Passion for Seeing cover

Paper 1-930337-06-X
112 pages

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A Passion for Seeing
Confessions of an Image-maker

Writings and drawings by Frederick Franck
Introduction by David Appelbaum, editor of Parabola magazine

A Passion for Seeing gathers a rare feast of stories, impressions, and observations from a writer and artist known for his keen honesty, great heart, and passionate pursuit of the question: what does it mean to be human? Carefully chosen excerpts from many of his books and over a dozen new drawings are among the treasures included. In A Passion for Seeing, Frederick Franck establishes himself as a prime witness to the twentieth century. Read in this anthology the best of Franck's observations. From the onset of World War Two and his work with Dr. Albert Schweitzer to private audiences with Pope John XXIII and the Dalai Lama, from the streets of New York City to the ancient temples of Japan, follow his art and thought as they illuminate our world.

 

Praise for Frederick Franck:

"Franck...looks deep into the human heart and what he finds there is the priceless treasure of the sacred reality: a discovery and message so crucial to contemporary humanity." --Georg Feuerstein, author of The Yoga Tradition

"Dialogues with the spiritual masters of the East show us the possibility of a universal ecumenism that is rarely experienced." --Matthew Fox, author of Original Blessing

"For the pilgrim in each of us who would journey into Eastern or Western spiritual traditions to chart a path in this troubled time...." --Joanna Macy, author of World as Lover, World as Self

"He simply sees things most people do not...." --Harvey Cox, author of The Secular City

 

Frederick Franck's sculpture and artwork are in the permanent collections of The Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum, the Tokyo National Museum, and other public and private collections. He is the author of over thirty books, including The Zen of Seeing (Random House), and the award-winning Pacem in Terris: A Love Story (Codhill), as well as an editor of What Does it Mean to be Human (St. Martin's Press), recently translated into Spanish and Chinese. He was recently honored with the World Citizenship Award by the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, and at over ninety years of age, he continues to be actively engaged in art, writing and the search for meaning in this world.