Newman Exhibition available in English
The Newman exhibition, prepared by the CL UK community for the Rimini Meeting 2011, is now available in English. Communities are invited to bring and propose the exhibition in their parishes, universities, schools, etc.
For information on how to borrow the exhibit:
meetingnewman@gmail.com (Beppe and Tatiana)
Details on the aims, content, and format of the exhibition:
Presentation
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This exhibition has been
realised and presented on the occasion of the XXXII edition of “Meeting per
l’Amicizia fra i popoli” - Rimini, 21-27/08/2011.
Prepared by the UK CL Community with the help of Ian Ker and Richard Duffield. |
Content
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This exhibition responds to the invitation, made by Pope Benedict XVI
during his visit to Great Britain in 2010, to reflect on the figure of John
Henry Newman. He extended this invitation above all because Newman was “a
modern man, who lived the whole problem of modernity”, and because he saw
that all of us have a lot to learn from Newman’s three conversions. The three
conversions can, in fact, be seen as three ‘conversions to reality’. The
first conversion is the discovery that God and the soul are real, and that
the presence of God can be perceived with the same concreteness and certainty
with which one perceives the outside world, everyday objects or the faces of
friends. For the young Newman this is a Copernican revolution: he realises
that what truly counts in life is the clear presence of the person of God, so
that all existence becomes a dialogue between the heart of man and the heart
of God. The second conversion brings the realisation that faith is not
exhausted in an individualistic dialogue with God but becomes an awareness of
the whole of reality. A faith that is not rooted in reality, that does not
change the criteria with which we relate to the world, is an illusion and not
a response to the deep desires of man. From here began Newman’s untiring
battle against the dualism between ‘things’ and ‘words’ and his surprising
discovery that a true dialogue between man and God opens up a dialogue with
the hearts of other human beings. The final conversion is Newman’s conversion
to Catholicism. It is the discovery that God decided to ‘interfere in human
affairs’, creating a real place of His presence in the form of the Catholic
Church. In this living body, the person of Christ becomes tangible: He is
present in the communion between brothers of the faith, He shines in the
sanctity of their lives, He lets Himself be touched in the sacraments. In the
communion of the Church, the dialogue with the heart of God coincides with
the dialogue between the hearts of men. Our aim is to trace this threefold
journey of conversion by proposing a biographical and thematic path, from
which it emerges that conscience was the driving force of Newman’s journey
towards the certainty of truth: ex umbris et imaginibus in veritatem (“out of
shadows and illusions into truth”). We also consider how such a journey
characterised
Newman as an educator.
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Technical details
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Number of panels
The exhibition
is made of 22 panels in different formats.
Each panel is printed on a roller banner, inserted in a roll up portable stand which is supplied with a canvas carry bag.
The exhibition does not require any external hanging or standing device. PREVIEW OF PANELS AND STANDS Dimensions of the panels
- N. 20 panels 80x200 cm (nn. 1, 3-17, 19-22)
- N. 2 panels 100x200 cm (nn. 2 and 18)
The exhibition requires a space of 30 linear metres.
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Sections
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The exhibition is divided
into 3 sections:
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Introduction: from panel n. 1 to panel n. 2
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Section I (The first conversion): from panel n. 3 to
panel n. 6
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Section II (The second conversion): from panel n. 7 to
panel n. 12
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Section III (The third conversion): from panel n. 13
to panel n. 22
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Audio-Video
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The exhibition includes
also three audio-video media:
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N. 1 DVD audio-video, 8’51’’ (A dialogue with Newman),
to be used in the first section
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N. 1 CD audio, 4’13’’ (A dialogue from “Callista”), to
be used in the second section
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N. 1 DVD audio-video, 4’20’’ (Biglietto speech), to
be used in the third section
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Language
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English
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