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" Reginald W. Machell (1854–1927): "


Document Type : AL
Record Number : 1064681
Doc. No : LA108310
Call No : ‭10.1163/15700593-01402002‬
Language of Document : English
Main Entry : Massimo Introvigne
Title & Author : Reginald W. Machell (1854–1927): [Article] : Blavatsky’s Child, British Symbolist, American Artist\ Massimo Introvigne
Publication Statement : Leiden: Brill
Title of Periodical : Aries
Date : 2014
Volume/ Issue Number : 14/2
Page No : 165–189
Abstract : Reginald Willoughby Machell (1854–1927) was a promising young artist from a prominent family in North-West England when he was introduced to Madame Blavatsky in 1886. Machell joined the Theosophical Society, abandoned his academic style and decided to devote his life to creating a didactic art aimed at illustrating Blavatsky’s doctrines. When the Theosophical Society split after Blavatsky’s death, Machell sided with the American faction led by William Q. Judge and later by Katherine Tingley. In 1900, the artist moved to Lomaland, Tingley’s Theosophical colony in California, where he remained for the next 27 years of his life. He continued to paint Theosophical subjects and to write articles on the relationship between Theosophy and the arts. He also emerged as a successful wood carver and as a gifted teacher of younger Theosophical painters, who formed the so called Lomaland Art Colony. Best remembered for a single iconic Theosophical painting, The Path, Machell was extremely popular for several decades among all branches of the Theosophical movement. At the same time, his almost exclusive focus on Theosophy led to his marginalization in wider artistic circles, although other teachers recruited by Tingley for the Lomaland art school, including Maurice Braun (1877–1941), eventually managed to be accepted by the American art establishment. Reginald Willoughby Machell (1854–1927) was a promising young artist from a prominent family in North-West England when he was introduced to Madame Blavatsky in 1886. Machell joined the Theosophical Society, abandoned his academic style and decided to devote his life to creating a didactic art aimed at illustrating Blavatsky’s doctrines. When the Theosophical Society split after Blavatsky’s death, Machell sided with the American faction led by William Q. Judge and later by Katherine Tingley. In 1900, the artist moved to Lomaland, Tingley’s Theosophical colony in California, where he remained for the next 27 years of his life. He continued to paint Theosophical subjects and to write articles on the relationship between Theosophy and the arts. He also emerged as a successful wood carver and as a gifted teacher of younger Theosophical painters, who formed the so called Lomaland Art Colony. Best remembered for a single iconic Theosophical painting, The Path, Machell was extremely popular for several decades among all branches of the Theosophical movement. At the same time, his almost exclusive focus on Theosophy led to his marginalization in wider artistic circles, although other teachers recruited by Tingley for the Lomaland art school, including Maurice Braun (1877–1941), eventually managed to be accepted by the American art establishment.
Descriptor : Blavatsky
Descriptor : Braun
Descriptor : Lomaland
Descriptor : Machell
Descriptor : Point Loma
Descriptor : Theosophical Society
Descriptor : Theosophy and the Arts
Descriptor : Tingley
Location & Call number : ‭10.1163/15700593-01402002‬
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10.1163-15700593-01402002_2619.pdf
10.1163-15700593-01402002.pdf
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