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NORMAN LINDSAY

Enter the Magicians

1974

Facsimile Etching

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30.3 x 35.6 cm
Published: 1974
Edition: 550
Publisher: Odana Editions

Reference
Norman Lindsay Etchings: Catalogue Raisonné (Odana Editions and Josef Lebovic Gallery, 2006, cat.299)

Norman's most celebrated veiled woman is the figure representing life in Enter the Magicians. This central figure was modelled by Rose.

The transparent veil indicates life's eternal enigma and the magicians represent artists, both creative and destructive, revealing all the complexities of human passion. The surrounding figures are the vast panorama of life from which art derives its material. In a letter to publisher Charles Shepherd, Norman wrote in detail about the symbolism in Enter the Magicians and outlined why he was reluctant to explain his work: The Magicians of course, are the artists - the creators, whose function is to create human consciousness by revealing life in all its complexities of human passion to mankind. The figure of Life is still veiled, but the veil is transparent - already art has made its revelation and Life, since Homer made its first analysis, is revealed to us. We know the passions which motivate man, but Life will always be an enigma, and therefore the transparent veil remains.

The dignified figure of the magician represents Creative Art - the malicious small Magician represents the destructive element in Art, of which we have plenty of examples with us today. The whirling image of the five pointed star represents fire, the dripping figures emerging from below represent Water, the Salamander and the Naiad - the elemental symbols of the creation of biological life. The strong figure clasping the boy and girl represent the bi-sexual construction of the human entity - half man, half woman. Surrounding all these are just a series of images, suggesting the spectacle of life from which Art draws its material - the Bull with the primitive male figure symbolising the fecundity of life.

I don't mind giving you this rough interpretation of the symbolism of the etching, though it is against my principle to explain my works. Firstly, the explanation destroys the intellectual exercise of divining the picture's motive, and secondly, it does not matter what intellectual concept the picture arouses as long as it is emotionally and aesthetically responded to. If a picture arouses interest, emotion, and gives an aesthetic pleasure it has been understood, even if this understanding does not take the precise intellectual form as above. I may add, that I don't work out my pictures on an intellectual formula. I let the picture evolve as an image in my mind and put it into pictorial form, and then find out afterwards what it means. Which is merely to say, that, as an artist, I think, in forms, which later I translate into words ...

Technically this etching is a masterpiece. In a long letter to Harry Chaplin about the technicalities of his etchings Norman said: ... One's instrument is the most delicate that ingenuity can devise; the point of a needle. One's material, copper, offers a surface which can record the most delicate of tones in markings finer than hairs, while it can go to the other extreme in the deepest blacks a pigment may convey. With such a gamut it is impossible not to dream of achieving a technical perfection.

... I will go so far as to say that there are two etchings which remain in my mind as having achieved something of what I sought, as against the intensely difficult technical problems they presented. 
Enter the Magicians is one, and C Sharp Minor Quartette the other ...

 

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