At Fitchburg Art Museum, revisiting Spiritualism and finding new pathways to the dead – The Boston Globe

Massachusetts was a Spiritualist bastion. The Banner of Light newspaper, started in Boston in the 1850s, was published for 50 years. A Spiritualist camp was incorporated in the village of Lake Pleasant, in Montague, in 1879. The National Spiritual Alliance is still headquartered there. Spiritualists were abolitionists and suffragists.

Starting in the 1920s, magician Harry Houdini did everything in his power to debunk Spiritualism. Knowing how tricks worked, he would attend seances in disguise, point a flashlight at deceptions being practiced, and reportedly cry out, I am Houdini! And you are a fraud!

But consider the yearning that drove Spiritualisms believers. In the 19th century, more children died young, more mothers died in childbirth, and more people died of disease and infection. The Civil War saw 750,000 dead.

A search for solace was thrust upon Americans. Spiritualism thrived, and not all its practitioners were kooks and shysters. They longed for meaning. In After Spiritualism curator Lisa Crossman finds striking parallels between then and now.

A section focused on history pointedly calls back to the Civil War. Brian Kneps interactive video installation, Deep Wounds, was originally made for Harvard Universitys Memorial Hall, where the names of Union soldier alumni are inscribed on the walls.

But what of Harvards Confederate dead? Knep evokes them with video tiles on the floor. Step on them and much is made visible: A mans relationships, the year he graduated, and the battle he fell in. But, quite explicitly, not his name. More than 150 years after the most divisive era in American history, Knep points out, silence and recrimination remain.

In the series Within Our Gates: Site and Memory in the American Landscape, painter Keith Morris Washington likewise probes Americas unhealed wounds. For more than 20 years, he has visited the sites of lynchings and painted them as he saw them benign, shimmering landscape or suburban serenity. Beside each painting, he places text from a news report about the murder. He leaves out dates, so the horrors seem ongoing despite appealing paintings in which roiling, loose gestures stir the air.

One addresses the death of an unknown black man accused of attacking an aged white woman, in Maryland, according to the news article. Another visits the housing development tract where Matthew Shepard was murdered for being gay in 1998 in Laramie, Wyo. Gutting to read, these stories raise specters of present-day mob violence and hate crimes. Does the arc of the moral universe bend toward justice? Or does it circle back to fear and loathing?

These works arent merely about loss. Theyre about a society that spurs violence and resists resolution. They are very much about 2020.

Innovations in technology make another rhyme with the past. Scamming Spiritualists capitalized on the magic of photography, conjuring spirits with double exposures. Other so-called spirit photographs had white smudges (darkroom tricks or the result of faulty cameras) that were labeled as ectoplasm a gooey substance mediums were said to emanate during seances.

Ectoplasm, during the stuffy Victorian Era, had a not-so-veiled association to sexuality. Arising in the wake of the Age of Enlightenments valuing of reason and science, Spiritualism addressed in direct and sidelong ways what reason could not satisfy: mortality, longing, sensuality, and intuition.

Even technology. It moves faster than we do and shakes up our perceptions of ourselves and the world. Today, social media is hardly a breeding ground for reason. Maria Molteni and Lacey Prpi Hedtke did a performance at the Boston Center for the Arts, inviting visitors to pose for spirit photos with homemade ectoplasmic goop, collected in a comical and informative book on view here, Ectoplasm Selfies: DIY Ritual in the Age of Social Mediums.

Many works address the shows central theme of bereavement and the question of life after death. Imna Arroyos installation Ancestors of the Passage invites visitors to pin notes to an altar. Its a simple installation: A table covered in white, a bowl of slips of paper. The action is what matters; the momentary sense of communion with a lost loved one.

Society and common sense fall away when we touch into our own tender places of loss. Spiritualism suggests that relationships do not harden into amber after a loved one dies. Whatever you believe about an afterlife, that is a potent tonic.

At its heart, After Spiritualism honors the yearning to connect with someone gone. Art, like religion and unlike science and reason, can do that. But the exhibition leaps to no assumptions, and it peddles no snake oil. Rooted in the context of history and society, its a two-way lens that invites viewers to understand what drives Spiritualism even as we remember our own losses.

AFTER SPIRITUALISM: Loss and Transcendence in Contemporary Art

At Fitchburg Art Museum, 185 Elm St., Fitchburg, through June 7. 978-345-4207, http://www.fitchburgartmuseum.org

Cate McQuaid can be reached at catemcquaid@gmail.com. Follow her on Twitter @cmcq.

View post:

At Fitchburg Art Museum, revisiting Spiritualism and finding new pathways to the dead - The Boston Globe

Related Posts

Comments are closed.