2020 Péladan research update

Friends who follow me on other media will be aware that this page has been quiet for a while, following a couple of years of extreme life turbulence. In early 2018 I was making good headway with the manuscript for my (horrendously overdue) book on Péladan, when family emergencies took priority. Sadly, by the end of the year I had lost my father and found my life taking unexpected directions, as I became guardian to a large authorial and educational legacy.

Despite the travails of the past year, I managed one presentation on Péladan at the as-always incredible Trans-States Conference II, at the University of Northampton. Friends of this page can enjoy that here, as part of the pre-arranged Dark Fulgurations panel with my good friends Dr Simon Magus and Dr Chris Guidice, moderated by the inimitable Prof. Wouter Hanegraaff:

I would also recommend watching this lecture by friend and colleague Dr Per Faxneld for more biographical background on Péladan, if you haven’t already familiarised yourself with it. Dr Faxneld does a great job of filling in a lot of the background, and this allowed me to tweak my paper to focus more directly on Péladan’s philosophy rather than covering the same ground. Watch this before watching mine if you are not familiar with Péladan (and because it’s a very interesting paper!)

That conference also saw the launch of the book that emerged from the immensely successful Trans-States I (2016), edited by Cavan McLaughlin and produced by Fulgur Press. I am proud to have a chapter in there based on my talk at that conference too, and am grateful to Cavan and Robert Shehu-Ansell of Fulgur for their support in producing it during a most trying year.

In other news, although there are many changes to all aspects of my academic and professional life, I am pleased to say that I have resumed progress with the book, the publisher is supportive and we have tentative dates. So watch this space; while most Péladan-related work will take place behind the scenes for a while, I hope to have more substantial progress news soon.

New Article: Making the Invisible Visible

My original English article MAKING THE INVISIBLE VISIBLE: PÉLADAN’S VISION OF ENSOULED ART  written for the Neosymbolist Salon in Madrid is online at Project AWE – an amazing initiative dedicated to to understanding & experiencing cultural icons of Western European heritage and exploring forgotten connections between Hermetic-Cabalist traditions & Art.

The Spanish version of this article was included in the exhibition catalogue for the 1st Neosymbolist Salon in 2013, and delivered as part of my lecture on the closing day of the exhibition.

Interview on Peladan with Haakan Sandell

My interview with Swedish retrogardist poet Haakan Sandell, exploring Peladan’s views of sacrality in art, feminine nature, and why Peladan was not a misogynist. The interview was conducted in the winter of 2012-13. The Swedish version is available on retrogarde.org.

1. Your unique site  peladan.net  on the philosophy of Joséphin Péladan (1858-1918), one of the organizers of french symbolism and founder of the Rose+Croix order, is under open construction. And of course more important it mirrors the fact that you are writing your Dr. thesis on Péladan. But what was your very first introduction to this rather forgotten character of the “decadent” parisian 1890s? How did this interest began? 

When I was researching possible topics for my PhD thesis, due to my own background as an artist I wanted to explore the intersection between art and esotericism, and had already concluded that I wanted to focus on the Symbolists since I have an enduring interest in the use of artistic symbolism to encapsulate and communicate esoteric concepts; particularly the notion of manifesting an ideal in visual form. I already knew of Péladan, but based on the literature available I had initially thought him an eccentric oddity. As I looked into the background of some of the Symbolist artists, his name kept coming up, and I realised that there was no in-depth study of his work available. I searched a little further and discovered that there was a major dissonance between the stereotypical impressions of him, and the quality of some of his work, and further research revealed that there was a lot more to him than met the eye – in fact he had been sorely misread by a number of his biographers. I also felt an affinity for much that he had to say, particularly his insistence on the sacrality of artistic expression and the notion of the artist-initiate. Therefore, not only was this a practically untouched subject which was an ideal research topic, but it represented an opportunity to review Péladan’s life and work from a fresh perspective, allowing it to speak for itself.

2. -Péladan´s group of artists wished for a sacred art. With your own words “art presented as…an intermediary aspect of religion between the physical and the metaphysical”. Or as you also put it “the synthesis of Matter and Ideal”. In a similiar and rather typical saying on symbolism, the Russian symbolist Akym Volynsky defines symbolism as “the fusion of the phenomenal and the divine worlds”. But more exactly, how did Péladan expect the sacred to incarnate into the material, how is art made holy? 

In his own words:

Art is man’s effort to realize the Ideal, to form and represent the supreme idea, the idea par excellence, the abstract idea, and great artists are religious, because to materialize the idea of God, the idea of an angel, the idea of the Virgin Mother, requires an incomparable psychic effort and procedure. Making the invisible visible: that is the true purpose of art and its only reason for existence.” (Péladan, ‘L’esthetique au salon de 1883,’ L’Artiste, vol. 1 (Paris : May 1883)

For Péladan, art represents the manifestation of man’s creative impulse which is in itself, according to him, the ultimate demonstration of man’s most sacred faculty. In his view, art has to have a deeper meaning – he had no respect for realistic representations but felt that art should be the act of giving form to an idea. He did not consider that art could be “made” holy; rather he believed that as long as artistic expression was engaged in a process of giving form to an ideal, then it was holy by definition. In a sense, a painting (or a poem, or a novel, or a play) could encapsulate a myth, in almost talismanic form, and in turn, that myth was a symbolic key with which to make sense of reality; through which to perceive deeper “truths” not ordinarily visible in linear history or mundane reality. So to understand why Péladan perceived symbolic art as sacred, we have to look to ideas concerning symbolic thinking and the role of myth in culture. His own books, plays, and characters, were themselves both artistic and occult ‘signs’ for esoteric meaning, drawing on several centuries of universalist esoteric thought, and the perceived power of the written word as well as the image imbued with ideals that can manifest change in the material world.

3. -When one regards Art as holy, and as Péladan also does, you tell us, as a representation of myth, how should we from his standing point think about the art work itself? I here have in mind German Idealism and Friedrich Schiller who seems to be stating that the blending of spirit and nature in Art never becomes real in a true sense, but remains “Schein”. If that is giving enough merit to the world of the senses one can question Péladans predecessor in symbolism, Stephane Mallarmé, although he definitively viewed poetry as culture- and myth-based codification, would also emphasize books and paintings as an object.

As far as Péladan was concerned, the actual artwork was seen as a vessel for the Idea that it embodies, and although an object, it still took on the nature of an icon or a talisman that was somehow made sacred because it successfully expressed in the language of the senses, an idea that until then was incomprehensible. The artwork is not the same as the Idea, but it is as close as we can get in our finite world of the senses, and therefore the symbol used to “clothe” the idea is sacred. He is very clear about this, and as a notion it reflects ancient theurgic traditions as well as earlier esoteric thinkers who considered that the embodiment of the sacred in matter was almost more significant than their celestial form, because it represented a unification of sacred and material worlds. So for Péladan, the material form was not somehow lesser than the otherworldly idea, but almost more significant because it represented a triumph of the spirit within matter.

4. -The idea of perfection of art is no longer a natural concept in contemporary art. Would the obvious Platonic or Neoplatonic influences be the explanation of the importance of perfect art, “ideal” art, to the French Symbolists of the Rose+Croix? Or how should we best understand how Péladan emphasize perfection? 

As noted in the previous question, for Péladan, artistic perfection was not a matter of technique or realistic depiction, but of the process of giving form to an ideal. He explains this as follows in his book Les Idées et les Formes: Antiquité Orientale (1907),

What is Art? Human creation. God made the universe (macrocosm), man made the temple (microcosm), from where arts emerged…. What is a monument, if not a calculation of lines and volumes for the expression of spiritual will? From the forest path and from the cavern to the cathedral, human work appears colossal. What is a figure such as the sphinx or the winged bull with a human face, if not a philosophical combination of natural motifs for the manifestation of an idea? From the cat to the sphinx, from the savage bull to the genius that guards the temple threshold, through quasi-divine operations the artist raises himself to the level of creator.

Péladan adapted Antoine Fabre d’Olivet’s (1767-1825) notion of philosophical, or allegorical history for the understanding of the history of enduring human ideas (in turn based on an older tradition of “universalist history” deriving from the Renaissance and eventually forming a current within the Counter-Enlightenment). However, rather than applying it piecemeal he states quite clearly that while it is not appropriate for historical accuracy, the notion of symbolic thinking is a necessity for aesthetic gnosis.

Péladan reached back to the art of ancient civilizations, seeking motifs with which to clothe his philosophy, and demonstrated a considerable understanding of the “true” history of these civilizations, but takes artistic license when using them in his work. He did not appear to perceive Egyptian art as a process of giving idea to form, but more of a direct representation of divine attributes that became the reality of the afterlife, something he believed to have been understood by initiates, and expressed in naturalistic imagery for the lay population. In Péladan’s view, the step from Egyptian to Chaldean art is the step from cat to sphinx, from bull to chimeric temple guardian, and the process of taking that step is what he considers the exaltation of mankind. It is theurgy in reverse; rather than invoking a deity in order to animate a statue, the statue is created to demonstrate man’s ability to conceive and to clothe the Idea. This is why Chaldean art represented a break from the direct depiction of deities and the ‘language of the dead’ that Péladan perceived in Egyptian civilisation, and a step in the direction of human creativity. For Péladan, Chaldean (Assyrian) art was a process of giving material form to ideas, whereby statuary and reliefs came to take on the nature of three-dimensional hieroglyphs representing concepts rather than entities – and it would appear that this is the most significant differentiation; Egypt codified the ideas, Chaldea gave them form clothed by the human imagination:

The bull with a human face, an admirable creation… A combination of the flanks and hooves of a bull with the mane of a lion, that signify the two types of courage and animal strength; this type is amplified by the mitred face and the wings signifying supernatural being. He thinks with the head, he can rise to the sky with the wings, and by the organic characteristics he can rule the earth. The sphinx is an androgynous cat, it dreams; the bull is alert and in motion.1

This is one of the best examples of what Péladan meant by “a perfect work” – one in which the ideal was given symbolic form that could take on a life of its own in the human imagination and communicate these notions to the viewer, taking on an almost talismanic role within the mythology of a given civilisation. This is what he meant by the ensoulment of a work of art – from the moment that a form was created in order to represent an ideal, it was perfect in the sense that Péladan meant it. Hence we find motifs such as that of Orpheus, the Sphinx, and the androgyne repeated in the works of many of the artists who worked with him, as well as within his own novels, all of which were styled as “éthopées” ( NB. The term éthopée is a figure of speech stemming from the Greek ethologia or ethopoiia, literally meaning study or creation of ethos (understood as customs or mores).

5. -You quote Péladan´s saying “Artist…if you create a perfect work, a soul will come to inhabit it”. The Gnostic Manichean Bogomils, as the radical iconoclasts they also were, destroyed icons and crucifixes, and believed that a demon (daimon) did inhabit and hid behind each icon. Their historic successors, the Cathars of southern France, regarded their “perfects” as living icons, embodying the Holy Spirit. What would be Péladan´s view on the relation between the perfection of art and the perfection of man? 

To answer fully I would need to explain Péladan’s cosmology, which is quite complex and difficult to present succinctly, so I’ll do my best to give an overview, but please keep in mind that this is something of a simplification.

Péladan strongly believed in the notion of daimons (intermediary beings between heaven and earth), that were not inherently evil, but that were somehow “imperfect”, but still forces of nature engaged in an effort towards reunification with the Divine. He also believed that some daimons took human form, and were descended from angels: he considered these to be a separate, gifted race of men, who were also burdened with the knowledge of their heavenly origins and whose responsibility it was to attempt to redeem both themselves and the world around them. In his own words: “I believe, along with Pythagoras and Plato, that the genius is never a man, but a d[a]emon, that is to say, an intermediary being between the spiritual and the earthly hierarchy” (Comment on Devient Artiste). In his novel Istar he wrote: “The enchanters, the egregores of all times, of all lands, mages, saints, artists, poets, aristes, mystagogues, are all the obscured or shining offspring of angelic descent.”

There is a strong Orphic element to Péladan’s perspective, according to which he perceived humanity as combining both an earthly, as well as a daemonic nature, and at the heart of his teachings – and his own life – was the notion of “kaloprosopia” (a term he invented, derived from the Greek “Kalos=Good” and “Prosopo=Face”). He stated that ‘the law of kaloprosopia is to realize the exteriorisation of the character one claims for oneself.’ This was essentially an ‘ art of personality,’ perceived as an art of self-initiation.

Péladan saw self-initiation as a profound act of inner transformation. In his handbook for neophytes, Comment on Devient Mage, he explains: ‘If one imagines that magic teaches the secrets of omnipotence, that it offers the possibility of the transmutation of metals, the secret of making gold, talismans and charms, this is a simplistic and disastrous notion… For those who have come to me asking them to complete within them the confusing work… I offer this practical method of self-magification.”

The essence of his teaching is a process of self-knowledge and spiritual development, based on the cultivation of one’s intellectual and spiritual faculties. He accompanies each teaching with advice on all aspects of life, and argues forcefully in favour of conscious individualism. Péladan reminds the reader:

Seek no other measure of magical power than that of your internal power: nor should you judge another being, except by the light they emit. To perfect yourself by becoming luminous, and like the sun, to warm the latent ideal life around you, there is the whole mystery of the highest initiation.

If for Péladan perfect art was that which most effectively reflected a given Ideal, then human perfection was a life lived according to these ideals, whereby they were given form, not in a two-dimensional painting, but in a life lived as a work of art.

6. -“Do not present the thing itself but its atmosphere,” is  often quoted advice Stéphane Mallarmé gives for poetry. His symbolist poetic ideal was not to show but to evoke the memory of something. For pre-abstract Art this must have had its special complication. Even if when we look at Rose+Croix painters like Alexandré Séon or – perhaps less great – Alphonse Osbert, it seems obvious that what they are showing is not what they are saying. So we have this belief in the spirituality of the material figurative in the art work. But how does Péladan consider that its sacredness comes in: with its creator, as incarnated in an Object of art or in ritualistic communication with the viewer? I´m thinking about the difference between an icon and a piece of art, where the icon is through adoration and tradition not really a piece of art. 

As noted earlier, for Péladan the sacrality of a painting depended on its depiction of an ideal. In this sense, all Symbolist paintings were, in fact, more icons, or visual talismans, than simple pieces of art. One of my favourite examples illustrating this is that of Orpheus – or more specifically, the depiction of his decapitated head on his lyre – as a central theme of many Symbolist paintings. The majority of Symbolist depictions of Orpheus focus on the head and the lyre – the dead Orpheus in other words – who continues to sing, even in death. In the painting by Gustave Moreau (Young Thracian Woman with head of Orpheus, 1875) we see a young woman holding the head and the lyre, while paintings by Redon, Séon and Delville all follow precisely the same motif: the head and lyre in the foreground, and the sea or beach where, according to legend, Orpheus’ remains were washed up, forming the background.

In his greatly influential work The Great Initiates (1889), Edouard Schuré discusses the notion of initiation in depth, and writes: “Initiation… was, then, the creation of a soul out of itself, its evolution on a higher level, and its flowering on the divine plane.” According to Schuré it was Orpheus who transmitted this Dionysian, theurgic impulse, throughout Greece, and then Europe. Orpheus himself stands for creative genius, initiatory tradition, and his lyre symbolises human existence itself, whereby, according to Schuré, “every chord corresponds to a mood of the human soul and contains the laws of one science and one art,” thus ‘proving’ Orpheus to be “the great mystagogue, ancestor of poetry and music, which reveal eternal truths.”

This “religion” of initiatory and creative genius was the motive force of the Symbolists, for whom Orpheus was the archetypal Artist-priest. In Péladan’s vision, it was these artist-initiates who would collectively initiate society through their exposure to the mysteries hidden within symbolic artwork. Therefore, these works in which we see the repeated motif of Orpheus’ head and lyre, are no less than sacred icons, talismans encapsulating their whole raison-d’etre. And Orpheus is their patron saint.

One might rightly question why the Symbolists preferred the decapitated form as opposed to a more Dionysian, triumphal figure such as that preferred in Renaissance depictions. The simple answer is ideologically based: the head and lyre are symbols, and as such, offer more compositional and interpretative freedom to the artist than a full human form complete with background and props, where focus on the symbol will necessarily be diluted. By isolating the complex symbol of the head-and-lyre, the artist is free to make it his own and to use all his skill so as to communicate the symbolic message, just as is the case with stylized icons in various religious traditions.

7. -In Russian symbolism, again, the World Soul in the female image of Sophia is a focus of intention, and also emphasizing the feminine sides of creativity in general, as can be seen also in the Rose+Croix imagery. But the Rose+Croix exhibitions where, very strictly and negatively in the manifesto, closed to female artists. Is this a contradiction inside the symbolist movement, and what would be your perspective on this mental drama of androgyne idealization contra misogynist attitude? 

We need to make a distinction here between misogyny, or perceiving women as somehow second-best according to patriarchal conditioning and ideology, and the perception of men and women as ontologically different based on what amounts to esoteric cosmology. It is very important to remember that when judging Péladan, one should perceive him not as a Symbolist first and foremost, but as an occultist for whom the notion of allegorical and mythic history and cultural interpretation were far more significant than literal ones. In that context, sociocultural mores are informed by a certain idiomatic perspective that needs to be understood in its own terms, rather than in direct relation to either mainstream or modern attitudes.

Péladan’s perception of the primordial androgyne and the Fall of man leading to its separation drew upon the allegorical history of Fabre d’Olivet, according to whom the perfect androgyne separated into man and woman because natural law could not permit divine perfection to exist for eternity in material form. Therefore the androgyne was made imperfect and mortal so that its divine essence would ultimately return to the source whence it came, rather than being condemned to lifelong existence in matter. However, when this separation occurred, Péladan believed, man came to be composed of ‘an element, a substance and an essence,’ respectively named Nephesh [sic], Ruach, and Neschamah [sic], women contained only Nephesh and Ruach, while ‘Neschamah, the spirit, the only immortal essence, remained entirely within Adam.’ Péladan provides a complex and detailed explanation of this notion, but sadly space does not allow for further detail.

As he explains in his initiatory handbook for women, Comment on Devient Fée, he thought that because women possessed a different ontological composition, they were able, if they cultivated it, to come into direct communion with God, and did not need to attempt to reach Him through other paths – the same paths, such as art and philosophy, that he prescribed for men who did need them in order to reach their divine potential. He saw them not as lesser, but as different. Thus, Péladan advises his female readers, they should seek to cast off the restrictions and trivial rules that society has imposed on them, and instead aspire to incarnate ideal femininity. In this way they can become “living works of art” (following the law of Kaloprosopia) who perfectly complement the masculine nature, thus leading to harmony in relationships, and (ideally) society as well, ultimately leading to a metaphorical reunification of the androgyne and by extension, social and cultural rebirth. Péladan’s view of women lacking certain characteristics is not a kind of veiled misogyny; he constantly encouraged those women in his circle to attempt to live up to the ideal of femininity in what could be described as an early version of gender-specific individuation. This may appear outdated in our time, but rather than a contradiction, I feel it should be understood as a direct result of his esoteric cosmology and a product of his time, which in itself belongs to an older philosophical perspective.  

1Péladan, Antiquités Orientalesp. 159. Cf. J.E. Reade, Assyrian sculpture-1 (London, The British Museum Press, 1998)

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