Los Angeles Times

On common, cosmic ground

‘The Basilisk’ at Nicodim reflects on the spiritual with disparate works.

- By Carolina A. Miranda carolina.miranda @latimes.com Twitter: @cmonstah

Pass through the doors of Nicodim Gallery in Los Angeles and you may think you have entered the astral plane.

In one room are feathered costumes and alien paintings produced by the Unarius Academy of Science, the 6-decade-old El Cajon spiritual group that believes in reincarnat­ion and the channeling of knowledge from alien beings. In another is a spiraling wall piece attributed to the seminal Dadaist Marcel Duchamp.

“The Basilisk,” as this exhibition is called, is no ordinary show.

Curated by Aaron Moulton, who serves as the creative director at Venus gallery (across the street from Nicodim), this otherworld­ly installati­on takes universal symbols of light and dark and assembles them in a single, cosmic show. And it is wonderfull­y jarring.

There are paintings by Monarca Lynn Merrifield — who claims to have been contacted by alien beings — that combine Christian imagery with extraterre­strial invasion. One room over is a video work of a sun by artist Diana Thater, who in 2015 had a one-woman installati­on at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. A painting by Thomas Kinkade (yes, that Thomas Kinkade) shows a ship named “Faith” navigating stormy seas. It hangs on wallpaper depicting outer space created by contempora­ry artist Mungo Thomson.

Moulton said he was interested in finding the ways seemingly disparate works might share common mystical ground. Abstractio­n and paintings of aliens can both contend with issues of existence and being, for example. Or there might be shared symbols, such as the spiral or circumpunc­t (a dot with a circle around it), markings that make appearance­s in myriad cultures.

“These archetypal energy systems run through the human project and go across culture and time,” Moulton says. “So thinking of evil and light and this idea of magical thinking — these things that we personify with the boogeyman or god or a shaman or the priest — this show is that.”

“[It] is really about exploring the idea of a universal aesthetic experience,” he adds. “It’s an aggressive term at a time when we’ve hyper-specified the human experience. But I believe we are very simple animals who look at light and dark.”

The exhibition at Nicodim is inspired by temple design. It is a progressio­n of spaces and works that lead to a place that is designed to channel “true light.”

“The Basilisk” is the second in a three-part series of esoteric exhibition­s that the curator is organizing for Nicodim. The first, held last year, was titled “Omul Negru,” and examined questions of evil and how it is personifie­d. “The Basilisk,” says Moulton, “is all about coming from darkness and seeking the light — the push-pull between the two.”

And the third, which is scheduled to go on view at Nicodim’s Romanian branch in June (the gallery has spaces in Los Angeles and Bucharest), takes as its point of inspiratio­n the Hierophant, the card from the tarot deck that shows a figure with two fingers pointing toward heaven and two pointing down.

“It’s the idea of the person who reveals the sacred,” says Moulton. “The priest, the guru, the madman, the charlatan.”

The series of shows is not some wink-wink-ironic juxtaposit­ion of high-low. In fact, Moulton doesn’t much care for the idea of breaking culture out into those sorts of categories.

“To call Thomas Kinkade a ‘low’ artist is a real stating of privilege,” he says. “Kinkade is an important artist. He’s just not important to the art world, just because it doesn’t appeal to their agendas.”

Instead, for Moulton, the exhibition­s are about putting together objects from across various aspects of the human experience in a way that explores the yearnings of faith. Optical art mixes with sacred painting mixes with abstract contempora­ry art mixes with aliens in a way that feels electrical­ly charged.

In this way, the curator has sought to bring together the folklore of faith, be it that of the Unarians or artists with degrees from UCLA.

“Folklore is an enduring language,” Moulton says. “Folklore is what we all come back to.

“Really, it’s in these moments when truth falls apart that you have the greatest spiritual awakenings.”

 ?? Nicodim Gallery ?? AN INSTALLATI­ON in “The Basilisk” exhibition features objects, including a sarcophagu­s, created and employed by members of the religious group Summum.
Nicodim Gallery AN INSTALLATI­ON in “The Basilisk” exhibition features objects, including a sarcophagu­s, created and employed by members of the religious group Summum.
 ?? Nicodim Gallery ?? “URIEL AND the Lemurian Masters” is from the Unarius Academy of Science, a spiritual group.
Nicodim Gallery “URIEL AND the Lemurian Masters” is from the Unarius Academy of Science, a spiritual group.

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