Amber Salladin to Return to Imagination Redeemed 2020

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The Anselm Society is pleased to announce that Amber Salladin has joined the cast assembling to speak at Imagination Redeemed 2020 on April 24-25. This will mark Salladin’s second straight year at the event.

Salladin, Assistant Conductor of the Young People’s Chorus of New York City, is the principal conductor of the YPC community chorus at the Goddard Riverside Community Center on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, as well as a conductor in YPC’s School Choruses program in New York City schools. A native of Southern California, Amber holds a Bachelor of Music Education degree from Wheaton College (IL) as well as a Master’s degree in choral conducting from the University of Southern California. She lived overseas for 12 years, working as a conductor, accompanist, arranger, music teacher, singer and church musician in both Vancouver, Canada, and London, England. Amber is also the music director of Emmanuel Anglican Church in New York City’s West Village, as well as the principal pianist of the New York Session Symphony.


About Imagination Redeemed

We love the great stories from our books and movies. Why can’t we encounter God with the same air of wonder?

Imagination Redeemed is a gathering of people who long for God’s mysteries to be illuminated more clearly on the stage of our world; to find His handiwork everywhere; and to see His people filled will the kind of stories, songs, and ideas that awaken them to their parts in the Great Drama.

In the fourth year of the flagship event of the Anselm Society, the two-day conference will delve into the most beloved works of literature, music, film, and other art forms—from Narnia to Asgard, from the Beatles to Beethoven—and equip us with the lost tools to bring their magic into our daily faith.

Learn more .

About the Anselm Society

I thought I was the only one who felt this way about books…music…art…that they could teach us something profound about the Maker who gave us this deep longing for beauty in the first place.

No, you’re not the only one.

And in past eras, you likely would have known this because the Christian community--the church--was where all the best art a culture had on offer could be found.

Sadly, modern American Christianity isn’t where most people with thirsty imaginations typically turn.

The Anselm Society exists to change that. Our dream is the reunification of the church and the arts.

A renaissance of the Christian imagination. Learn more.