OUR REVIEW OF THIS EXHIBITION HERE.
In conjunction with the major exhibition Kandinsky at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Invisible Friends is a rare Sydney showing of ‘spirit drawings’ created in the 1860s and ‘70s by Georgiana Houghton (1814–84).
Recently ‘rediscovered’ by art history, Houghton’s outwardly abstract artworks – among the most astonishing images of her time – have now assured her place as one of the most radical of spiritualist artists and a precursor of the abstraction to come.
Houghton was a prominent figure of the early spiritualist movement in Victorian England, which played a significant role in 19th-century culture. Spiritualism is a belief system that centres around communication with the spirits of the dead, often through people known as mediums.
This exhibition of her watercolours, rarely seen outside their home in the chapel of the Victorian Spiritualists’ Union, Melbourne, is presented alongside an exhibition of works by Vasily Kandinsky (1866–1944) to reveal the significant role spiritualism played in early modernism.