This kind of picture is invented out of amusement and curiosity to serve as entertainment or test of perception. However, inspired painters can see the other "hidden" dimension of the visible phenomena when contemplating the subject. As a truth which is not invented by human beings, this is of superior importance to an amusement or entertainment. Due to his experience, Vietinghoff clearly recognized in which art pieces this contemplative process was at work.
There are people who have an easy ability to see the hidden images in a picture puzzle. Others do not see the hidden picture even after long time. We know that it is not possible to discover it more easily or quickly with strained will. After a kind of "click", most people are able to see it sooner or later but the hidden message was always in the image. It was not visible to the normal eye focus, tension or impatience.
There are about four possibilities to see such hidden pictures. It may occur spontaneously, by an eye exercise program when learning to change the view, unintentional contemplation until the subject is transformed or someone colors the lines and planes which belong together in order to make obvious the sought picture.
In the case of mediumistic contemplation for the purpose of metaphysical insights, only the first three possibilities are given and they can alternate and complement one other.
If the change of the view on the reality to a vision does not occur spontaneously, the artist is not immediately inspired. It helps to make oneself empty, devotedly open and set a view without expectation.
This may be accompanied by eye exercises until the intuition emerges from the energy field of relaxed attentiveness and the transcendental view appears. Then, "spontaneous", i.e. unintentional and quickly following visual experiences arise.
At another time, accompanying view exercises may help to maintain and extend a prior spontaneously appeared vision.
Egon von Vietinghoff undertook all possible preparations within his power, from his own production of paints to calming down his mind. By doing so, he "tilled the soil" as a farmer cannot influence and control the weather and growth of nature. He did not presume but only established the connection to another side of life. Then, he received insights through color visions into dimensions which are not created by humans and will never be imagined or invented by them. In this stage of creation, Vietinghoff was only interested in dis-covering the daily perception and lifting the veil from the eyes. Thus, the essence of existence appears behind the screen, the "thing-in-itself" as Kant said.
Vietinghoff refused anything else including the mentioned "isms" as a basis of true art piece. To dismember and distort existing shapes is an act of mutilation but not of creativity, a kind of crime to nature. Whether out of ignorance or arrogance it does not matter. It has a blasphemous aspect and solely manifests the problems of the artist.
Thus, the art of Egon von Vietinghoff is not psychological but somewhat cosmic, not focused on the individual and his society but oriented on metaphysics. Therefore, it is timeless but actual at any time due to its existential dimension. This art does not refer to the events of the day yet should definitely not to be covered in dust or Vietinghoff be seen as fuddy-duddy.
The reproach of Vietinghoff's art as outmoded stems from complete ignorance of his mystic approach. This kind of criticism missed his art inasmuch as cosmic and metaphysic dimensions have a permanent actuality, if you know or not. Mystics never were "up-to-date". A superior truth, not burdened by mundane information touches the beholder even subliminally. Through mainly simple objects of nature and by means of a comprehensible color language, Vietinghoff was moved by images born in a transcendental vision. Lucid colors, natural warmness, radiating harmony, composed calmness, fascinating three-dimensionality, serene details, and masterful technique – all together is possible to discover and partly verbalize by yourself in his paintings after looking at them for a while.
According to Vietinghoff's definition, the silent message of a transcendentally creating painter, which resonates in varying degrees throughout the work, remains almost always beneath the threshold of consciousness.
However, most beholders feel through this message something special: an astonishment or a hunch, a touch difficult to grasp. The other half of the artist's message is a zest for life and enthusiasm for the phenomena of this world.
Life offers both sides! At least, the message is not simply "Look here is this object!" or "Here you see a pretty decoration!"
In Vietinghoff's philosophy only what is visually experienced on the metaphysical level, matters in fine arts, skillful workmanship provided. During the moments of mystic insights, he became a tool of the spiritual energy which is the true "essence of life" (J. W. von Goethe).
Thus, he penetrated the visible reality in the strictly visual way whereas other inspired people do it through philosophy, music or religion. In a meditative state of mental composing, he was awaiting to be favored to participate in the miracle of creation.
This is not his own unique method. He recognized it as the common characteristic in the works of geniuses from Grünewald to Turner, in which there was two dozen of his most favored painters.
He experienced the manifestation of the metaphysical world in the visible nature through the sense organ of the eye which in the end is not to judge intellectually and invited him to marvel.
The beholder's approach should be eased by artistic adaption, as a nonverbal – but not abstract (!) – color language, the expression according Vietinghoff's Transcendental Painting, is not bound to any denomination or intellectual construction but generally intelligible.
His School of Pure Vision, in the sense of schooling with the aim of pure detached seeing, is an empirical and neutral way for visual immersion but not a devised top-heavy theory. This includes the analogy to the experiences in Zen which is actually used in different religious orientations as a general exercise.
Mystics in various countries and times describe, in their respective parables and terms of their world view, similar cosmic experiences and divine insights. The ratio and the everyday mind do not perceive mysticism or look at it skeptically.
Since the border between mystic and mysterious is not always clear enough and the often misused term mysticism has an unpleasant taste (somewhat with reason), we would like to add some neutral definitions. You may recognize the main characteristics of Egon von Vietinghoff, his manner of work and his philosophy.
He was humble enough and absorbed by his work as a painter and author not to call himself a mystic.
What means to be a mystic ?
This part is in process ...
Wikipedia (December 2011)
Mysticism (from the Greek mystikos, meaning 'an initiate') is the knowledge of, and especially the personal experience of, states of consciousness, i.e. levels of being, beyond normal human perception, including experience and even communion with a supreme being… The present meaning of the term mysticism arose via Platonism and Neo-Platonism – which referred to the Eleusinian initiation as a metaphor for the "initiation" to spiritual truths and experiences – and is the pursuit of communion with, identity with, or conscious awareness of an ultimate reality, divinity, spiritual truth, or God through direct experience, intuition, instinct or insight. Mysticism usually centers on practices intended to nurture those experiences. Mysticism may be dualistic, maintaining a distinction between the self and the divine, or may be non-dualistic. Many if not all of the world’s great religions have arisen around the teachings of mystics (including Buddha, Jesus, Lao Tze, and Krishna); and most religious traditions describe fundamental mystical experience, at least esoterically. Enlightenment or Illumination are generic English terms for the phenomenon, derived from the Latin illuminatio … and adopted in English translations of Buddhist texts, but used loosely to describe the state of mystical attainment regardless of faith. Conventional religions … have strong institutional structures, including formal hierarchies and mandated sacred texts and/or creeds. Adherents of the faith are expected to respect or follow these closely, so mysticism is often deprecated or persecuted… Since … mystical knowledge cannot be directly written down or spoken of (but must be experienced), numerous literary forms that allude to such knowledge – often with contradictions or even jokes – have developed…: Aphorisms, poetry, koans, riddles, and contradictions. These can be meant as humorous phrases; or as serious questions with significant mystical answers. Others believe that the most edifying understanding of these riddles is that excessive effort contemplating the impossible can give an individual the opportunity to stop trying to 'achieve' and start just 'being'.
Encyclopedia Britannica (11th edition published in 1911)
(Omissions and highlighting by the editor of the Egon von Vietinghoff Foundation’s website)
Mysticism appears in connexion with the endeavor of the human mind to grasp the divine essence or the ultimate reality of things, and to enjoy the blessedness of actual communion with the Highest. The first is the philosophic side of mysticism; the second, its religious side. The first effort is theoretical or speculative; the second, practical. The thought that is most intensely present with the mystic is that … of a supreme, all-pervading, and indwelling power, in whom all things are one. Hence the speculative utterances of mysticism are always more or less pantheistic in character. On the practical side, mysticism maintains the possibility of direct intercourse with this Being of beings – intercourse, not through any external media such as an historical revelation, oracles, answers to prayer, and the like, but by a species of ecstatic transfusion or identification, in which the individual becomes in very truth 'partaker of the divine nature.' …
Mysticism differs, therefore, from ordinary pantheism in that its inmost motive is religious; but, whereas religion is ordinarily occupied with a practical problem and develops its theory in an ethical reference, mysticism displays a predominatingly speculative bent, starting from the divine nature rather than from man and his surroundings, taking the symbolism of religious feeling as literally or metaphysically true, and straining after the present realization of an ineffable union. The union which sound religious teaching represents as realized in the submission of the will and the ethical harmony of the whole life is then reduced to a, passive experience, to something which comes and goes in time, and which may be of only momentary duration.
Mysticism … is not a name applicable to any particular system. It may be the outgrowth of many differing modes of thought and feeling. Most frequently it appears historically, in relation to some definite system of belief, as a reaction of the spirit against the letter. When a religion begins to ossify into a system of formulas and observances, those who protest in the name of heart-religion are not unfrequently known by the name of mystics. At times they merely bring into prominence again the ever-fresh fact of personal religious experience; at other times mysticism develops itself as a powerful solvent of definite dogmas.
In the East, mysticism is not so much a specific phenomenon as a natural deduction from the dominant philosophic systems, and the normal expression of religious feeling in the lands in which it appears… The so-called mysticism of the Persian Sufis … appears in the 9th century … as a kind of reaction against the rigid monotheism and formalism of Islam… Persian literature … is full of an ardent natural pantheism, in which a mystic apprehension of the unity and divinity of all things heightens the delight in natural and in human beauty…
The contemplative asceticism of the Essenes of Judaea may be mentioned... By Plotinus … the One is explicitly exalted above the vows and the 'ideas'; it transcends existence altogether and is not cognizable by reason. Remaining itself in repose, it rays out, as it were, from its own fullness an image of itself, which is called vas, and which constitutes the system of ideas of the intelligible world. The soul is in turn the image or product of the vas, and the soul by its motion begets corporeal matter. The soul thus faces two ways – towards the vas, from which it springs, and towards the material life, which is its own product…
The appeal is still to the individual, who, if not by reason then by some higher faculty, claims to realize absolute truth and to taste absolute blessedness. Mysticism … appears in the medieval Church as the protest of practical religion against the predominance of the dialectical spirit. It is so with Bernard of Clairvaux … who condemns Abelard’s distinctions and reasonings as externalizing and degrading the faith. St Bernard’s mysticism is of a practical cast, dealing mainly with the means by which man may attain to the knowledge and enjoyment of God. Reason has three stages, in the highest of which the mind is able, by abstraction from earthly things, to rise to contemplatio or the vision of the divine. More exalted still, however, is the sudden ecstatic vision, such as was granted, for example, to Paul…
To lose thyself in some sort, as if thou wert not, and to have no consciousness of thyself at all – to be emptied of thyself...
Richard of St Victor declares in opposition to dialectic scholasticism, that the objects of mystic contemplation are partly above reason, and partly, as in the intuition of the Trinity, contrary to reason… From the 12th and 13th centuries onward there is observable in the different countries of Europe a widespread reaction against the growing formalism and worldliness of the Church... Men began to feel a desire for a theology of the heart and an unworldly simplicity of life. …
In the beginning of the 13th century the foundation of the Dominican and Franciscan orders furnished a more ecclesiastical and regular means of supplying the same wants, and numerous convents sprang up at once throughout Germany. The German mind was a peculiarly fruitful soil for mysticism, and, in connexion either with the Beguines or the Church organization, a number of women appear about this time, combining a spirit of mystical piety and asceticism with sturdy reformatory zeal directed against the abuses of the time… Meister Eckhart was a distinguished son of the Church; but in reading his works we feel at once that we have passed into quite a different sphere of thought from that of the churchly mystics; we seem to leave the cloister behind and to breathe a freer atmosphere. The scholastic mysticism was … practical and psychological in character. It was largely a devotional aid to the realization of present union with God; and, so far as it was theoretical, it was a theory of the faculties by which such a union is attainable… But in Eckhart the attitude of the churchman and traditionalist is entirely abandoned. Instead of systematizing dogmas, he appears to evolve a philosophy by the free exercise of reason… The freedom with which Eckhart treats historical Christianity allies him much more to the German idealists of the 19th century than to his scholastic predecessors…
Mysticism did prepare men in a very real way for a break with the traditional system. Mysticism instinctively recedes from formulas that have become stereotyped and mechanical. On the other hand its claim for spiritual freedom was soon to be found in opposition also to the Reformers. The wild doctrines of Thomas Münzer and the Zwickau prophets … roused Luther to the dangerous possibilities of mysticism as a disintegrating force. … The final breakdown of scholasticism as a rationalized system of dogma may be seen in … Nicolaus of Cusa …, who distinguishes between the intellectus and the discursively acting ratio almost precisely in the style of later distinctions between the reason and the understanding. The intellect combines what the understanding separates; hence Nicolas teaches the principle of the coincidentia contradictoriorum. If the results of the understanding go by the name of knowledge, then the higher teaching of the intellectual intuition may be called ignorance – ignorance, however, that is conscious of itself, docta ignorantia. "Intuitio," "speculatio," "visio sine comprehensione," "comprehensio incomprehensibilis," "mystica theologia," "tertius caelus," are some of the terms he applies to this knowledge above knowledge; but in the working out of his system he is remarkably free from extravagance…
The gloom and harshness of these Spanish mystics (St Theresa and John of the Cross) are absent from the tender, contemplative spirit of Francois de Sales …; and in the quietism of Mme Guyon … and Miguel de Molinos … there is again a sufficient implication of mystical doctrine to rouse the suspicion of the ecclesiastical authorities…
The religiosity of the Quakers, with their doctrines of the "inner light" and the influence of the Spirit, has decided affinities with mysticism; and the autobiography of George Fox … proceeds throughout on the assumption of supernatural guidance. Stripped of its definitely miraculous character, the doctrine of the inner light may be regarded as the familiar mystical protest against formalism, literalism, and scripture-worship…
Philosophy since the end of the 18th century has frequently shown a tendency to diverge into mysticism. This has been especially so in Germany. The term mysticism is indeed often extended by popular usage and philosophical partisanship to the whole activity of the post-Kantian idealists. In this usage the word would be equivalent to the more recent and scarcely less abused term, transcendentalism, and as such it is used even by a sympathetic writer like Carlyle; but this looseness of phraseology only serves to blur important distinctions. However absolute a philosopher’s idealism may be, he is erroneously styled a mystic if he moves towards his conclusions only by the patient labour of the reason… When Recejac defines mysticism as “the tendency to draw near to the Absolute in moral union by symbolic means,” the definition … is one which would apply to the philosophy of Kant…
It is in place where the movement of revulsion from a mechanical philosophy takes the form rather of immediate assertion than of reasoned demonstration, and where the writers, after insisting generally on the spiritual basis of phenomena, either leave the position without further definition or expressly declare that the ultimate problems of philosophy cannot be reduced to articulate formulas… Schelling’s explicit appeal in the Identitätsphilosophie to an intellectual intuition of the Absolute, is of the essence of mysticism, both as an appeal to a suprarational faculty and as a claim not merely to know but to realize God.
Thoughts of Vietinghoff's contemporaries
(not available yet)
Giorgio de Chirico (1888-1978)
Carlo Carrà (1881-1966)
Filippo de Pisis (1896-1956)
Michail Matjuschin (1861-1934)
Wladimir Tatlin (1885 -1953)
El Lissitzky (1890/91-1941)
Wassily Kandinsky (1866 -1944)
Piet Mondrian (1872-1944)
Max Ernst (1891-1976)
Hans Arp (1886/87-1966)
Paul Klee (1879-1940)