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A Few Recent Articles Worth Looking At

The Camden Arts Centre is hosting the first UK solo exhibition of the occult paintings of Swedish artist Hilma af Klint. Klint, an avid Theosophist painted over a thousand occult works that were kept secret until twenty years after her death.

Atlantic critic Philip Jenkins gets around to reviewing “Aradia, the Gospel of the Witches” only 107 years after its first release. Jenkin’s calls Aradia “the great-grandmother of modern neo-paganism.” The Atlantic has also announced plans to review Gerald Gardner’s “Witchcraft Today” sometime in the year 2061.

The Portland Tribune looks at the phenomena of home altars and the people who build them. Included in the story is an amazing picture of an altar built by Enrique Ugalde, a performance artist with a keen interest in shamanism and the occult.

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