An academic background in Fine Art and History of Art led to Jonathan Koestle-Cate's early interest in the history of modern and contemporary art and the church. His writing on this subject first appeared in a collection of essays published in 2003 called 'Painting, Sculpture and the Spiritual Dimension', edited by Brandon Taylor and Stephen Newton. Some years later, the theme of contemporary art in and for the church formed the basis of his PhD, completed in 2012 at Goldsmiths College. The process of this research allowed him to develop ideas cultivated over a decade of observing and reviewing church-based projects, and led to several publishing and lecturing opportunities. In 2013 Koestle-Cate joined the editorial board of Art and Christianity, to which he has been a regular contributor for some years. In the same year he was invited to become a trustee for Art and Sacred Places, an organisation committed to sponsoring contemporary art projects in sacred sites. He is an Associate Lecturer at Goldsmiths College, where he teaches Art History, Cultural Theory and an Introduction to Western Thought.
'This is a genuinely ground-breaking book. Closely argued, carefully researched, and intellectually ambitious, it examines precisely how today's often problematic relationship between the Christian churches and the visual arts is playing out in both theory and practice. Cate's generous selection of case studies, ranging widely in denomination, location and aesthetic genre, and often superbly illustrated, is an impressive art-historical monograph in itself. When set, as here, within a broader conceptual framework that is itself both philosophically accessible and theologically sensate, it will surely do much to reinvigorate and re-shape the current and future mind-sets of churchmen and artists alike.' Graham Howes ,Trinity Hall, Cambridge, UK