It is an absolute honour to see my name alongside women and men I admire and deeply respect for what they contributed to the collective .......
This autumn and winter, The College of Psychic Studies presents The Medium is the Message – a major exhibition that explores the rich and complex relationship between artistic practice and mediumship.
Marking the centenary of the College's move to its historic home at 16 Queensberry Place in 1925, the exhibition spans four floors and features over 100 artworks alongside rare archival materials. It brings together more than 30 artists from the mid-19th century to the present day, examining how artists have visualised supernatural connection and imagined radical futures shaped by the ghostly and the unseen.
The Medium is the Message invites visitors to consider the artist as a channel between worlds – as a receiver of visions, energies and ideas. It highlights the enduring role of mediumship within the College's history, with particular focus on the vital contributions of women – as artists, mediums, and feminist visionaries.
The exhibition includes newly acquired works by Ithell Colquhoun, Aleksandra Ionowa, Sidney Manley, Ethel Le Rossignol, Anna Mary Howitt Watts and others alongside the first UK presentation of American visionary artist Paulina Peavy. These are shown in dialogue with works by contemporary artists including Sandra Vásquez de la Horra, Chantal Powell and Samir Mahmood, engaging with themes of spirit communication, ancestral memory, and the energetic connection between the body, Earth, and unseen realms.
THE REAL SURREAL PART III: HOW THE LIGHT GETS IN
July 10 - September 5, 2025
Opening Reception: Wednesday, July 16 from 6-8pm
(in conjunction with the ADAA Gallery Walk)
Cavin-Morris Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibition: The Real Surreal Part III: How the Light Gets In from July 10 - September 5, 2025.
This third part of our trilogy of exhibitions presents other artists involved with our gallery who, independently of any art movement, non-personal agenda or canon have integrated art and especially the process of making art, into the very areas claimed by mainstream Surrealists, who intellectually sought to achieve in their own work automatic writing and drawing, the immediacy of madness, the juxtapositions of diverse materials in unexpected conformations, dreams, psychic phenomena, occult magic, and spiritualism in its varied usages.
We have also included several Contemporary artists to augment this group, trained artists who are not catering to the mainstream canon. The people who create this work follow idiosyncratic iconoclastic paths, mainstream or non-mainstream. We can say the ‘official’ Surrealists made their work ABOUT the phenomena mentioned above, and these non-mainstream artists make their work from within those phenomena.
Jean Dubuffet and André Breton were prophetic in their fields but were not around long enough to observe the contemporary manifestations and new additions to the field. This is particularly true regarding artists of non-Western origin and the African-Atlantic diaspora. The gates are opening in institutions such as the Collection de L’art Brut, Lausanne, and the Pompidou Center (inheritor of Bruno Decharme’s esteemed abcd collection, now on view at the Grand Palais in the exhibition titled Dans l’intimité d’une collection) to continue the work of exposure and information on this magic facet of non-mainstream contemporary art all across the Ethnosphere, as Wade Davis has so fittingly named it.
These are the artists who are also most sensitive and vulnerable to world events. Surrealism was a reaction to, and antidote for, institutional repression of culture and the creative soul. For third-world artists it celebrated the right to personal freedom. Dubuffet at one point called it the work of the ‘common man’ but in truth the common man who makes this work is also the charismatic individual who is a culture bearer for spiritual and visionary knowledge and ancestral information. André Breton sensed this when he added the works of Haitian master and Vodou priest Hector Hyppolite to the Art Brut Collection. It was a shame the paintings were later withdrawn when the collection came to New York. We are making up for that error now by exploring the visionary creatives from ALL parts of the world. This is how the light gets in.
Artists in the exhibition include Angkasapura, José Bedia, J.J. Cromer, Leonard Daley, Nicole Frobusch, Catherine Garrigue, Dagmar Havlíčková, Shneider Léon Hilaire, Davood Koochaki, Olga Karlíková, Loïc Lucas, Přemysl Martinec, Jean-Pierre Nadau, Simone Pellegrini, Andre Pierre, Imam Sucahyo and Anna Zemánková. Sculptors include Chrissy Callas, Rosie McLachlan, Yohei Nishimura, Andrey Tischenko, and Petros Tsakmaklis.
There is a Crack in Everything; That’s How the Light Gets In
-Leonard Cohen
For further information please contact info@cavinmorris.com or call us at 212-226-3768.
Nicole Frobusch, Throne, 2024, Natural earth pigments & 24k gold on hemp paper
16.5 x 11.5 inches, 41.9 x 29.2 cm, NFro 40
CAVIN-MORRIS GALLERY-NEW YORK
TRANSCENDANTS II
(September 12 – October 19, 2024 )
Opening Reception on September 19th, from 6 – 8 pm
Cavin-Morris is pleased to present TRANSCENDANTS II, an exhibition of visionary drawings and paintings.
While we recognize fully that the word ‘visionary’ is not a monolith of meaning, for the purposes of this exhibition we are interested in the works that serve as vessels of real spiritual connection, whether achieved through personal or community belief, or communication with, or direct and immediate presentation of, a vision. The art is not so much a narrative of visionary experience as it is an actual utilization of the creation as an arena of paranormal experience. For this reason, our exhibition is not and cannot be encyclopedic. Though ignored by mainstream art history its actual global presence is huge. TRANSCENDANTS could entertain and sustain a thousand variations.
In the last decade we have seen well-deserved attention paid to the spiritual abstractionists and surrealists of the early to mid-twentieth century. Exhibitions, books, and articles have been written on new and current artists working within the same parameters. Shows have been staged in major museums with works by Leonora Carrington, Agnes Pelton, Hilma af Klint, Emma Kunz, Remedios Varo, Georgiana Houghton, and others. The other commonality between these artists is that they all came up through or were seriously influenced by the ‘Academy’.
In December 2023, Cavin-Morris presented the first of two exhibitions called Transcendants which dealt with artists who were true spiritualists and mediums but were ignored by the art world because they were not part of that canonic mainstream, a life choice by many of the practitioners. The living artists in this follow-up exhibition illustrate the point that some working now need recognition and should not be bypassed by art historians in the current critical stampede toward newer artists who too often appropriate the spiritualistic visual language of earlier artists.
There has been a pithy problem with the above mainstream focus because it excludes some of the most authentic visionary artists in the world. It ignores the visionary content of artists who made work as a direct animistic contact with the paranormal world, often mediumistically, and who did not make the work for any part of the art world canon, but rather for personal and/or community or cultural reasons.
This exhibition reflects the work of Anna Zemánková, Frances Smokowski, Dagmar Havlíčková, František Jaroslav Pecka, Nicole Frobusch, and Cara Macwilliam. Though all are empathically tuned to animistic aspects of Nature and occult forces, the visual and conceptual language of these artists are quite different from each other. There is no central codex of protocols common to all; a spiritual vision beyond the call is an individual journey.
These six artists are not classic Art Brut artists. Each is or was involved on some level with the artworld and the cultural aesthetics of their times. We have included Anna Zemánková in both exhibitions because she was our beacon and gateway early on in understanding the tremendous heights and depths of artists making this kind of work as a personal amulet. They can rise above personal and political adversity by creating. The process of making the art is as important or more important than the final work.
We are presenting this body of work as an observation of the deep history of artists whose creations dance with the spirit world. While the work itself is timeless the art in the exhibition ranges from the 1920s to the present. An online catalog combining both shows will be available later in the Fall.
Artists in the exhibition include: Nicole Frobusch, Dagmar Havlíčková, Cara Macwilliam, František Jaroslav Pecka, Frances Smokowski, and Anna Zemánková.
For further information please contact info@cavinmorris.com or call us at 212-226-3768.
At The DOLLHOUSE
I will be exhibiting my clay sculptures alongside a selection of my paintings
I am delighted to offer this 6-week online course with The College Of Psychic Studies, where I will share my ongoing research on the divine feminine - alchemy - colour and symbolism
To register please follow this link
Cavin-Morris Gallery -New York
Delighted to be represented by Shari and Randall in their Gallery on 529 West 20th Street, 3rd Floor, New York
The current exhibition is from 22 June- 31st of August and features some of my work.
For inquiries https://www.cavinmorris.com/self-taught-a-l#/nicole-frobusch/
COLLEGE OF PSYCHIC STUDIES-LONDON
Delighted to be offering another intuitive clay workshop on the 10th of February 2024, at my favourite place in London.
The link for booking and more info can be found here.
Spiritual Arts Foundation
Very honoured to be a member of the Spiritual Arts Foundation alongside many other stupendous artists
They Come They Sit They go
My first group contemporary art exhibition who said it wasn't possible........
Women in Art Fair
This is very close to my heart and I am very excited to be exhibiting two of my pieces at the Women in Art Fair at the Mall Galleries
Start Art Fair at The Saatchi Gallery 11-15th of October
I am very honoured to have LUNAR exhibited in this beautiful group project
THE JAKA PROJECT
ONLINE ART AUCTION TO RAISE MONEY FOR THE KOGI TRIBE TO HELP REBUILD A BRIDGE .
During this in-person workshop with artist Nicole Frobusch, we will dive deep into the process of intuitive creation with clay. Quietening our mind, we allow our hands to guide us in forming the clay. The result: A deeply personal and sacred expression.
During this in-person workshop with artist Nicole Frobusch, we will dive deep into the process of intuitive creation with clay. Quietening our mind, we allow our hands to guide us in forming the clay. The result: A deeply personal and sacred expression.
I also recently collaborated with amazing Stan from @a_x_art the outcome is below