Symbolism in Sacred Arts: The Use of Religious Symbols in Visual and Performing Arts
Keywords:
Symbolism, Sacred Arts, Religious Symbols, Visual Arts, Performing ArtsAbstract
Symbolism in sacred arts serves as a vital medium for expressing and preserving spiritual truths across diverse religious traditions, manifesting through both visual and performing forms of artistic expression. Religious symbols—whether the cross in Christianity, the lotus in Buddhism, the crescent in Islam, or the yantras and mudras of Hinduism—function as powerful carriers of meaning that bridge the human and the divine, uniting communities in shared belief while fostering individual spiritual reflection. In visual arts, sacred symbols are conveyed through colors, forms, motifs, and architectural patterns, while in performing arts, they are embodied through gestures, rituals, music, and dance, transforming artistic acts into profound religious experiences. Though each culture develops unique symbolic vocabularies, a universality of sacred imagery reveals shared archetypes and cross-cultural resonances. In modern contexts, these symbols continue to inspire reinterpretation and innovation, highlighting the enduring role of sacred arts in shaping faith, identity, and transcendence.
References
Morgan, D. (2005). The sacred gaze: Religious visual culture in theory and practice. Univ of California Press.
Dyrness, W. A. (2001). Visual faith: Art, theology, and worship in dialogue. Baker Academic.
Harries, K. (2011). Art and the Sacred. In Seminar notes (New Haven: Yale University, 2010). https://bpb-us-w2. wpmucdn. com/campuspress. yale. edu/dist/8/1250/files/2012/09/Artand-the-Sacred-reduced-2e8r309. pdf.
Morgan, D. (2012). The embodied eye: Religious visual culture and the social life of feeling. Univ of California Press.
Langer, S. K. (2009). Philosophy in a new key: A study in the symbolism of reason, rite, and art. Harvard University Press.
Viladesau, R. (2000). Theology and the arts: Encountering God through music, art, and rhetoric. Paulist Press.
Jensen, R. (2010). Living Water: Images, symbols, and settings of early Christian baptism (Vol. 105). Brill.
Reichard, G. A. (2012). Navaho religion: a study of symbolism. Princeton University Press.
Downloads
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2013 International Journal of Engineering, Science and Humanities

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.