Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Maria, Dominus tecum.

BALDOVINETTI, Alessio. Annunciation.
1447. Tempera on wood.
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence.
Advent meditation, day ten: consider today's depiction of the annunciation. Consider the haste. Angeli currit. What does this rushing haste suggest? Consider, again, God's glory in the light that cuts through at oblique angles. Consider the dies serena. Consider how all these things work to glorify God?

Agenda:
  1. Pray
  2. Lecture on Book VI-VIII of Ballad of the White Horse  
    1. Take notes
  3. Review HW:
    1. Review and study notes on The Ballad
    2. Be good.

Monday, December 9, 2013

Second Week of Advent: ad augustum per angustum

ANGELICO, Fra. The Annunciation. 1430-32.
Tempera on wood. Museo del Prado, Madrid.
Advent meditation, day 9: consider the lux in Fra Angelico's Annunciation. Consider the divine light piercing through the garden and portico. Consider also Mary's figure as almost in pain. Consider how such news, such an experience, such a piercing revelation might bring the death of the Old Mary and birth of the New Mary.
It is also fitting for this season to meditate on the Incarnation. ad augustum per angustum. That is, "To honor through narrowness (being pressed)." When we think of the "scandal" of the gospel or the complete revolution of values for the world of classical antiquity, we often think of Christ's sermon on the mount or of his passion and sacrificial death. But the Christian revolution of classical values really begins with the Incarnation. It is truly a mystery that God became man. But it is also an offense that Omnipotence Itself pours out Its Strength into the limited, frail frame of a Baby. This offends every worldview where might makes right, every system that bases the Good on power. Every other set of values sees weakness as bad and strength as good. (This is why Feminism and Marxism is so flawed.) But the Christian story shows from its inception that God cares about the weak and lowly things. Attend to Mary's Magnificat. Christ is glorified, then, not because he comes as the strongest, most powerful thing in the universe; rather, Christ attains glory by his descent into the narrow limits of humanity's pressed being. For in this we see that out of the mouth of babe's Thou hast ordained praise. 

Agenda:
  1. Pray
  2. Latin Proverb: Ad augustum per angustum
    1. Literally: "To glory through narrowness." Augustum means "straits." Christ took on the definite form of a man and walked through the straits of human woe and the limits of hunger, temptation, and need, yet all the while without falling into sin.  
  3. BWH Project: 
    1. Presentations on a passage from The Ballad of the White Horse
  4. Lecture on Book IV-V of Ballad of the White Horse  
    1. Take notes
  5. Review HW:
    1. Review and study notes on The Ballad
    2. Be good.

Friday, December 6, 2013

Mundum olim erat obscurum.

BAROCCI, Federico Fiori. Annunciation.
1582-84. Oil on canvas. Pinacoteca, Vatican.
Yes. It's true. The world was once dark. Advent meditation, day five: consider the contrast of light and dark in Barocci's "Annunciation" and this should of course remind us of the primordial darkness before the light of Christ, through Mary, broke open ancient night of a fallen world.

Agenda:
  1. Pray
  2. BWH Project: 
    1. Presentations on a passage from The Ballad of the White Horse
  3. Lecture on Book IV-V of Ballad of the White Horse  
    1. Take notes
  4. Review HW:
    1. Review and study notes on The Ballad
    2. Be good.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Ave Maria Gratia Plena

ANDREA DEL SARTO. The Annunciation. 1512-13.
Oil on wood. Galleria Palatina (Palazzo Pitti), Florence.
Advent meditation, day three. Consider Del Sarto's background; consider the contrasts of turbulence and peace, the strange arches of heaven breaking up the distance of all the world. 

Agenda:
  1. Pray
  2. Work on The Ballad of the White Horse Project
  3. Lecture on Book IV-V of Ballad of the White Horse  
    1. Take notes
  4. Review HW:
    1. Work on BWH Project. Due on Friday (12/6)!
    2. Review and study notes on The Ballad
    3. Be good.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Ave Maria

ALLORI, Alessandro. Annunciation. 1603.
Oil on canvas. Galleria dell'Accademia, Florence.
Advent meditation, day two: consider Allori's depiction of the divine interruption by Gabriel and the humble response of Mary. In this painting we are reminded of Mary's beautiful submission to the Divine calling on her life.

Agenda:
  1. Pray
  2. Improve and correct Beowulf exams for credit. You can show your mistakes and corrects in an oral interview for credit. Due by tomorrow. 
  3. Ballad of the White Horse Project:
    1. Choose any passage (1-3 pages, or 5-10 stanzas) that you particularly like. 
    2. Read your passage in front of your fellow peeps (ante discipulos).
    3. Discuss the meaning of your passage in the following ways:
      1. What is the context of the passage?
      2. What do you love about it?
        1. Sonic Elements: beautiful lines (alliteration, rhyme, word choice)
        2. Visual Elements: images of strong, beautiful, sad things
        3. Intellectual Elements: arguments the poet is making, contrasts ("but" or "yet" or "turns" in the poem)
      3. What does your passage add to BWH as a whole?
  4. Work on The Ballad of the White Horse Project
  5. Lecture on Book III of Ballad of the White Horse  
    1. Take notes on the rap battle
  6. Review HW:
    1. Work on BWH Project. Due on Friday (12/6)!
    2. Review and study notes on The Ballad
    3. Be good.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Adventus Laetus.

ANDREA DEL SARTO. Annunciation.
1528. Oil on wood. Galleria Palatina (Palazzo Pitti), Florence.
Two days ago marked the beginning of the season of Advent, the new year of the Church calendar, that season of dark that precedes the light, that season of waiting of the LORD, that season of following the star to Christ. 

Agenda:
  1. Pray
  2. Hand bank Beowulf exams. Discuss and review.
  3. Work on notes for each book of The Ballad of the White Horse
  4. Lecture on Book II of Ballad of the White Horse
  5. Review HW:
    1. Finish notes on Book I The Ballad
    2. Be good.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Ballad of the White Horse, Book I: notes on setting

Welcome back. I hope you are rejuvenated not merely from the time off but also by a renewed sense of thankfulness. Perhaps that is asking too much. The week before last, if you can think that far back, we began The Ballad of the White Horse. This week we shall endeavor to finish it. Each day this week we shall discuss a section of the poem. On Monday of next week you will have you exam.

Agenda:
  1. Pray
  2. Latin Proverb: Destituis ventis remos adhibe.
    1. Literally, "When the winds fail, take to the oars." This statement carries with it the idea that we mustn't sit on our hands and simply wait for opportunities; we must act. Colloquially, we might translate it, "Don't just sit there; do something!" 
  3. Work on notes for each book of The Ballad of the White Horse
  4. Lecture on Book I of Ballad Ballad of the White Horse
  5. Review HW:
    1. Finish notes on Book I The Ballad
    2. Be good.