Margaret Ithell Colquhoun (9 October 1906 – 25 April 1988) was a British painter, author, and occultist whose work integrated surrealist techniques with esoteric practices, including alchemy, Kabbalah, and ceremonial magic.[1][2]
Born in Shillong, Assam, then part of British India, she returned to England as an infant and trained at the Slade School of Fine Art after initial studies at Cheltenham Ladies' College.[1]
In the 1930s, Colquhoun aligned with the British surrealist group, exhibiting at the Mayor Gallery and contributing to publications like The London Bulletin, though she departed in 1940 amid tensions over her independent occult pursuits and aversion to the group's political alignments.[2][1]
She innovated automatic drawing methods such as fumage and decalcomania, often drawing from Hermetic traditions and her initiations into orders like the Ordo Templi Orientis and the Fellowship of Isis, producing works that evoked mystical landscapes and symbolic forms.[2][1]
Relocating to Cornwall in the late 1950s, she immersed herself in Celtic spirituality, authoring books including The Sword of Wisdom (1975), a study of Golden Dawn founder S.L. MacGregor Mathers, alongside travelogues like The Crying of the Wind (1955) and novels infused with occult themes.[2][1]
Her archive of over 5,000 items was acquired by Tate in 2019, prompting renewed recognition of her role as a pioneering figure in British surrealism who prioritized esoteric inquiry over mainstream artistic conformity.[2]
Early Life and Education
Birth and Upbringing
Margaret Ithell Colquhoun was born on 9 October 1906 in Shillong, Assam, British India, to British parents Henry Archibald Colebrooke Colquhoun, a colonial administrator, and Georgia Frances Ithell Manley, who had been born in Woolwich, England, in 1873.[3][4] Her father, born around 1870 possibly in Peshawar, worked in the British colonial service, reflecting a family tradition of imperial administration spanning generations.[5][2]Colquhoun was relocated to the United Kingdom as an infant and raised there primarily by her mother amid a household that included her brother Robert Sutherland Colquhoun.[5] The 1911 United Kingdom census recorded the family living in Ventnor on the Isle of Wight, alongside an aunt and two servants, indicating a comfortable middle-class colonial existence adapted to British domestic life.[3]Her early childhood unfolded in southern England, where she attended school in Rodwell near Weymouth, Dorset, before enrolling at Cheltenham Ladies' College, an institution emphasizing rigorous education for girls from similar backgrounds.[6] This upbringing, shaped by the liminal experience of Anglo-Indian heritage, encouraged personal independence within a structured familial environment tied to imperial service.[2]
Formal Training in Art
Colquhoun commenced her formal art education at Cheltenham School of Art, attending from 1925 to 1927, where she developed foundational skills amid an environment that accommodated her emerging esoteric interests, such as composing the alchemical play The Bird of Hermes in 1926.[2][7]In 1927, she relocated to London and enrolled at the Slade School of Fine Art, studying there until 1931 under the rigorous classical regime emphasizing drawing from life and anatomical precision.[8][9]At the Slade, Professor Henry Tonks, the school's influential director of drawing, recognized her talent, praising her gifts while advising against pursuits that might divert her from technical mastery.[8]Her training culminated in notable achievements, including joint first prize in the prestigious Slade Summer Composition Prize in 1929 for Judith Showing the Head of Holofernes, a work depicting the biblical scene with dramatic figural composition.[8][10]Subsequent student compositions, such as Judgement of Paris (1930), Susanna and the Elders (1930), Death of Lucretia (1931), and Death of the Virgin (1931), demonstrated her proficiency in historical and mythological subjects, adhering to the Slade's emphasis on narrative clarity and draughtsmanship.[8]Colquhoun later reflected on this period, stating in the London Bulletin (1939): "I learnt to draw at the Slade School. I have not yet learnt to paint."[8]
Engagement with Surrealism
Entry into the British Surrealist Group
Colquhoun's engagement with Surrealism began in earnest following her attendance at the International Surrealist Exhibition held at the New Burlington Galleries in London in June 1936, where she was exposed to works by leading figures such as Salvador Dalí, whose lecture on his paranoiac-critical method particularly influenced her approach to automatic techniques and dream-inspired imagery.[11][12] This event marked a pivotal shift, as evidenced by the surrealist elements in her first solo exhibition at Cheltenham Art Gallery later that year, featuring paintings that incorporated subconscious motifs and organic forms reminiscent of Dalí's style.[11]In 1939, Colquhoun was formally invited by the Belgian-born gallerist and Surrealist organizer E.L.T. Mesens to join the British Surrealist Group, solidifying her alignment with the movement amid its growing presence in London.[11][7] That June, she participated in a joint exhibition with Roland Penrose at the Mayor Gallery, presenting 14 oil paintings and two carved objects that demonstrated her adoption of surrealist automatism, including works like Pitcher-plant (c. 1936), which explored erotic and botanical symbolism through free association.[7][12] Her contributions to the Surrealist London Bulletin around this time further integrated her into the group's intellectual and artistic circles, where she advocated for experimental methods to access the unconscious.[2]
Surrealist Techniques and Early Works
Colquhoun's initial foray into Surrealism manifested in her botanical studies of the mid-1930s, which she reinterpreted as surrealist still-lifes featuring anthropomorphic forms and dream-like distortions of natural elements.[13] These works, displayed in her first solo exhibition at Cheltenham Art Gallery in 1936, revealed influences from Salvador Dalí's precise rendering of fantastical scenes and René Magritte's juxtaposition of everyday objects in uncanny contexts.[2] By the late 1930s, her compositions increasingly departed from strict figuration, incorporating the surrealist motif of the double image—where forms ambiguously suggested multiple interpretations, such as hybrid plant-human figures evoking erotic or subconscious tensions.[14]A hallmark of Colquhoun's surrealist practice was her intensive application of automatist methods to bypass conscious control and tap the unconscious, employing them more rigorously than most peers in the British group.[5]Decalcomania emerged as her primary technique, executed by applying wet paint to a surface, folding it, and pressing to produce irregular blots and stains that suggested organic or mythical shapes, often interpreted afterward as landscapes or symbolic entities.[15] She complemented this with frottage, rubbing pencil or paint over textured objects like leaves or bark to imprint accidental patterns, fostering unplanned compositions that mirrored the randomness of dreams.[16]Further experiments included fumage, where smoke from a candle was directed onto paper to form ethereal wisps, and parsemage, scattering dry pigments or particles for serendipitous distributions.[14] These processes, which Colquhoun began refining in the early 1940s amid her active participation in surrealist circles, prioritized textural immediacy over polished brushwork, transforming smudges and irregularities into integral pictorial elements.[17] Such methods not only aligned with surrealist tenets of psychic automatism but also laid groundwork for her later esoteric integrations, though in this phase they remained tethered to exploring subconscious imagery without overt mysticism.
Transition to Occultism
Conflicts with Surrealist Orthodoxy
Colquhoun's affiliation with the British Surrealist Group, established under E.L.T. Mesens's leadership, frayed in April 1940 during a meeting at the Barcelona Restaurant in London, where Mesens insisted on members' adherence to proletarian revolution, boycotts of non-Surrealist activities, and avoidance of exhibitions outside the group's purview. Colquhoun contested these impositions, arguing that political engagements impeded artistic freedom and that her occult explorations—rooted in traditions like the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn—clashed with the prescribed orthodoxy.[18]Mesens, enforcing a rigid interpretation of Surrealism aligned with André Breton's manifestos emphasizing Freudian automatism and socio-political revolt, demanded Colquhoun renounce her occult ties, viewing them as deviations from materialist principles toward mysticism. When she refused, Mesens sought Breton's endorsement for her expulsion, which was granted despite Breton's private interest in esoteric themes; Colquhoun was thus excluded from the group that year.[18][14]Further discord emerged in 1944 at a poetry reading alongside Toni del Renzio, where their rejection of a Surrealist protestdeclaration intensified hostilities, highlighting Colquhoun's resistance to the movement's autocratic control and ideological conformity. This rift, exacerbated by her systematic initiations into occult orders and alchemical studies, propelled her toward uncompromised esoteric integration in art and writing, diverging from Surrealism's collective dogma.[18][2]
Integration of Esoteric Influences
Colquhoun's transition from surrealism involved adapting automatist techniques to esoteric ends, extending methods like decalcomania, fumage (smoking canvases to form images), and parsemage (scattering dust or frottage) beyond Freudian unconscious exploration to invoke spiritual entities and hermetic insights. These practices, refined from the late 1930s, aligned with her research into Golden Dawn rituals and alchemical processes, allowing her to channel occult forces directly into visual forms.[19][14]Membership in occult organizations from the 1950s onward provided structured frameworks for this integration; she joined the Ordo Templi Orientis's New Isis Lodge in 1955, resigning in 1962 after adopting the magical name Splendidior Vitro, and was ordained Priestess of Isis in the Fellowship of Isis in 1977. Concurrently, affiliations with Druid orders, such as the Druid Order where she became a deaconess in 1961, and the Order of the Pyramid and Sphinx from around 1961 to 1975, exposed her to Enochian magic, Celtic revivalism, and ritual invocation, which she incorporated into site-specific works amid Cornwall's ancient landscapes.[11][14]Esoteric traditions like alchemy, Kabbalah, Gnosticism, Theosophy, Rosicrucianism, and Tarot permeated her iconography, manifesting in symbols of unity and transcendence; for instance, Diagrams of Love (1940–1941) depicts the divine androgyne through alchemical motifs of conjunction, while Gorgon (1946) employs esoteric color scales and geometric principles to evoke feminine potency and mythic guardianship. Cornish paintings from the 1950s, such as Landscape with Antiquities (1950), fused neolithic monuments and Celtic lore with kabbalistic tree-of-life structures, interpreting natural forms as vessels of hidden gnosis during her residency in Vow Cave from 1949 to 1959.[19][11]By the 1970s, this synthesis culminated in abstract esoteric series, including her Taro deck (1977), which abstracted Tarot archetypes into non-figurative designs drawn from ritual meditation and Golden Dawn correspondences, underscoring her view of art as a magical act of revelation rather than mere representation. Her writings, such as those on MacGregor Mathers and the Golden Dawn, further evidenced this fusion, treating painting as an extension of ceremonial magic to access perennial wisdom.[19][14]
Artistic Oeuvre
Evolution of Style and Methods
Colquhoun's early artistic style, emerging in the 1930s following her formal training, aligned closely with Surrealist conventions, featuring dream-like compositions with figurative elements drawn from natural forms and erotic symbolism, often rendered on smooth surfaces that minimized visible brushstrokes.[5] This approach reflected influences from Salvador Dalí and René Magritte, emphasizing bizarre juxtapositions to evoke the subconscious, as seen in works like The Pine Family (1940), which integrated esoteric symbols within a Surrealist framework.[20]By the early 1940s, amid her growing disillusionment with orthodox Surrealism, Colquhoun shifted toward experimental automatism, abandoning premeditated planning for spontaneous processes that incorporated chance effects, such as ink blots, smudges, and stains to generate imagery directly from the unconscious. She documented these innovations in writings, including methods like "mantic stains" derived from occultdivination practices, which linked artistic creation to mystical revelation rather than purely psychological exploration.[21] This evolution marked a departure from polished Surrealist precision to textural, organic forms that prioritized raw emergence over narrative coherence.[17]In the late 1940s and 1950s, her methods further integrated esoteric disciplines—drawing from Kabbalah, alchemy, and sacred geometry—resulting in paintings that blended automatist techniques with symbolic abstraction, where forms evoked spiritual hierarchies and alchemical transformations rather than overt Surrealist provocation.[11] Works from this period, such as those exploring "mineralogical automatism" and "parsemia," employed materials like smoke or decalcomania to simulate visionary states, yielding less confrontational imagery that prioritized mystical harmony over disturbance.[22] By the 1960s, this synthesis culminated in a mature style of luminous, layered compositions that fused occult iconography with automatic improvisation, reflecting her independent pursuit of art as a conduit for transcendent insight.[23]
Major Themes and Cornish Landscapes
Colquhoun's artistic oeuvre recurrently explored themes of occultsymbolism, eroticism, and the interplay between human consciousness and the natural world, often rendered through surrealist automatism and esoteric iconography. Her works frequently incorporated alchemical motifs, such as transformations of organic forms into mystical entities, reflecting her belief in a unified spiritualcosmos where the material and ethereal realms converged.[24] These elements drew from her engagement with hermetic traditions and qabalistic principles, evident in pieces like Embryo Fetish, which repurposed discarded materials to evoke primal fertility and hidden forces.[5]From the early 1940s, Colquhoun's relocation to Cornwall profoundly shaped her thematic focus, infusing her art with the region's ancient megalithic sites, rugged moors, and coastal formations, which she perceived as repositories of prehistoric magic and ley line energies. In her 1957 book The Living Stones: Cornwall, she described the landscape's granite tors and standing stones—such as those at Bodmin Moor—as pulsating with residual druidic vitality, inspiring paintings that blended empirical topography with visionary overlays.[25] This integration manifested in works like Cornish Landscape (1971), an oil and card panel depicting abstracted cliffs and waves laced with symbolic flora, symbolizing the erosion of natural purity against modern encroachments.[26] Her Cornish output emphasized eco-mystical concerns, portraying the peninsula's elemental forces—wind, sea, and stone—as conduits for occult revelation, distinct from her earlier urban surrealism.[2]Colquhoun's landscapes eschewed literal representation for automatist techniques, such as decalcomania and fumage, to capture Cornwall's "genius loci," where geological features evoked alchemical processes of dissolution and rebirth. Paintings from this period, including those exhibited at the Newlyn Gallery in 1971, featured hybrid forms merging human anatomy with tidal rockscapes, underscoring themes of sexual alchemy and cyclical renewal amid environmental fragility.[26] This phase marked a departure from orthodox surrealism toward a localized mysticism, prioritizing Cornwall's pre-Christian heritage over continental influences.[11]
Literary Output
Autobiographical and Personal Writings
The Living Stones: Cornwall, published in 1957 by Peter Owen Limited, constitutes Colquhoun's principal published work blending personal reflection with regional exploration.[27] In it, she recounts her post-World War II relocation to Cornwall's Lamorna Valley, seeking artistic solitude amid the landscape's geological and mythical features, describing the endeavor as an escape from "my own entangled life."[28] The text interweaves her direct experiences—such as wandering coastal paths and observing local flora—with esoteric interpretations of standing stones, holy wells, and Celticfolklore, emphasizing the region's "living" spiritual vitality as perceived through her occult lens.[29] This hybrid form, often characterized as a memoir infused with psychogeography and occultism, prioritizes subjective encounter over linear chronology, with roughly half the content devoted to her immersion in the wooded, coastal environs near Penzance.[30]Colquhoun's earlier travelogue, The Crying of the Wind: Ireland, issued in 1955 and also commissioned by Peter Owen, similarly incorporates personal anecdotes from her 1954 travels across Ireland, though it leans more toward ethnographic sketches of folklore, saints' lives, and rural customs than overt self-disclosure.[31] Drawing on visits to sites like holy islands and ancient monasteries, she documents encounters with locals and landscapes, framing them through a surrealist-occult sensibility that highlights synchronicities and symbolic resonances, such as winds evoking ancestral voices.[32] While less introspective than The Living Stones, it reveals her affinity for peripheral Celtic regions as sources of magical inspiration, informed by her own migratory impulses post-divorce and wartime disruptions.[33]Archival materials, including those held by Tate Britain, contain additional unpublished prose fragments designated as autobiographical, such as a brief account of her menarche and other intimate life episodes, often interwoven with dream-derived or surreal elements.[34] These pieces, spanning the 1930s to 1970s, reflect personal themes like bodily rites and relational tensions but remained uncompiled into a formal memoir during her lifetime.[32] Colquhoun's reluctance to produce a conventional autobiography aligns with her esoteric worldview, favoring dispersed, allusive disclosures over exhaustive narrative, as evidenced by autobiographical allusions scattered across her occult texts and letters, such as an extended 1940s epistle titled "Letter from Behind an Iron Curtain," which chronicles emotional and artistic isolation.[35]
Occult and Theoretical Texts
Colquhoun's most significant theoretical contribution to occult literature is her 1975 monograph Sword of Wisdom: MacGregor Mathers and the Golden Dawn, which provides a meticulous biographical account of Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers, the key figure in establishing the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Drawing on archival materials, personal correspondences, and Mathers' own ritual translations—including editions of The Key of Solomon and The Book of Abramelin—the book traces the order's hierarchical grades, Enochian magic practices, and internal schisms, emphasizing Mathers' authoritarian leadership and synthesis of Kabbalistic, Rosicrucian, and Masonic elements.[36] Colquhoun, initiated into Golden Dawn offshoots and other esoteric groups, incorporates her firsthand insights to argue for Mathers' enduring influence on Western esotericism, while critiquing sensationalized accounts from contemporaries like Aleister Crowley.[37]Beyond this, Colquhoun authored shorter theoretical pieces on magical theory, including essays exploring alchemy's symbolic correspondences, the role of automatism in evocation, and the integration of Tantric and Druidic traditions into modern occultism.[38] These writings, often published in esoteric journals or privately circulated during her lifetime, reflect her rejection of dogmatic orthodoxy in favor of experiential gnosis, influenced by her surrealist background. Posthumous compilations, such as A Walking Flame: Selected Magical Writings (2024), assemble approximately 40 such texts, covering topics from astral projection techniques to critiques of ceremonial rigidity, underscoring her view of magic as a creative, intuitive discipline akin to artistic inspiration.[39]In Grimoire of the Entangled Thicket (1973), Colquhoun presents a idiosyncratic theoretical framework blending Cornishfolklore, hermetic symbolism, and botanical sigils into a personal system of natural magic, intended as both practical guide and philosophical treatise on elemental invocation.[32] This work prioritizes localized, animistic esotericism over imported hierarchies, aligning with her post-surrealist emphasis on landscape as a living grimoire, though it remains less widely disseminated than her Mathers study due to its experimental structure.[40]
Fiction and Poetry
Colquhoun's fictional output includes two novels published during her lifetime, both infused with surreal and esoteric elements reflective of her broader interests in occultism and dream imagery. The Crying of the Wind, released in 1955, is set in Ireland and chronicles the protagonist's encounters with local landscapes, folklore, and inhabitants, blending travel observations with narrative fiction to evoke a sense of mystical isolation.[41][42]Goose of Hermogenes, published in 1960, narrates a first-person account of a young woman's entrapment on an enchanted island under her uncle's dominion, progressing through alchemical stages toward liberation; drawing from medieval occult traditions, it features uncorrelated dreamlike scenes symbolizing transformation, the philosopher's stone, and gendered power dynamics.[43][44]Her short stories, often derived directly from personal dreams, adopt a straightforward prose style centered on a singular, evocative idea rather than elaborate plotting. These pieces, published sporadically in literary outlets, prioritize concise exploration of subconscious motifs over conventional narrative arcs.[45]Colquhoun composed poetry across her career, disseminating individual works in journals before compiling two modest volumes. Grimoire of the Entangled Thicket (1973) comprises verse accompanied by her drawings, inspired by the Kabbalistic Tree of Life and Welsh mythological sources such as the Hanes Taliesin from the Mabinogion, employing formal structures to invoke pre-Christian and hermetic symbolism.[46]Osmazone (1983) assembles diverse short forms, from rhymed poems to prose-poetic fragments, unified by recurring maritime themes and esoteric introspection.[47] Her poetic style occasionally experiments with surrealist fragmentation, as analyzed in scholarly examinations of her surrealist affiliations.[48]
Personal Life and Later Years
Relationships and Residences
Colquhoun entered into a brief marriage with the Russian-born Surrealist artist and critic Toni del Renzio in 1943, following their meeting in the early 1940s amid London's Surrealist circles.[11][49] Their union, marked by discord and professional tensions—including del Renzio's role in a dissident Surrealist group—ended in separation by late 1946 and divorce in 1947.[50] No children resulted from the marriage, and Colquhoun pursued no further documented long-term romantic partnerships, channeling her energies into solitary artistic and esoteric pursuits thereafter.[51]Born in Shillong, Assam (now India), in 1906 to a British civil servant father, Colquhoun was raised primarily in England after returning as a child.[52] She resided in London during her Slade School studies in the 1920s and subsequent Surrealist involvement in the 1930s and early 1940s, with periods of travel to Paris and Mediterranean regions.[53] Following her divorce and amid postwar dislocation, she relocated from London to Cornwall around 1947–1948, seeking renewal in the region's landscape.[54]In Cornwall, Colquhoun established her primary long-term residences in the Penwith peninsula, initially near Mousehole and Newlyn, including Stone Cross Cottage, where she cultivated a garden reflective of her occult interests.[55] She later lived in the village of Paul, maintaining studios attuned to the local coves and cliffs that inspired her work, until entering a nursing home in Lamorna in her final years.[49]Colquhoun died on 11 April 1988 at age 81, with her ashes scattered on rocks at Lamorna Cove as per her wishes.[49]
Final Period and Death
In her final years, Ithell Colquhoun resided in Lamorna, Cornwall, where she maintained a studio and continued experimenting with artistic techniques, including enamel drip methods that produced abstract, fluid forms reflective of her esoteric interests.[24][11] She had lived in the region since the 1940s, drawn to its landscapes for inspiration in her painting and writing on occult themes.[56]Colquhoun died of heart failure on 11 April 1988 at the Menwinnion Country House Hotel in Lamorna, at the age of 81.[57][56] In her will, she bequeathed the contents of her studio to the National Trust, stipulating that proceeds from their sale be used to acquire and preserve wild land in Cornwall, with her ashes scattered on rocks at Lamorna Cove.[57][49] Her death occurred in relative obscurity, with limited contemporary notice of her passing.[58]
Reception and Legacy
Initial Critical Response
Colquhoun's surrealist paintings, such as Double Coconut (1936) and Sunflower (1936), were displayed in early group exhibitions, marking her entry into the British surrealist scene following her attendance at the International Surrealist Exhibition in London in 1936.[6] Her works contributed to the movement's exploration of the unconscious, earning her recognition as one of the most frequently exhibited British surrealists by 1938.[59] However, her persistent integration of occult themes clashed with the orthodox surrealist emphasis on Freudian psychoanalysis, leading to friction with group leader E.L.T. Mesens.In 1940, Mesens expelled Colquhoun from the British surrealist group, citing her refusal to abandon occult interests as incompatible with the movement's principles; this exclusion contrasted with the tolerance extended to figures like Herbert Read, whose utility as a propagandist outweighed similar esoteric leanings.[13] The decision reflected internal power dynamics rather than a consensus on artistic merit, as Colquhoun continued independent experimentation with automatic techniques like fumage and decalcomania. Read, a key surrealist advocate, expressed approval of her early writings in a 1941 letter, aligning her intuitive methods with his advocacy for organic form in art.[47]This rift contributed to a subdued initial critical reception, with limited mainstream commentary amid wartime constraints and her withdrawal from group affiliations; the 1940s emerged as a period of relative isolation for her practice, despite solo exhibitions like that at the Palmes Gallery in 1943, where her mystical landscapes received niche praise for their visionary intensity but scant broader analysis.[13] Overall, while surrealist peers acknowledged her technical innovation, her unorthodox synthesis of magic and automatism marginalized her within the canon, prioritizing ideological conformity over empirical artistic output.
Posthumous Recognition and Exhibitions
Following her death on April 1, 1988, Ithell Colquhoun's body of work entered a period of relative obscurity, with her archive divided between the Tate gallery and the National Trust, the latter tasked with using proceeds from her estate to preserve Cornish landscapes.[60][51] Renewed scholarly and curatorial interest emerged in the early 21st century, driven by reassessments of British Surrealism and women's contributions to occult-influenced modernism, though her recognition lagged behind male contemporaries until major institutional retrospectives.[25][2]The most significant posthumous exhibition to date, "Ithell Colquhoun: Between Worlds," organized by Tate, presented over 170 paintings, drawings, and writings across two venues: it debuted at Tate St Ives on February 15, 2025, before transferring to Tate Britain from June 13 to October 19, 2025, marking the largest survey of her career and highlighting her synthesis of Surrealist techniques with Cornish mysticism.[61][25][55] This show drew on her estate's holdings to contextualize her evolution from automatic drawing to landscape-infused occult symbolism, fostering critical acclaim for her overlooked role in expanding Surrealism beyond urban Parisian circles.[62][63]Smaller exhibitions have complemented this revival, such as "The Night Side of Nature" at Purdy Hicks Gallery in London, which opened on August 29, 2025, and featured three key Colquhoun paintings—Nativity (1929), Roman Sun (1947), and Kelp Gathering (1949)—alongside contemporary responses to themes of the esoteric and feminine.[64] Academic events, including a 2023 symposium at Arts University Plymouth examining her diverse legacy in Surrealism and occultism, have further solidified her status as a pioneering, if belatedly acknowledged, figure.[65] These efforts underscore a curatorial shift toward integrating her esoteric practices into mainstream art historical narratives, countering prior dismissals of her work as marginal.[5]