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Helena P. Blavatsky considered the art of her time as being already in deep decline. In 1891 she wrote of "the gradual decadence of true art, as if art could exist without imagination, fancy and a just appreciation of the beautiful in Nature, or without poetry and high religious, hence metaphysical aspirations!" (Collected Writings 13:180). She herself had an educated talent for drawing, but no pretensions as an artist. Professional artists among the early Theosophists included the engraver Albert Rawson, the painter Isabelle de Steiger, and Hermann Schmiechen, who painted iconic portraits of Koot Hoomi, Morya, and Blavatsky.
George Russell, the Irish poet and painter known as "AE" joined the Esoteric Section in 1890. His work belongs within the Celtic Revival movement, with its awareness of mythology and the spiritual world, but with the distinction that he was a clairvoyant who painted spiritual beings that he had seen, not merely imagined.
Similarly, the Czech painter Frantisek Kupka was a spiritualist medium in Prague and Vienna before coming to Paris in 1896 and mixing with Theosophists and occultists. Kupka's work combines the results of his own visions with geometrical symbolism and allusions to esoteric philosophy.
Charles W. Leadbeater, while clairvoyant, was not a painter, but employed artists to reproduce his visions of the auras and thought forms of the human being and of astral forms made by music. These were published in Man: Visible and Invisible, illustrated by Count Maurice Prozor and Gertrude Spink, and in Thought Forms, illustrated by John Varley and others. So also Geoffrey Hodson’s book on devas, The Kingdom of the Gods, was illustrated by Ethelwynne M. Quail.
The Symbolist movement in painting, which arose in France, Belgium, and the Netherlands around 1890, was not a direct result of Theosophy, but was a phenomenon that could only have arisen at the same time and in the same milieu. It was certainly theosophical in the general sense of the term. The Symbolists aimed at the re-spiritualization of art, rejecting both academic realism and the everyday subject matter of the Impressionists. Most of them, like the Theosophists, were syncretic in their sources. Their inspiration came variously from Christian mysticism (for example, some of the paintings of Maurice Denis and Thorn Prikker), Oriental mythology (Paul Gauguin and Paul Ranson), the Rosicrucian revival of Josephin Peladan (Jean Delville, Fernand Khnopff, Carlos Schwabe, and Jan Toorop), and sacred geometry (Charles Filger and Paul Serusier).
Roerich, who had belonged to the Theosophical Society in prerevolutionary Russia, was a prolific painter of mythological scenes and landscapes in an easily recognizable style. His earlier work drew on Russian folklore and the iconic tradition of Orthodox Christianity. Later he painted a series of the founders of all the world's religions. During and after his expedition to the Himalayas (1925-8), he treated Mahayana Buddhist subjects, especially concerning the hidden realm of Shambhala, known to Theosophists through Blavatsky's references to it (see Collected Writings, cumulative index). Roerich, whose wife Helena claimed to act as a channel for the Master Morya, is probably the most thoroughly Theosophical of twentieth-century painters, although not as highly regarded artistically as some others.
Although there is little specifically "Theosophical art" as such, the impulse that gave rise to the Theosophical movement found ample resonance among painters. It led them, in their very disparate ways to produce a visual commentary on the great themes of Theosophy: the inner truth and symbolic richness of all religions and the boundless universe that the human being is destined to explore. Tags: |
| Last Updated ( Friday, 08 July 2011 20:16 ) |
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