FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Darker
Stars—The Roots of Steampunk Art
January
26 – February 25, 2012
The whole idea of Steampunk is revisionist..... its process is to look back on
certain threads of history and reweave them into the present and future. There
are no rules. A literary precedent has been set with Edgar Allan Poe and Jules
Verne up through Lovecraft and Sterling but as that literary history has darkened
and brought in more decadent elements it is common now to include J.K. Huysmans
and his ilk for their embrace of the phantasmal and of artifice as weapons against
bourgeois complacency. Though there is a Steampunk or Steamgoth literary lineage
the same isn't true of its Art. There have indeed been Contemporary Steampunk
art exhibitions but none working back through history. As I mentioned, there are
no rules and so, with this exhibition and several to follow, Cavin-Morris Gallery
is going to explore alternative revisionism and establish some Old Masters in the
historical lineage of what has become known as Steampunk Art.
Despite the twin sisters of poverty or depression, it was a
hand-me-down from Victorian times to feel that, with the right machine, the
right invention, the right harnessing of one of Nature’s energies (usually
having to do with electromagnetism or electricity or steam), one could be rich
and a world savior to boot. The Inventor was a god. The role models were people like Thomas
Edison and Nicholas Tesla. Inventing could push the outer limits of
individual opportunity. One could be rich, famous, and in control of
one’s destiny. It is this
feeling of do it yourself unlimited opportunity that the Steampunk and
Steamgoth communities draw upon.
But the mind does not automatically draw within the
lines. The fantasy world Jules Verne imagined was shared by
others. Charles Dellschau’s Flying Machines were not a literary
device. They represented the hopes and dreams of someone who completely
believed in their existence. Dellschau becomes the center of this
exhibition because of his fixation on airships and flying, he is the epitome of
what Steampunk design is all about. But he wasn’t looking backward.
He was looking into his present and forward.
Melvin Edward Nelson was another for whom the magazine, Popular Mechanics, was a Bible. For
him the machine had a different spin and fed a visionary hunger. He was
physically in tune with astral geology and the ability of the human mind to
receive cosmic information--the very voices of planets being born, of the
healing energy of interplanetary light emanations. He took Dellschau out
further from the skyways of earth into the planetary airways. He designed
and built machines that would harness universal energy; the mind and body would
fuse and see first hand the awesome births and deaths of planets and stars and
use this experience for healing, and he would be the inventor who made it
possible.
Emery Blagdon grew up with the same belief of the inventor as God.
If properly tuned and psychically aimed, a machine could prevent disease or
heal the ill. He knew he was intuitive. He could invent and build
the machines but he couldn’t necessarily explain how they worked. That
was the work for scientists. Meanwhile he could channel energy through the
Healing Machines and put them to work on an earth that was suffering. Although
his goal was a positive one, it was still infused with poignancy in his
recognition of the dark side of Nature and Her legacy of Disease and
Death. Electromagnetism could be recycled through the machines to counter
these curses.
The Victorian times were also an era of exploration of the occult;
of mediums and visionary voyages, of the embrace of mental depression as a
route of survival and a sign of creative intensity. In A Rebours,
by Joris-Karl Huysmans, the main character, Jean Des Esseintes, builds a
mechanical fish to float in a false sea to replace Nature’s more risky
version. Some in the Victorian world, in opposition to bourgeois
complacency, held a need for individual freedom of expression close to anarchy.
Religion was also potentially a path to darker visionary worlds. In
Henry Darger’s struggle with the blood, and complete immersion demanded by
Catholicism, he used Prussian soldiers and huge explosions as forces that both
protected and threatened the world. War became the ultimate world of
adulthood, both attractive and terrifying. Darger’s vision is a bridge to
the Goth viewpoint in its dance on the edge of cruelty.
If there ever is a revisionist timeline of Steampunk and
Steamgoth Art then the names Charles Dellschau, Melvin Edward Nelson, Emery
Blagdon, and Henry Darger, certainly should be recorded as some of the natural
self-taught progenitors.
This first exhibition examines artists who are self-taught and for
whom there is little differentiation between their lives and their artwork. The
art itself was really life process. The second show in this series will present
works by both trained and untrained artists dealing with the same subject
matter.
Also shown will be Zbynek Semerak, Leos Wertheimer, and Sandra
Sheehy.
For further information, please contact Shari Cavin, Mimi Kano, or
Randall Morris at 212 226-3768, or e: info@Cavinmorris.com.
1 comments:
Awesome stuff!
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