Laurence Caruana Explained

Laurence Caruana (born February 16, 1962) is a Maltese artist, writer, and lecturer noted for his contribution to the contemporary visionary art movement, particularly through his Manifesto of Visionary Art.[1]

Biography

Laurence Caruana was born the third son of Maltese parents who met and married in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. After completing his studies in German and ancient Greek Philosophy (B.A. from the University of Toronto 1985), he learned classical painting techniques at the Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Vienna (Academy of Fine Arts Vienna 1990).[2]

Caruana then began an itinerant existence, living variously in Toronto, Malta, Vienna, Munich, Monaco, and Paris. In that period, he actively pursued visionary experience (dreams, entheogens) as a source for his painting and writing.[3] After meeting his French fiançée in Munich, L. Caruana settled in Paris. In the year 2000 he met Ernst Fuchs of the Vienna School of Fantastic Realism and subsequently apprenticed under him for a year, working in his studios in Monaco and Castillon, as well as at the St. Egid chapel in Klagenfurt.[2]

In 2008 he held the first Visions in the Mischtechnik painting seminar in the eco-village of Torri Superiore Italy, which eventually led to the creation of The Vienna Academy of Visionary Art, where Caruana has served as Director and Principal Lecturer since 2013.[4] While still maintaining a studio in the Bastille area of Paris, the artist currently lives in the Josefstadt district of Vienna - frequently traveling abroad to exhibit, teach or lecture on visionary art.[5]

Painting

After apprenticing with Ernst Fuchs, Caruana began using the Mischtechnik, a painting technique which alternates between glazes of oil color (mixed in an oleo-resinous medium) and water-based whites (mixed in egg tempera or casein).

His art is highly mythological. Through fine lines, strong colors and precise rendering, Caruana's work manifests the imagery typical of visionary experience. More uniquely, his work combines symbols and styles from different cultural mythologies.

He has exhibited his works in London, Paris, Vienna, Munich, Monaco, and other cities, both individually (Le Pouvoir des Mythes in Galerie d'Art Visionnaire de Paris) and as part of various groups (Chimeria in France, Society for Art of Imagination in England).[4] [6] Giclée reproductions of his work have frequently appeared at transformational festivals such as The Boom Festival in Portugal and the O.Z.O.R.A. festival in Hungary.[7] [8]

The artist's images have also been reproduced on album covers,[9] [10] in magazines,[11] as tattoos, trading cards,[12] and in posters for transformational festivals.

Writing

L. Caruana's creative and critical writing are extensions of his interest in mythology and visionary art.

Creative writing

In a novel such as The Hidden Passion (Recluse 2007), the author has retold the tale of Christ from the Gnostic perspective. Though condemned by the early church as a heresy, Gnosticism expands Christian myth by incorporating motifs from other cultures, such as ancient Greece (Platonism) and Egypt (Hermeticism). Throughout the novel, Christ utters the actual sayings (logia) of the Gnostic gospels found at Nag Hammadi Egypt. L. Caruana's interest in Gnosticism forms part of a much broader fascination with crossing myths from different cultural mythologies.[13]

Critical writing

Due to his deep involvement with the Visionary art movement, L. Caruana has also become one of its spokesmen. Through his on-line Visionary Revue, he has documented the history and evolution of this international movement. His First Manifesto of Visionary Art (Recluse 2010, English, French and Portuguese editions) was published on-line and in print to an enthusiastic response.[14] The creative essays Myrette and A Mirror Delirious, which appear in issue 4, bring up to date all the author’s thoughts and insights into Visionary art since the publication of the Manifesto.[15]

Caruana's lifelong pursuit of 'the ancient image-language' reached fruition in a book entitled Enter Through the Image: The Ancient Image-Language of Myth, Art and Dreams (Recluse 2008). Drawing upon examples from sacred and visionary art, the book demonstrates how we may 'think through images' and eventually enter through the image to the mystical experience of henosis. In its elaboration of the image-language, the book delineates how various myths may cross one another and how different cultural symbols may be combined.[16]

Teaching

Since 2008, Caruana has held The Visions in the Mischtechnik painting seminar in the eco-village of Torri Superiore Italy, co-teaching with Amanda Sage, A. Andrew Gonzalez and others. He has also taught painting at the Omega Institute for Holistic Studies and The Chapel of Sacred Mirrors in New York. In 2013 he co-founded The Vienna Academy of Visionary Art which "revives classical techniques of painting while pursuing art as the expression of beauty, spirit and vision." [17]

Lectures

From his studio in The Vienna Academy of Visionary Art, L. Caruana often travels abroad to deliver lectures on visionary art. He has spoken at such venues as the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris,[18] the Metageum conference in Malta,[19] and Alex Grey's The Chapel of Sacred Mirrors in New York.[20]

Publications

By L. Caruana

On (or including) L. Caruana

External links

Notes and References

  1. Published, secondary source references to L. Caruana's Manifesto may be found at:
    • Silvia Thyssen, Boundaries in Question : Examining Visionary Art, Erowid Extracts: Psychoactive Plants and Chemicals, May 2003, p. 18.
    • Erik Davis, The New Eye: Visionary Art and Tradition, Introduction to True Visions (Betty Books, 2006) pp. 5-8. This article first appeared in the COSM Journal of Visionary Culture, volume IV (COSM Press, 2006) p. 59.
    • José Eliézer Mikosz, Arte Visionária - Representações Visuais Inspiradas nos Estados não Ordinários de Consciência (ENOC) (Editora Prismas 2014) passim.
  2. Dalis Erben malen Europa, edited by Roger M. Erasmy (Kastner Verlag, 2005) p. 14.
  3. La Mort Transfigurée: L'Art Visionnaire et la Mort (Galerie l'Arche de Morphée, 2006) p. 79.
  4. Web site: L. Caruana Biography . 2024-06-08 . lcaruana.com.
  5. Web site: The Vienna Academy of Visionary Art . https://web.archive.org/web/20221209062946/http://academyofvisionaryart.com/faculty/biographies . 2022-12-09.
  6. Web site: Fostering Imaginative Artists Since 1961 . Society for Art of the Imagination .
  7. Web site: Boom Festival . www.youtube.com.
  8. Web site: O.Z.O.R.A. festival . 2024-06-08.
  9. Web site: The Artaxian Mantra's EP Luneo . myspace.com.
  10. Web site: Soul Stalkaz' EP The Lordz of Deth .
  11. The Gnostic 4 magazine, December 2011
  12. Web site: The Galactik Trading Card Oracle Complex .
  13. Caruana, Laurence, The Hidden Passion: A Novel of the Gnostic Christ, Based on the Nag Hammadi Texts (Recluse 2007,) Back cover.
  14. See, for example:
    • Silvia Thyssen, Boundaries in Question : Examining Visionary Art, Erowid Extracts: Psychoactive Plants and Chemicals, May 2003, which also exists on-line at: Article.
    • Erik Davis, The New Eye: Visionary Art and Tradition, Introduction to True Visions (Betty Books, 2006), which first appeared in the COSM Journal, issue 4 and also appears on-line at Article
  15. Web site: VISIONARY REVUE. www.visionaryrevue.com.
  16. Caruana, Laurence, Enter Through the Image: The Ancient Image-Language of Myth, Art and Dreams (Recluse 2008,) Back cover.
  17. Web site: The Academy of Visionary Art. Academy.
  18. See the RISC (Relais d'information sur les sciences de la cognition) website: Web site: Association pour la Recherche Transdisciplinaire sur les Etats Modifiés de Conscience - Accueil . 2008-01-14 . dead . https://archive.today/20120708185151/http://hallucinations.risc.cnrs.fr/ . 2012-07-08 .
  19. Web site: Metageum conference . https://web.archive.org/web/20070330133710/http://www.metageum.org/ . 2007-03-30.
  20. Web site: Chapel of Sacred Mirrors .