE (Comparative Religion, Iconography and the Arts)
STEVEN GEORGIOU • CARE (Art and Religion)
BONNIE HARDWICK • CARE (Art and Religion)
STEWART HELLER • CARE (Television & Electronic Media)
SALLY HINDMAN • CARE & SKSM (Art and Liberation)
SALLY JUAREZ • CARE (Drama)
JACQUELINE LEWIS • CARE (Arts Ministries)
ELIZA LINLEY • CARE (Architecture)
HILARY MARCKX • CARE (Photography and Environment)
DONNEL MILLER-MUTIA • CARE (Arts in Youth Ministry)
SYLVIA MILLER-MUTIA • CARE (Arts in Youth Ministry).
MICHAEL MOYNAHAN, SJ • (Drama and Mime)
TIM NUVEEN • CARE (Poetry)
DAVID JAMES RANDOLPH • CARE (Communications)
MICHAEL RHODES • CARE (Film and Ministry)
DAVID STEADMAN • CARE (Art History)
MARGO WESLEY • CARE (Poetry)