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OPENING OF THE THIRD EYE

Natsumi Goldfish, Alexis Palmer Karl,

Daniel Goncalves, Barry William Hale

October 3 - 7 2018 The Living Gallery NYC - Opening of the Third Eye reception

with performance by Natsumi Goldfish October 4, 6 - 10pm

 

"We accept so many things that come through the media; we get used to them, however vigilant we are. But for any creative art, you have to remain 110% conscious, and in a world that's losing consciousness, that's getting harder." Keith Jarrett

 

Stephen Romano Gallery is please to announce a four person exhibition of the works of Natsumi Goldfish, Alexis Palmer Karl, Daniel Goncalves and Barry William Hale at the Living Gallery Outpost on the Lower East side in New York City. The exhibition's theme will be further asserted with the inclusion of historical and vernacular images and objects including works by Jacob Bohme, Karl Kohl, Burt Shonberg, Jack Edwards, Darcilio Lima, Wolfgang Grasse, William Mortensen, spirit photography, as well as unknown artists.

The premise of the exhibition is to unite four artists from different corners of the world, America, Japan, Australia and Portugal, who's thread of continuity is to make art that achieves for the artist and consequently for the viewer an enriched state of consciousness, or the opening of the third eye, the locus of occult power and wisdom in the forehead of a deity, especially the god Shiva. Each of these artists, as well as the included peripheral material, aspires to induce, through the medium of visual art, a state of affirmation to the seeker of a cosmic order that perpetuates a higher sense of the spiritual (or meta-physical) connectedness amongst us.

The Living Gallery Outpost is located at 246 East 4th Street New York NY 10009.

Exhibition hours are Wednesday October 3, 4 - 8pm, Thursday October 4, 2 - 10pm, Friday 5 - Sunday 7, 1 - 8 pm or by appointment at 646 709 4725.

For further information and visuals please contact Stephen Romano at romanostephen@gmail.com

"When we quit thinking primarily about ourselves and our own self-preservation, we undergo a truly heroic transformation of consciousness." Joseph Campbell

 

"I give the name of cosmic sense to the more or less confused affinity that binds us psychologically to the All which envelops us. The existence of this feeling is indubitable, and apparently as old as the beginning of thought... The cosmic sense must have been born as soon as man found himself facing the forest, the sea and the stars." Teilhard de Chardin "The Phenomenon of Man" 1959

 

Natsumi Goldfish

Natsumi Goldfish is a contemporary Japanese artist based in New York City. Natsumi Goldfish grew up in the fringe of Tokyo, a place of between of all, where nature and urban culture, and many different elements coexisted. The environment inspired and educated her to believe in pluralism, or something close to the idea of being between and both, which is an important part to understand her creation. In 2011 she moved to the United States. In 2013, she received her B. A. in Art from Tyler School of Art. Natsumi Goldfish primary works with oil painting. Her creation is based on her interest in conscious and unconscious human behaviors seen in history as well as in her ordinary life.

 

 

 

"I hope it is true that a man can die and yet not only live in others but give them life,

and not only life, but that great consciousness of life." Jack Kerouac

 

Alexis Palmer Karl

Alexis Palmer Karl is a multidisciplinary artist, professor at Pratt Institute and School of Visual Arts, and scholar and lecturer on magic and ritualism in art, fashion and fragrance. She has lectured extensively on ritualistic shamanic practices and folkloric magic, and the relevance of ritual within artistic culture at both the Metropolitan Museum and The Morbid Anatomy Museum, where she was the house perfumer and an exhibiting artist.

Karl’s art work is concerned with a reinterpretation of magical objects and the illustration of oracular magic through sculpture, film, gothic dark ambient music, ritual fragrance, and large scale portraits of witches. Her upcoming solo exhibition at Pratt Institute, “The Ecstasy of Forbidden Daylight”, is based on studies of 18th century accounts of witchcraft trials from her research in the UK, and a series of her lectures at The Morbid Anatomy museum, and serves to bring the archetype of the Witch into the modern era.

 

 

"The key to growth is the introduction of higher dimensions of consciousness into our awareness." Lao Tzu

 

Daniel Gonçalves

Daniel Gonçalves is a self-taught draughtsman and painter from Porto (b.1977) with a deep genuine creative streak. This gift, combined with a hyperactive personality, led him from an early age to understand the world and to relate to it through his artistic expression, having participated in the last decade in multiple collective exhibitions held in Porto.

In the course of his experimentations searching for a personal style, regardless of the multiplicity of techniques, he has always revealed a particular attention for the games of shapes and colors. Lately presents an obsessive black-and-white, materialized in geometric abstract drawings, though spotted by organic elements: a repetitive minimal aesthetic, more circular than linear.

 

"As we grow in our consciousness, there will be more compassion and more love, and then the barriers between people, between religions, between nations will begin to fall. Yes, we have to beat down the separateness." Ram Dass

 

Barry William Hale

Barry William Hale is a Sydney based artist whose work over the past 20 years has included painting, drawing, installation, video, sound and performance. A feature of the Adelaide Biennale and Sydney Biennale, he is considered one of the key exponents of outsider and esoteric art in the region, specifically creating work which responds to concepts of western spirituality, philosophy and ritual. His writing and artwork have been published internationally across a range of academic and cultural publications, and his artwork was a central component of the national touring exhibition: Windows to the Sacred.

“My work is a synthesis of Art and Magick, and the residue of my esoteric endeavors. It is essential for me to forge a magical link to the metaphysical subject matter. There is great power in the things people are afraid of. The Devil is the name some new regime gives to the God[s] of those whom they oppress. These repressed forces become the locus of forbidden power imprisoned by the walls of taboo. For me, these Crowned Anarchies become the agencies of liberation. My work is Gnostic in the sense that it gives primacy to direct experience with the divine. In the spirit of the Rebellious Promethean spark of the Luciferian fire." - Barry William Hale

“Better to reign in hell than serve in heav’n” Paradise Lost — John Milton

Other complimentary works in the exhibition include:

 

 

Jacob Bohme (1575 - 1624) "The Aurora", 1674, ink on paper.

Burt Shonberg (1933 - 1977) Untitled, 1965, Oil on canvas. The artist made this work under the influence of peyote.

 

 

 

 

Unknown photographer, "Devotee of a Witchcraft Cult in Brazil", 1956, Silver print.

Olga Fröbe-Kapteyn (1881 – 1962) Untitled, circa 1930, ink on board.

Eddie Adams (1933 - 2004) "Disciples of Rasjneesh Chandra Mohan (Osho)" 1979, AP photo, Silver print

Unknown Artist (signature illegible) Unknown artist (signature illegible)

The Demon Queen Rangda, circa 1940's, Bali. Oil on canvas.

Eugène le Poitevin (1806 - 1870) "Diableries Erotiques", 1832, lithograph.

Darcilio Lima (1944 - 1991) "The Magi", circa 1975, lithograph

Unknown photographer "Native Tibetan Devil Dancers with Masks, Lamas" 1910, postcard.

A. Fiorello (dates unknown) "Because The Earth Is One Organism" circa 1960's, painted plaster.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Unknown photographer, Original Lobby Card for the film "She Demons", 1958, Silver print.

Excerpt from Johannes Faust "Magia Naturalis" published 1849

"The knowledge of the Son teaches me N. The love of the Holy Spirit + Ghost, enlighten me N."

Wolfgang Grasse (1930 - 2008) "Mystik Des Daseins", circa 1959, Ink and acrylic on paper.

Jack Edwards (dates Unknown) "Mediums of Camp Silver Belle" circa 1940's, silver print.

William Mortensen (1897 - 1965) "Sappho", circa 1926, photograph.

William Mortensen (1897 - 1965) "Meditation", circa 1926, photograph.

 

 

for further informtion and visuals, please contact Stephen Romano at romanostephen@gmail.com