Presented by MONASH UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF ART MEDIA KIT Believe not every spirit, but try the spirits 21 April - 27 June 2015 Opening function: Wednesday 22 April 2015, 6-8pm Guest curators: Lars Bang Larsen and Marco Pasi Georgiana Houghton (UK), Yuri Ancarani (IT), Jan Bäcklund (DK), Kathy Barry (NZ), Belle Bassin (AU), Vincent Ceraudo (FR), Mikala Dwyer (AU), Max Ernst (DE), Madame Favre (FR), Chiara Fumai (IT), Diena Georgetti (AU), Madge Gill (UK), Tamar Guimarães (BR) & Kasper Akhøj (DK), Susan Hiller (US), Susan Jacobs (AU), Jess Johnson (NZ), Kristine Kemp (DK), Joachim Koester (DK), David Lamelas (ARG), Dane Mitchell (NZ), Matt Mullican (US), Olivia Plender (UK), Lea Porsager (DK) Laurent Schmid (SU), Georgina Starr (UK) and Dorothea Tanning (US) The major group exhibition Believe not every spirit, but try the spirits takes as its departure point the art of forgotten Victorian-era Spiritualist Georgiana Houghton (1814-1884), and features contemporary and historical painting, sculpture, video and photography that both explore and adopt Spiritualist practices and methodologies. Rarely seen outside a Spiritualist context since 1871, Houghton’s 25 abstract watercolours from the Victorian Spiritualist Union collection were produced as part of her Spiritualist practice, which saw Houghton use drawing as a way to channel communication with spiritual entities. The works were brought to Australia for an exhibition in 1910, during a period in which Spiritualism was especially popular. The Victorian Spiritualist Union is the longest continuously operating Spiritualist organisation in the world and counts amongst its many distinguished patrons Australia’s second Prime Minister Alfred Deakin, who was the organisation’s President before devoting himself to politics. Believe not every spirit affords an opportunity to reflect on the influential role of the Spiritualist movement in Australian history. Charlotte Day, Director, MUMA comments, ‘A unique amalgamation of artist, Spiritualist and medium, the fascinating and unexpected story of Houghton has generated international interest from curators and writers who see her work as representing an abandonment of figurative form that anticipates the development of modern abstraction by artists such as Kandinsky or Malevich by several decades.’ Marco Pasi, who has been researching the life and work of Houghton for several years, was invited along with Lars Bang Larsen to curate the inaugural exhibition of MUMA’s new biennial program collaborating with international curators. Pasi adds of Houghton’s work, ‘In many respects nineteenthcentury Spiritualism has been a lost continent for a long time. Recent research however has begun to show how important this movement has been from a cultural and social point of view. Art is perhaps the one aspect of Spiritualism that has attracted least attention from historians. Houghton’s watercolours emerge from this lost continent as alien, impossible objects, which on the one hand oblige us to rethink the relationship between artistic creativity and alternative spirituality, and on the other open the door to new interpretations in the history of modern art’. At a time when few opportunities were present for women to explore creative practices, Houghton’s work draws attention to the role of women within society by creating an alternative space through ritual. The perceived irrationality of Spiritualism has in the past been used as an excuse to systematically belittle the importance of Houghton (and other female artists such as Hilma af Klint) within a history of abstract art. Houghton’s strange mediations between individual self and the collective otherworld foreground a feminist investigation that complicates common tropes of hysteria and feminine theological excess as dangerous or disturbed. Ground Floor, Building F Monash University, Caulfield Campus 900 Dandenong Road Caulfield East VIC 3145 Australia Houghton’s seemingly frenetic, yet highly deliberate, and beautiful watercolours accept as legitimate that which lies beyond the bounds of conventional experience, and offers a fascinating context for an array of contemporary artists who are interested in the spaces between dream, after life and living reality. Artists such as Joachim Koester, Matt Mullican and Jess Johnson absorb both shared cultural and personal memories through the aesthetic of ritual to interrogate notions of the world beyond. Lars Bang Larsen adds, ‘The paranormal has always tapped into our emotions, hopes and fears through its quasi-erotic heightening of the senses. Since the turn of the millennium, artists—such as those in Believe not every spirit—have increasingly turned to it to develop a critique of contemporary experience. They explore marginalised Spiritualist practices and imaginaries, utilising them to respond to an elusive global regime of continuous war, religious fundamentalisms, invisible transmissions of information, and ghostly operations of finance and control. Such an artistic approach emphasizes Spiritualism’s historical defiance of institutionalized forms of art, religion and politics. Then and now, it is a way of insisting on the necessity to imagine and intuit otherness—other forms of being, aesthetic revolt by fragile means, inhabiting ambiguous states.’ MEDIA For all media enquiries please contact Kelly Fliedner [email protected] | +61 418 308 059 www.monash.edu.au/muma Telephone +61 3 9905 4217 [email protected] Georgiana Houghton The Portrait of the Lord Jesus Christ 1862 courtesy of the Victorian Spiritualist Union Presented by MONASH UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF ART BELIEVE NOT EVERY SPIRIT, BUT TRY THE SPIRITS: MEDIA KIT GUEST CURATORS Lars Bang Larsen is an art historian, independent curator and writer based in Copenhagen. He has curated projects at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Sala Rekalde, Bilbao; and Raven Row, London. Marco Pasi is Associate Professor in History of Hermetic Philosophy and related currents at the University of Amsterdam. His research focuses on the complex web of relations between modern Western esotericism, religion, politics and art. PUBLIC PROGRAMS Monday 20 April, 6.00-7.30pm Boiler Room lecture at The Wheeler Centre with Matt Mullican Tuesday 21 April, 12.30-1.30pm MUMA floor talk with Kathy Barry and Dr Jan Bryant, Senior Lecturer MADA Wenesday 22 April, 6pm Opening celebration with performance by Matt Mullican Wednesday 22 April, 12.30-1.30pm Lunchtime Forum Lecture with Lars Bang Larsen and Marco Pasi Venue: Monash University Caulfield, Lecture Theatre G1.04 Saturday 13 June, 2-3.30pm Spectral Stories: A Melbourne Spiritualist’s carte-de-visite album Dr Martyn Jolly, Head of Photography and Media Arts, Australian National University georgiana houghton Born in the Canary Islands in 1814, Houghton spent most of her life in London working as an artist and a Spiritualist medium. In her youth, Houghton trained as a painter but she gave up in 1851 following the death of her younger sister. In 1859, still in mourning for her sister, Houghton became attracted to Spiritualism, and especially to the idea that the spirit survives after the death of the body and can communicate with the living through a human medium. In 1861 Houghton became a drawing medium. First using pencils and then switching to watercolours, she created automatic or spirit drawings. While in a trance, her hand moved involuntarily, supposedly channelling ideas from the dead and expressing them in visual forms. Her spirit guides were initially other artists and later said to be high spirits such as archangels. Houghton and other Spiritualists believed that these spirit guides provided the content of the drawings, while Houghton herself was responsible for their style. There are detailed explanations for each drawing on their reverse side. These elaborate descriptions provide a key to the symbolism in the drawing, clarifying the message of each work and naming the spirit who acted as Houghton’s guide in the creative process. At MUMA, a unique display system will be installed, allowing both sides of each watercolour to be on view. In 1871 Houghton self-funded an exhibition at the New British Gallery on Old Bond Street, London. Although received well by the British Spiritualist clergy and some artists, most contemporary audience members were baffled by her dense symbolism and new abstract aesthetic. The exhibition was a financial disaster, as Houghton only sold one of the 155 works on display. However Houghton's work has survived and can usually be found (save, the occasion of this exhibition) on the walls of the active Victorian Spiritualist Union, located in Melbourne's CBD. from top: The Tenderness of the Lord 1862 The Tenderness of the Lord 1862 (reverse) The Sheltering Wing of the Most High 1862 The Sheltering Wing of the Most High 1862 (reverse) all images courtesy of the Victorian Spiritualist Union Presented by MONASH UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF ART BELIEVE NOT EVERY SPIRIT, BUT TRY THE SPIRITS: MEDIA KIT Matt Mullican (USA) For the opening celebration of Believe not every spirit, Matt Mullican will give a performance while in a state of hypnosis. Since the 1970s Mullican has been experimenting with hypnosis to create art that both examines his subconscious, and functions as a strategy for breaking from the patterns of everyday life. Working under these hypnotically induced intoxications or psychoses, Mullican becomes his alter ego, what he refers to as that person—an ageless, genderless being that inhabits his physical body. That person’s reality is documented through a series of performances wherein he draws, counts, and writes with ink on large sheets of easel paper. Joachim koester (DK) Joachim Koester uses as vehicles various events, characters and places from the past, to build new subjective histories of magic, initiation rituals and hallucinatory experiences. Of Spirits and Empty Spaces (2012) is a 16mm film about the American spiritualist and activist John Murray Spear who, along with his congregates at the The Domain, a settlement within the borders of rural New York and Pennsylvania in 1861, sought the designs for a new sewing machine through trance and movement. At the time, Elias Howe, American inventor and sewing machine pioneer had already developed a sewing machine with several strong patents. Spear and his group intended to circumnavigate Howe's legally protected designs in order to create a new and cheaper machine that would be accessible to ordinary people. Chiara Fumai (IT) The performance practice of Italian artist Chiara Fumai belongs to a tradition of female mediums—she sees herself as being 'spoken to' by different controversial entities, which she then freely (mis)interprets and combines into new stories to question their symbolic meaning and representation in the mind of the viewer. Dealing with radical feminism, media culture, language and repression, her starting point is performance, which later transforms into . installations, videos and collages. Tamar Guimarães (BRZ) & Kasper AkhOj (DK) ˇ Tamar Guimarães and Kasper Akhøj's film entitled Captain Gervasio's Family premiered at the 55th Venice Biennale's main exhibition, The Encyclopedic Palace, in 2013. This black and white silent film is a portrait of a Spiritualist community in Palmelo, Brazil, where half of the inhabitants are believed to be psychic mediums. The Spiritualists of this small town practice what is known as ‘the magnetic chain’, a legacy from the German physician Franz Mesmer, the founder of Spiritualism Allan Kardec, and the French botanist François Deleuze. The film focuses on a map drawn by a Spiritualist woman which charts twenty astral cities hovering above Brazil that are supposed to represent a more splendid vision of those found on earth—a utopia of continuous progress and urbanisation. ˇ from top: Matt Mullican Self-induced hypnosis 2007 performance at TATE, London courtesy of the artist Joachim Koester Of Spirits and Empty Spaces 2012 16mm film still courtesy Galleri Nicolai Wallner Chiara Fumai The Invisible Woman 2012 drawing and collage courtesy of the artist and Apalazzo Gallery Tamar Guimarães and Kasper Akhøj Captain Gervasio's Family 2013 16mm film converted to video courtesy of the artists
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