Images of self-transformation : occult and mystical influences in Australian art, 1890s-1950s
thesis
posted on 2017-02-08, 04:09authored bySarmiala-Berger, Kirsti
The aim of this thesis is to show that the mystico-occult was a crucial influencing factor
in Australian art between the 1890s and 1950s. To this end, an outline of four esoteric
movements, Spiritualism, Theosophy, witchcraft and the Golden Dawn, is presented,
together with a discussion of the extent of their presence in Australia. The mysticooccult,
defined as the spiritual transformation of consciousness, is understood from the
point of view of a single religio-philosophic system, whose basic axioms are
fundamental to the esoteric tradition as a whole. These axioms include the existence of a
transcendent, and hence a more perfect reality, the correspondence of the transcendent
and the perceptual, the divine origin of humankind, and the soul's ambition to return to
its primal origins. These axioms are compared with certain psychological (Freudian and
Jungian) principles, positing the esoteric as a form of ancient psychologism.
The ideas, personal histories, socio-cultural contexts, and selected works of four
Australian artists- Charles Douglas Richardson, Christian Waller, Roy de Maistre and
Rosaleen Norton - are discussed with a view to determining the extent of their
involvement with esoteric ideas. It is found that each of these artists was decisively
influenced by the mystico-occult: Richardson's interest in Spiritualism resulted in a
number of allegories with Spiritualist subject matter; Waller's work is particularly
informed by Theosophical and Golden Dawn doctrines; Roy de Maistre's reading of
Theosophical/ Anthroposophical literature culminated in the 1919 colour music
paintings; and Rosaleen Norton's oeuvre had wide esoteric antecedents in which the
beliefs and practices of witchcraft and the Golden Dawn played a prominent role.
Like the fin de siecle Symbolists, these four Australians saw art as a medium for the
revelation of transcendent truths, and an instrument in the process of self-transformation.
Their subject matter is therefore often discernibly esoteric, ranging from Norton's visions
of the transcendent realms to Waller's depiction, in The Great Breath, of spiritual
regeneration through the evolution of the human soul. The presentment of esoteric,
symbolic contents in their works is seen to be in keeping with the Symbolist! modernist
theory which sanctioned the deliberate manipulation of the visual sign for spiritual ends.
By concentrating on pictorial properties as the carriers of esoteric meaning, Richardson,
Waller, de Maistre and Norton avoided descriptive, rhetorical ends. By circumventing the ordinary, rational denotations of representational fonns, they emphasized the
expressive, emotive contents of their works. Through this theoretical programme, the
symbolic images of these artists became talismans with the power to effect a
transformation of consciousness: in contemplating the symbolic meanings of their
images the viewer could, through correspondences, gradually unite herself with her
primal origins.
Presented, in this thesis, are a number of previously undiscovered documentary
associations, such as the influence of Beatrice Irwin's New Science of Colour on Roy de
Maistre's theories of colour and form. Connections such as these serve to reinforce the
extension of previously established iconological discourse into the realm of the esoteric.
In researching the mystico-occult component in Australian art, it is intended to link the
statements concerning the esoteric, to the body of already existing art-historical writings.