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Excerpt:
In common with many people in America's Bible Belt,
West is an evangelical Protestant - a religious tradition
that emphasises the primacy of the Bible as the Word
of God and insists that its contents are fundamentally,
if not literally, true. Like a Southern preacher in
the pulpit on a Sunday morning, she often takes the
Bible, especially its most prophetic books - Ezekiel,
Daniel and Revelation - as her text. Instead of preaching
the Word, however, she visualises it. At times, the
violent colours, vibrant swirls and chaotic compositions
of her paintings conjure up the Bible's horrific apocalyptic
vision. At other times, she employs a sweeter mode of
stable shapes, balanced compositions and delicate pastels
to envision the biblical prophecy of God's triumph over
evil.
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The story of West's synthesis of art and religion into
a viable imagery of prophetic power has two points of
origin, the first a fervent belief in the Christian
faith, marked by her baptism at the age of fourteen,
and the second a long-time fascination with picture
making. A climactic fusion wedded these two concerns
and provoked the artist's creative outpouring: the murder
of Martha Jane in 1986 by her former husband, after
years of mounting abuse.
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