Meinrad Craighead is an extraordinary
woman. An artist with an international reputation, primarily
known for her visionary paintings of the Goddess, she also spent
14 years in a Benedictine monastery as a Catholic nun.
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Vessel
by Meinrad Craighead
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Her great-great-uncle was a saintly German monk, revered in Switzerland
at the turn of the century, whilst on her father's side her ancestors
include members of the Native American Chickasaw tribe. Alex Fisher
talked to the artist and discovered a woman whose personal spiritual
path unites these seemingly incongruent influences.
As a young child, Meinrad Craighead was always making images. Originally
christened Charlene, she was the first of three sisters born to
a poor family in Arkansas, US. Growing up during the Depression,
she made do with mud and scraps of paper to fulfill her innate desire
to express herself creatively. 'I was ecstatic when my father gave
me a little tray containing three sticks of charcoal. We were so
poor that we were only given anything at Christmas or, perhaps,
on a birthday. When I was 12, I was given a little drawing table.
Despite the fact that my parents were both uneducated, they supported
me in my desire to be an artist. From as early as I can remember
it was my identity. There was never any question. It was all I did
and all I ever wanted to do. By the time I was a teenager I spent
hours drawing everyday.'
In 1960 Meinrad received a scholarship to study Fine Art at the
University of Wisconsin. After teaching for two years she took a
year off to study in Florence. She did not return to the US until
21 years later.
Despite the family's lack of money and constant moving to look
for work, Meinrad's childhood was grounded in a secure and loving
family life that had a profound influence on both her art and spirituality.
Her grandmother, or Memaw as she called her, was a powerful storyteller
and it was in her lap that Meinrad began to visualize the stories
that were to become her dreamlike paintings.
Her Catholic upbringing further fired and nourished her imagination
through ritual and ceremony. 'I think, from the beginning, I had
a safe container in which to dream, inside the arms of my mother
and my grandmother and then out into the safe container of the imagery
of the Catholic Church.' The candles, incense, poetry, psalms and
litanies all combined to give the young Meinrad a feeling for mystical
ritual, which still imbues her paintings and her daily life.
However, her first mystical experience, at the age of seven, was
not in the church but in nature - with her pet dog. As she gazed
into her dog's eyes she felt a mysterious rush of water coming from
deep within herself. 'I listened to the sound of water inside and
I understood: this is God. Soon after this I came upon a photograph
in a book - it was a statue of a woman. The recognition was immediate
and certain: I knew this was the woman I had heard in the water
and whose face I had sought with the dog's eyes. This discovery
brought a sense of well-being and gratitude which has never diminished.
Because she was a force living within me, she was more real, more
powerful than the remote 'Father' I was educated to have faith in.
I believed in her because I experienced her.' Rather than threatening
her certainty that the woman was, for her, the truer image of Divine
Spirit, the Catholic Church offered reflections of the feminine
deity in Mary as the Great Mother.
'One of the great, profound images inside the Catholic Church is
the continuity of the tradition of the Great Mother. Jung says that
the whole mythos of the Great Mother, going back in time, is contained
historically in the Catholic Church. The church itself is called
the Great Mother, and the term is the womb of the church, and all
the language of the Great Mother is still in Catholic ritual. Combined
with the influence of my maternal grandmother and mother as Wise
Women who made God the Mother real in my life, my Catholic heritage
and environment have been like a beautiful river flowing over my
subterranean foundation in God the Mother. The two movements are
not in conflict: they simply water different layers in my soul.'
It was only after Meinrad moved to Europe that she discovered her
family's relationship to the German monk Bruder Meinrad Eugster,
whose tomb still attracts thousands of pilgrims. Although this was
deeply meaningful to her (she took his name) it was not, she states,
the inspiration behind her decision to enter a monastery. 'Nothing
really influences you to enter a monastery other than a specific
call. I was in my late 20s when I began to understand that this
was what I was meant to do and at first I was shocked. I had a rich
artistic life, taking part in exhibitions, lecturing and traveling,
but the more I got into my deepest inner self, in relationship to
my creative work, the more I came to know that I was supposed to
choose the structure of monastic living. Having studied art history,
I knew the paradigm of artists inside monasteries. The archetype
of the monastery as a place dedicated to a solitary life, which
allows space for communion with the Great Spirit and creative expression
from that core place, was enormously appealing to me. This is what
vocation really is. It is literally a calling from your own interior
and there is no way I can explain it other than that.'
In 1966 Meinrad entered Stanbrook Abbey in England, where, for
the next 14 years, she continued her creative work, publishing her
first book, The Signs of The Trees, and becoming the subject of
a number of TV documentaries.
People often look for a conflict of ideology as a reason for her
finally leaving her life as a nun in 1980, but Meinrad explains
it differently. 'The spiritual energies which guided me into the
monastery were now calling for me to leave the Abbey. I began to
understand that there was something that I was supposed to do that
I couldn't do in the monastery, but I didn't know what it was. It
was hard because I loved monastic living and, at 44 years old, it
would be hard to start a new life but, again, I had to trust my
intuitive calling. It was only after I left that I began to understand
that I was supposed to concentrate on images of the Great Mother.'
With a generous grant from the British Arts Council, Meinrad produced
her second book, The Mother's Song. This extraordinary collection
of paintings and prose was an outpouring of Meinrad's personal vision
of God the Mother. 'She (the Goddess) had guided me as an artist,
illuminating my imagination - eventually she erupted in my imagery.'
When asked if Meinrad still considers herself a Catholic, she replies:
'I'm a Catholic in the sense that I am who I am. I'm not a Catholic
if you mean do I go to Mass. I know nothing about Catholic politics.
I do not have any context for Catholicism except as a cultural and
spiritual heritage. All through your life your vocation is honed.
As this happens, things that are no longer useful fall away. This
is not a negative thing, but a maturing. You let go of things that
were once the center of your life because they have done their work.'
In 1983 Meinrad finally returned to the US to set up her studio
in New Mexico, where she still lives and works. Here she continues
some of the principles of a monastic life. 'I still identify with
some of the vows I took as a nun - the vow of poverty for example.
My understanding of poverty is not to have what you don't need,
so I live a very simple life. I am still following my commitment
to obedience. I am obeying the same spirit that drove me into a
monastery, drove me out of a monastery and drives me in my creative
vocation.'
The Catholic Church gave Meinrad a deep understanding of the importance
of ritual, but now her rituals are her own. 'Ritual is a physical
manifestation of one's spiritual life and my spiritual life is the
awe and the transcendental understanding of the unity of the Universe.
Every morning I light a small fire outside when the sun is going
to rise over the mountains. I take a glass of water and pour half
on the earth and drink the other half. So I acknowledge the fire,
earth, air and water elements and that we are not separate from
the Universe. The fire of creativity is no different to the fire
I burn in the belly of my wood stove - I relate it tothe fire burning
in my soul. After the fire I walk around the grounds of my home
and commune with the natural surroundings. This is at the crack
of dawn and I'm praying in the sense of being with the trees, being
with the beginning of the day.' In addition to her daily ritual,
Meinrad gathers with a community of women eight times a year for
equinoxes and solstices, as well as the Celtic feast days on the
first day of February, May, August and November.
More recently, Meinrad worked with a Nicaraguan shaman. 'This was
a very powerful experience, but it's no different to the creative
work I do privately. All creativity is shamanic because you are
journeying into the unknown - crossing the threshold of reality
into the unstructured reality of your dreams to receive information
which comes to you from the spirit world. When I go into the studio
in the morning, I don't know what is going to happen with a painting.
To be inside that mystery, the creative mystery, is to be inside
the unspeakable mystery of the Universe. What you bring back isn't
just for you: it's for the Universe, the community. I found it interesting
to do this side by side with another person - the shaman would come
back with information that was very useful to me, helping to identify
different manifestations of animal spirits that were mine. Of course,
all of this feeds back into my paintings. Fox Woman is a painting
of a manifestation of the wolf spirit and Yellow Woman is an image
of the Great Mother from the Native American tradition. Although
she is a traditional figure, the image is unique. When you paint
from the heart of the creative source, when you live inside Her
and She is your home, you create something that has never been seen
before. This is what the artist does. Praising the Goddess in a
historical context is one thing, but you don't really get near her
story unless you understand that we are vehicles through which she
is expressed.'
Although Meinrad is keen to avoid direct criticism of a patriarchal
spiritual tradition, when questioned directly about its effect on
our psyche, she replies: 'Of course, it has completely stolen our
birthright. However, that leads to political talk. Obviously we
live in the Western world and we know the paradigm of the patriarchal
'Father' who looks after everything. The priority of the males in
the house crosses over into the East and will probably be with us
for as long as we can imagine into the future, but there is a place
where it doesn't matter. If you are following your intuition, if
you are smart enough, silent enough and together enough, you are
going to be OK because you can do that sifting and throwing out.
Not a throwing out because of anger, as in "Oh, this has destroyed
me", leaving you angry all the time, but a honing down of what is
meaningful to you. I only speak from the point of view of an artist;
if I were a politician, perhaps I would speak differently. I've
never thought in terms of 'fixing' society. I've had this narrow
road that I've been able to stay in and lead a holistic life. If
you are following your intuition you will ipso facto lead a holistic
life. The thread to follow is always ahead of you - if you are really
following that in the deepest way, you're not going to get lost,
you're going to get nearer and nearer to your own center.'
For Meinrad, hearing and following her intuition has been an innate
tool that has guided her entire life. For those of us who sometimes
find it hard to hear our own inner guiding voice, Meinrad has a
very clear message. 'Really, it couldn't be simpler. First of all
you have to find the space and place to be, and then just be in
silence. The point is that none of this can happen without your
own solitude. It's no good craving the bliss of creativity if you
are not happy alone with yourself, if you're not at home with your
own soul. This is where you find the balance in your life; otherwise
you are always trying to be part of other people's solitude, trying
to fix situations. Doing nothing, growing without structure, is
where you begin the journey to the depth of your own being. This
is not about chasing a concept of 'heaven', 'nirvana' or 'bliss',
which is why I object to any of those definitions. The place to
reach is the center of our Selves, and when we arrive at the center
of our Selves we can come from authenticity, however we might speak
in the world. As artists, writers, teachers, doctors - whatever
we do - we can come from our own uniqueness and that uniqueness
is why we are here.'
MORE INFORMATION
To see this article in its original presentation, as it was first
published, and to read all the other articles that accompanied it,
order Kindred Spirit magazine - issue 54 http://www.kindredspirit.co.uk/
"The Mother's Song" and Meinrad's most recent book, "The Litany
of the Great River", are both published by Paulist Press, U.S.,
and can be found on http://www.pomegranite.com/
Meinrad's website is http://www.meinradcraighead.com/
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