Meinrad Craighead

Meinrad Craighead Goddess Painting

Meinrad Craighead is an amazing spiritual artist and mystic who articulates a brilliant vision of the artist's work in this world. Here is her first mystical experience:

Years before the Goddess movement got underway, artist Meinrad Craighead first encountered "God the Mother" as a child. Lying with her dog beneath blue hydrangea bushes in her grandmother's garden in North Little Rock, Arkansas, she had heard "a rush of water" deep within her. "I listened to the sound of the water inside and I understood; 'this is God.' "Thus, it is no surprise that she now lives and paints near the Rio Grande River, the watery guide she describes as the "natural, metaphysical, archetypal symbol which has ruled my life." from Soul Sisters, The Five Sacred Qualities of a Woman's Soul by Pythia Peay

Her first mystical connection to God was through the Earth. Artists have an implicit connection to the material world because it is our task to join matter and spirit in a work of art. Artists must have a fundamental respect for the raw stuff of matter and the Earth which supports and connects us. Craighead understand this fully. Here is how she describes the creative process:

As an artist, I'm the first to see the treasure which has never existed before. But the treasure is never for yourself. You are just the agent to receive it and bring it back." The creative process, she says, is endlessly regenerative.... an artist is a transformer; transformation is what our work is about. It's the work in the cauldron; you throw in anything and it all comes together as something delicious. It's like there's centrifugal force in us, and everything that comes in each day is spun around. Most is flung off, but the rich stuff drops right down to the bottom. You know what a compost heap is like; it seethes, makes noises, stinks, bubbles, and emits gasses. All of that is transformation. So when your imagination gets in there, it's growing in the most incredible, rich earth. No wonder the images come out; they've been trapped in there. The work of the spirit is in each of us. All we've got to do is just do it. That is the incarnation, that is making the invisible visible.- Meinrad Craighead

It makes you want to run out and create, right? The video below is a preview of a documentary about her life. She is amazing.I'll only touch on a couple things that struck me because there is just too much here. I love how she describes "the Divine gaze" which holds us in existence. We exist because the Divine perceives us. How validating is that? The Divine chooses us to be filled with Creative energy, to be used us as channel to transform the material world. I am also moved by her portrayal of the feminine aspect of the Divine. There is great courage in her work. She gently expands our conception of what is possible and creates more space for the Divine in this world. In our minds, the Divine is no longer just the narrow definition of "God", the Divine now has a "Goddess" face as well. God becomes as Tim Victor, a blogger I follow, says "Godde". By doing so, Craighead brings more balance into the world. Her work heals and transforms our world. She is a true artist and a true partner with the Divine Artist.

Independent documentary work in progress. Uploaded and produced by Amy Kellum in association with Minnow Media and Resource Center for Women and Ministry in the South. Meinrad Craighead: Praying with Images, an hour-long documentary, will offer an introduction to the lifelong pilgrimage of Meinrad Craighead and her mystical encounters with the Divine Feminine. As she explains the dreams and shamanic journeys that have often been the inspiration for her art, viewers will be introduced to images of the Divine Mother that have appeared around the globe throughout human history. Subsequent programs focusing on the Black Madonna and on Craighead’s lifelong fascination with animals as the sacred emissaries of divine messages will be introduced in this initial program. EXECUTIVE PRODUCER Amy Kellum first met Meinrad Craighead while involved with a group exploring Women's Spirituality through Duke University's Continuing Studies. She was so taken with Craighead's knowledge of ancient spirituality and the effect it has on our modern day ideas about God that she signed up for one of the artist’s workshops in New Mexico. She began videotaping Craighead's lectures in 2003 and has completed a Certificate in Documentary Studies from Duke University based on her work with the artist. Donna Campbell and Georgann Eubanks, Minnow Media, LLC, Film Producers Campbell and Eubanks launched their full-service video production company, Minnow Media, in 2001 with the twin goals of 1) preserving the voices and stories of individuals, communities, sites, and events that are on the verge of dramatic change or silence; and 2) enriching public discussion around issues of individual growth and social transformation. Campbell’s work has won national awards from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the Association of Women Broadcasters in Radio and TV, and the National Educational Television Association over the last decade. Before Minnow Media, Eubanks worked for 25 years in the nonprofit sector as a writer, educator, and communications consultant for groups ranging from the Chautauqua Institution to Harvard Divinity School. She is an Emmy winner in the category of original music and lyrics for a recent Minnow production. (See more at www.minnowmedia.net.) Sponsoring Organization: The Resource Center for Women and Ministry in the South (RCWMS) is a thirty-one-year-old nonprofit organization dedicated to weaving feminism and spirituality into a vision of justice for the world. Over the years RCWMS has sponsored dozens of workshops, conferences, and retreats on women and religion, equal rights, economic justice, community economic development, health care, and violence against women and children. The organization has mentored and encouraged young women, professionals in religious institutions, writers, and activists. In recent years RCWMS has developed program areas about art, writing, creativity, and spirituality. RCWMS publications include a quarterly newsletter, pamphlets, and a book of essays by Executive Director Jeanette Stokes, entitled 25 Years in the Garden.