Excerpt:
...Historically, art and the sacred have always been
intertwined. In early Shamanic societies the artist/healer/priest/shaman
was the creative source of culture. From East to West
up to the Industrial Revolution the creation of art
and the work of art itself has been understood as occurring
at a juncture between the spiritual and physical worlds.
Alex Grey has stated that the purpose of his art is
to examine the relationship of mind and body and to
awaken the spirit It is a rare occurance for an artist
to explore directly and explicitly the cycle of the
transformation of human consciousness as Grey has done
in such works as his Sacred Mirrors. Grey's visionary
approach to integrating the physical and metaphysical
worlds has labeled him as an Outsider in relation to
the concerns of much contemporary art, but the sacred
light and content of Grey's work shares affinities with
such diverse artists as Fra Angelico, Michelangelo,
Blake, Van Gogh and Rothko.
Grey's earliest memories predict the course that his
life will follow. While lying in his crib, he remembers
watching textures unfold, first, a boundless blissful
white light. Then a gnarley snaggle-branched, ugly dark
force moved into that space, coming in clumps, and taking
over. This terrifying shadowy swarm would obliterate
the white light. Little islands of luminosity would
crop up and clear away the gnarly texture until the
pure white light reappeared. Grey interprets these early
"texture" visions as perceptions of primordial universal
energies, the ongoing flux of repose and motion, yin
and yang, darkness and light, good and evil, life and
death. Grey's artworks point to this early vision by
their constant reference to the theme of polarities
and their visionary perception of subtle light.