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Spiritual Art

This page shares a few examples of creative spiritual artwork by those who pursued the challenging task of working with the meaning and purpose of color and form (not just for aesthetic or creative purposes, but with a deeper meaning behind colors associated with spiritual principles of movement and form). There are many great artists in the world, so this page is by no means complete and all art is certainly subjective. However, the works shown here reflect genuine spiritual principles, personalities, facts, and notions connected to Anthroposophy and other streams of knowledge. 

 

I believe that these artworks reflect genuine truths and ideas of the spirit working through people in an inspired way.

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Baron Arild Rosenkrantz (1870-1964)

Arild Rosenkrantz - Wikipedia

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Arild Rosenkrantz (1870 – 1964) was a Danish nobleman painter, sculptor, stained-glass artist and illustrator. He is created many beautiful anthroposophical works based on Dr. Rudolf Steiner's insights on color and insights from genuine spiritual insights.

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​​Arild Rosenkrantz was born in 1870 to Baron Iver Holger Rosenkrantz, a Danish diplomat, and Julia Louise Mackenzie, a Scottish socialite and medium, at Frederiksborg Castle. His father died when Rosenkrantz was only three years old. He accompanied his mother on her journeys to Italy, Scotland and England. She moved to Italy permanently in 1891 and was a spiritual medium

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In Rome he studied art under Professor Modesto Faustini in 1887; Faustini imparted an appreciation for the Italian masters that influenced Rosenkrantz's work. There was a dreamy, emotional quality to his work throughout his artistic career as a painter and stained-glass artist. Two years later he studied under Jean-Paul Laurens and Benjamin Constant at the Académie Julian in Paris. He was also influenced by the Pre-Raphaelites, painters of the French salonRomantic artists J. M. W. Turner and William Blake and Impressionist artist Claude Monet.​ He was studying in the United States in 1894 and 1895 and made glasswork for Tiffany. Later he made stained glass windows in a wide range of English churches and mansions.

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From 1898 he stayed in London, where he developed his reputation as an artist. In London, Rosenkrantz joined the Anthroposophical Society. In 1912 he met Austrian philosopher Rudolf Steiner personally. Two years later he and his wife moved to Dornach, Switzerland to participate in the decoration of the anthroposophical center Goetheanum with other artists. Steiner, who taught Rosenkrantz of colors intrinsic properties, said: "Colors are the soul of nature and the entire cosmos – and we become part of that soul when we live with the colors.".

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Rosenkrantz came to Denmark in the fall of 1939 to organize an exhibition in Copenhagen for his 70th birthday on 9 April 1940. However, German troops crossed over the Danish border and returning to London was impossible. His relatives at Rosenholm Castle in Jutland offered their home to Rosenkrantz and his wife, who then died in 1944. After that, he decided to stay in Denmark at the East Jutland castle. He worked more than 20 additional years creating works, exhibiting them, and lecturing.

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Influenced by anthroposophy through Rudolf Steiner and theories by Goethe, Rosenkrantz's works reflected a bold use of color. The Rosenholm Castle holds a number of his oil paintings and pastels.  He died in September 1964.​​

"Michael" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"Madonna" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"Prayers in the Desert" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"The Temple of Peace" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"The Mysterious Portal" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"The Temple" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"The Grail(?)" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"The Altar of the Soul" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"Christ on the Cross" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"The Grail" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"Astraea" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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Unknown, by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"The Guardian" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"The Hierophant" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"He Suffered" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"Group Souls" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"The Charioteer" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz.

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"Group Soul" by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz. These align with the 4 Gospels; lion, eagle, bull, and man.

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Freydoon Rassouli

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https://rassouli.com/

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RASSOULI  is an award winning artist and author who is known for his unique style of Fusionart. He migrated to the United States from Iran as a young man and is currently residing in Southern California.

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Rassouli grew up studying under traditional Iranian painting masters while searching volumes of artistic works of varied traditions and styles. He roamed the art museums, won awards for his paintings, and traveled in classical Europe as a teenager prior to going to the United States in 1963 to further explore his artistic drive. There, he studied fine arts and architecture at the University of New Mexico and environmental psychology at the University of Southern California.

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"Free Flight" by Rassouli

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"Alchemy of Love" by Rassouli

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"Process of the Light Workers" by Rassouli

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"Twilight of Perception" by Rassouli

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"Joy RIders" by Rassouli

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"Celestial Union" by Rassouli

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"Joy of Union" by Rassouli

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"From Spirit to Form" by Rassouli

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"Feast of Heavens" by Rassouli

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"Spiritual Gate" by Rassouli

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"Soul Sisters" by Rassouli

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"Cosmic Flow" by Rassouli

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"Divine Emanation" by Rassouli

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"Jacob's Dream" by William Blake

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William Holman Hunt, "The Light of the World", 1851-52. 

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“Sir Galahad's Vision of the Holy Grail”, 1879, by Sir Joseph Noel Paton

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Sir Galahad , The Quest of the Holy Grail by Arthur Hughes, Circa 1870 

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“Hypatia” by Alfred Seifert, Circa 1901.  Here, the martyr and initiate of the Library of Alexandria (died 415 AD) is portrayed with a philosopher's rose. In esoteric terms, the rose is a symbol of spiritual initiation, purification, and martyrdom.

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"The Knight of the Holy Grail", by Frederick Judd Waugh, 1912

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"The Wedding of St George and Princess Sabra", Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882). While this painting can be viewed from several perspectives, in medieval art, the princess in portraits like these typically refers to the higher self which is reunited with the seeker after slaying the dragon; one's lower aspects.

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"Parsifal" by Odilon Redon

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"Lohengrin", by Walter Crane, Circa 1895. The Swan Knight.

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"St George", circa 1906

Solomon J. Solomon, 1860 - 1927

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"Saint George and the Dragon", by Peter Paul Rubens, 1606 - 1608.

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 “Two Kings”, by Sir Frank Dicksee (1853–1928). While many interpretations of this painting abound, Charlemagne and King Arthur were surely at the forefront of the artist's mind...

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"Thor's Battle with the Giants'" by Mårten Eskil Winge.

"Odin, Thor, etc., are the names of divine beings to be found behind the outer veil of the sense world alone." - Rudolf Steiner, The Mission of Folk Souls, Lecture 8.

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"He (the Germanic Norseman of the ancient world) felt the Thor-force in his ‘I’ as the constant returning of the hammer of Thor into the hand of Thor, he felt the force of one of the most powerful Angels that had ever been known and revered, because he was a mighty Being who was seen to have remained behind at the Angel stage." - Rudolf Steiner, Folk Souls, Lecture 8

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"La Vierge aux Anges", William Bouguereau

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"Christ in the Sepulchre Guarded by Angels", by Wiliam Blake

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Madonna and Child, by Unknown

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"Princess", Anthroposophy, by Unknown

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"Pure Love" by Iris Sullivan.

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"Parzifal in the Heart" by Iris Sullivan.

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"Parsifal on the Lake" by Iris Sullivan.

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"The Threshold" by Iris Sullivan.

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"Heart's Light" by Iris Sullivan.

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Nineeta Sombart (1925-2019)

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Ninetta Sombart - Official Website

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Ninetta was born in Berlin (DE) on 2 May 1925. Her father, Werner Sombart (1863 – 1941), was a professor of economics; his first wife, with whom he had four daughters, died in 1920. Two years later he married Corinna Leon, the mother of Ninetta Sombart and her brother Nikolaus who was two years older than her. Through her mother she got to know the Russian-Orthodox Church but was later confirmed in the Protestant Church.

Her gift for drawing first became apparent in grammar school. After graduating she studied architecture and in 1941, after her father’s death, she followed her mother who had been evacuated to Bad Kösen (DE). There she worked in a home for boys with challenging behaviours. When the war was over, she painted soldiers’ portraits, worked as a poster artist and, in 1947, she married the landscape painter Wilhelm Bruckner. The couple moved to the United States and had four children.

In order to earn some money, she painted a picture that led to further commissions and reproductions in the form of art prints. Her pictures in the style of magical realism and surrealism were sought after and she was promoted by Salvador Dalí. In the 1960s a health crisis led her to the Ita Wegman Clinic (CH) and rang in a new chapter of her life.

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Ninetta Sombart became head of advertising at the Buss Engineering Factory in Pratteln (CH) and managed to also find time for painting. After her retirement in 1987 she worked as an independent artist, developing her own lazure technique with oil and acrylic colours. Again, her pictures became widely sold postcard motifs and art prints.

For Ninetta Sombart truth was more important than beauty in her painting – and sometimes she would paint over one of her pictures. She is best known as a painter of Christian motifs and altarpieces in the Christian Community. The drama she captures in her pictures reflects her interest in current affairs.

She was only twelve years old when she met the later world-famous Romanian conductor Sergiu Celibidache, with whom she spoke about reincarnation and whom she heard say that «When you lie, you become invisible for the spiritual world, your angel becomes powerless and you are left without him.»

Ninetta Sombart liked reading in Rudolf Steiner’s lectures, about religion, art and folktales from all over the world, but she also had cartoons in her library. She was closely connected with the Goetheanum, through exhibitions for instance, and an active member of the branch and the Christian Community.

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"Lazarus" by Nineeta Sombart

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"Erzangel" by Nineeta Sombart

"Archangel"

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"Todesengel" by Nineeta Sombart

"Angel of Death"

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"Sonnenwanderer" by Nineeta Sombart

"Sun Wanderers" or "Sun Seekers"

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"Heilsuchung" by Nineeta Sombart

"Healing Quest"

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Angel by Nineeta Sombart

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"Creation" by Nineeta Sombart

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"Jacob's Wrestling with the Angel" by Ninetta Sombart

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"Angel" by Nineeta Sombart

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"Deathbed" by Ninetta Sombart

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Liane Collot d’Herbois (1907-1999)

Liane Collot d’Herbois - Sophia Institute

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Liane Collot d’Herbois (17 December 1907 in Camelford, England – 17 September 1999 in Driebergen, the Netherlands) was a British painter and anthroposophical painting therapist. She researched light, darkness, colour and its application in painting and in therapy.

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More to Come...

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