Close Menu
Finance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Lloyds sees annual profits jump 12% in spite of motor finance hit – Yahoo Finance UK
  • Manappuram Finance Q3 Results: Profit slips, NII remains flat; dividend declared
  • Gloucester’s empty shops to be transformed into art spaces
  • Cryptocurrency Market Trends and Global Forecasts Report 2025-2035: Millennial-Led Participation and the Emergence of Crypto as a Viable Career Path Redefine Financial Sector Perceptions – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire
  • Japan’s finance ministry isn’t a massive macro hedge fund
  • Crypto Market Daily Movements | The cryptocurrency market has rebounded amid volatility, with Bitcoin nearing the $90,000 mark; according to Bloomberg, Tether has become the largest holder of gold reserves outside sovereign nations and banks, currently – 富途牛牛
  • Will Budget 2026 provide clarity on cryptocurrency taxation, simplify compliance?
  • PayPal and NCA Survey Shows Rising Merchant Adoption of Cryptocurrency Payments
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
Finance ProFinance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Finance Pro
Home»Art Gallery»Art gallery enhances worship at The Chapel Hill Community Church
Art Gallery

Art gallery enhances worship at The Chapel Hill Community Church

August 13, 20244 Mins Read


ARTS & CULTURE; COMMUNITY NEWS

By Diana Newton
Correspondent

Many places of worship are adorned with liturgical art that references sacred stories. The stained glass windows in a medieval cathedral colorfully capture images of Biblical disciples. A Jewish Reform synagogue may feature a contemporary fiber art quilt of a menorah. Elaborate geometric patterns adorn some Mosque domes. While religious beliefs and traditions vary, the art in these spaces tends to reflect and reinforce longstanding iconography, ritual objects, and even placement that is essentially liturgical.

The Art Need Not be Religious

This is not so at The Community Church, a Unitarian Universalist congregation with an art gallery along all four walls lining its sanctuary. The Church hosts five exhibits each year by selected community artists, regardless of their subjects (as long as they are not disturbing), genre, or media. Marni Goldshlag, a member of the Church’s Art Team, explained that the changing exhibitions are aligned with the vision statement the Church adopted in 1996: “We will be a congregation centered in Sunday worship, which takes in a beautiful bright, accessible sanctuary enhanced by all the arts.” Goldshlag explained, “One of the members of the Art Team is assigned to be the shepherd for each exhibit.” While art was formerly hung on its original cinderblock walls, a renovation in 2002 allowed them to upgrade to more art-friendly walls and lighting for the mostly two-dimensional works shown there year-round.

Ippis Halme Thinks Aloud—In Color

The current exhibit, Thinking Aloud (which runs through August 25th). spotlights twenty-two colorful and fantastical artworks drawn by Ippis Halme. Born in Finland, Halme later attended the Hornsley College of Art in London. Although she and her husband have now lived in Chapel Hill for almost fifty years, imagery from Finland still permeates much of Halme’s work: rug weavings, the lakes of her childhood, reindeer, Nordic forests, fairies. Her world travels also make regular appearances, as seen in pieces named “Travel Diaries” and “Postcards.” She also acknowledges that patterns and textile designs of the past—from Celtic to Native American to Art Nouveau—influence her work.

Large baskets of colorful permanent markers provide a vivid palette for Ippis Halme’s artwork. Photo courtesy of Ippis Halme.

For a long time, Halme completed drawings using pen, ink, and colored pencil. But with the Covid pandemic and its attendant darkness and isolation, her work burst into vivid color as she began creating pieces using permanent markers on watercolor paper. Huge baskets of markers some in bright neon colors, beckon her hand to capture her inner vision. She finds that even dried-out markers leave swaths of faded color that add visual interest. Halme says that her work may begin with a dream of an image or a doodle she jotted down and then start growing almost of its own accord. Certain natural motifs, such as birds, leaves, fruits, and mushrooms, recur. Halme has developed a technique of creating a pattern template to assist in the repetition. She has even used a halved pineapple as the basis for a pattern that interested her.

Halme’s drawing, “A Landscape in Moonlight,” showcases intricate line work in cool tones. Photo courtesy of Ben Alper.

The works are intricate and often include visual elements filled with hundreds of tiny black lines and circles that seem to become like textiles. Halme finds working on these black-and-white portions much more visually tiring than the vivid colors. In fact, each piece takes approximately one month to complete. Interestingly, as many artists traditionally do, Halme does not sign her name in the lower corner. “I don’t like to see it there,” she explains simply.

Ippis Halme’s Thinking Aloud exhibit demonstrates that the spiritual darkening experience of the pandemic turned on a bright switch of generativity in the artist and provides an unusually colorful opportunity for contemplation during worship.

Those interested in seeing the changing art exhibits at The Chapel Hill Community Church can readily visit before or after the Sunday service held at 10:30 AM during the summer. In the other seasons, there are two services—at 9:30 AM and 11:15 AM—which allow for viewing before, between, or after. Another option is to call the Church and arrange for a specific, hosted time to visit the gallery.


Diana Newton is a coach, facilitator, filmmaker, writer, artist, yoga teacher and general Renaissance woman. Her documentary film, The Ties That Bind, is available for streaming on UNC-TV. She lives in Carrboro and is a UNC alum. This reporter can be reached at Info@TheLocalReporter.press





Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Gloucester’s empty shops to be transformed into art spaces

January 28, 2026 Art Gallery

The West End’s Famous Free Late-Night Public Art Show Art After Dark Returns For 2026 Next Week

January 27, 2026 Art Gallery

The Contemporary Art Exhibitions Worth Leaving The House For This Winter

January 26, 2026 Art Gallery

7 artists and art galleries to pause and look closer at on AD PRO Directory

January 25, 2026 Art Gallery

New art and interiors gallery opens in Ross-on-Wye

January 23, 2026 Art Gallery

What counts as art, and who gets to decide?

January 23, 2026 Art Gallery
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Lloyds sees annual profits jump 12% in spite of motor finance hit – Yahoo Finance UK

January 29, 2026 Finance 1 Min Read

Lloyds sees annual profits jump 12% in spite of motor finance hit Yahoo Finance UKLloyds launches…

Manappuram Finance Q3 Results: Profit slips, NII remains flat; dividend declared

January 29, 2026

Gloucester’s empty shops to be transformed into art spaces

January 28, 2026

Cryptocurrency Market Trends and Global Forecasts Report 2025-2035: Millennial-Led Participation and the Emergence of Crypto as a Viable Career Path Redefine Financial Sector Perceptions – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire

January 28, 2026
Our Picks

Lloyds sees annual profits jump 12% in spite of motor finance hit – Yahoo Finance UK

January 29, 2026

Manappuram Finance Q3 Results: Profit slips, NII remains flat; dividend declared

January 29, 2026

Gloucester’s empty shops to be transformed into art spaces

January 28, 2026

Cryptocurrency Market Trends and Global Forecasts Report 2025-2035: Millennial-Led Participation and the Emergence of Crypto as a Viable Career Path Redefine Financial Sector Perceptions – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire

January 28, 2026
Our Picks

UK Construction Industry Report 2025: Output to Register an AAGR of 3.2% Between 2026-2029, Supported by Investments in Infrastructure, Data Centers, Housing, and Renewable Energy Projects – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire

January 27, 2026

Coinbase adverts banned in UK for suggesting crypto could ease cost of living crisis | Cryptocurrencies

January 27, 2026

Spain Construction Industry Report 2025: Market Grew by 4% and is Projected to Grow by 3.6% in 2026, Supported by Investments in Renewable Energy and Transport Infrastructure – Forecast to 2029 – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire

January 27, 2026
Latest updates

Lloyds sees annual profits jump 12% in spite of motor finance hit – Yahoo Finance UK

January 29, 2026

Manappuram Finance Q3 Results: Profit slips, NII remains flat; dividend declared

January 29, 2026

Gloucester’s empty shops to be transformed into art spaces

January 28, 2026
Weekly Updates

Drake Invested $100 Million In The World’s First Art Amusement Park

December 11, 2023

Outdoor Northeast Ohio art fests are here } Gallery Glances

June 6, 2024

Justin Timberlake Mugshot Turned Into FINE ART At Sag Harbor Gallery!

July 3, 2024
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
© 2026 Finance Pro

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.