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Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995)
Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995), a surrealist, poet, actress, occultist, and an intriguing individual within California’s counterculture movement of the mid-20th century, possessed a multifaceted artistic expression. Through her paintings, drawings, writings, and performances, she bridged the influences of Surrealism, beat culture, and the occult.
#surrealism #surreal #surrealist #surrealistdigest #thesurrealistdigest #surrealismart #art #arthistory #artbiography #biography #marjoriecameron
published: 24 Jun 2023
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Marjorie Cameron, Burt Shonberg, and Bohemian Los Angeles, a conversation with author Spencer Kansa
An in-depth conversation with biographer Spencer Kansa on two of the most fascinating and creative figures in the history of Bohemian LA!
Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995) was an artist, poet, actress and occultist. Her marriage to maverick rocket scientist (and fellow follower of Aleister Crowley) Jack Parsons put her at the center of alchemical L.A. in the 1940s and early 1950s. Following Parsons’ death in an explosion in 1952, she embarked on a lifelong spiritual quest expressed in her dazzling and hypnotic esoteric artworks, appearances in films (Curtis Harrington’s The Wormwood Star and Night Tide with Dennis Hopper) and more.
Burt Shonberg (1933-1977) was one of the premiere psychedelic and esoteric artists in L.A. in the 1950s and 1960s, a close friend and associate of Marjorie Camero...
published: 11 Jul 2023
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Marjorie Cameron: The Scarlet Woman
Marjorie Cameron: The Scarlet Woman. Catherine Auman is interviewed by Tom Explores Los Angeles about Cameron, wife of Jack Parsons, and perhaps Aleister Crowley's long-awaited Scarlet Woman. Cameron was an artist, an occultist, and she starred in Kenneth Anger's The Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome. MOCA later hosted a posthumous exhibition of her artwork.
❤ Find more Catherine Auman at https://linktr.ee/catherineauman
❤ Check out Catherine’s Books at http://tinyurl.com/28xxr7uc
Please WATCH & SHARE this video if it resonates with you, and don’t forget to SUBSCRIBE for more upcoming videos to maximize your personal and spiritual growth.
QUESTION — Have a question about personal or spiritual growth, dating, finding love or anything else? Post below in the comments section of this vide...
published: 13 Jan 2022
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Marjorie Cameron
In this Halloween episode of "The Wildwood Witch Podcast," Samantha Brown, our siren of the esoteric, has once again transcended the boundaries of time and mortality to bring us an intimate conversation with the enigmatic Marjorie Cameron (23 April 1922 - 24 June 1995).
Cameron, an artist, occultist, and muse of the infamous rocket engineer Jack Parsons, shares her life's tapestry—a blend of art, magick, and rebellion. From her early feelings of alienation to her pivotal role as "Babalon" in Parsons' Thelemic rituals, Cameron's narrative is a testament to her quest for authenticity and transcendence. Her involvement with figures like Kenneth Anger and her contributions to avant-garde cinema are also explored, revealing a woman who lived fiercely, unapologetically, and at the vanguard of ...
published: 05 May 2024
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Cameron - MOCA U - MOCAtv
"There was a time when art was an assault on what art was, and practices were motivated by an elated passion for regions of the mind that amaze the vision more than the eyes. Cameron [b. Marjorie Cameron, Belle Plaine, Iowa, 1922; d. Los Angeles, 1995] was of a time of heedless belief in the power of art to invent and celebrate new ways of representation and being. Her work oscillates between the psychedelic and surreal and defies a conventional understanding of modernity as a logical notion of progress in art. She reminds us of how little we perceive of our existence and how much our mind, if fully explored, awakens an alternative knowledge.
Her life and her art parallel with some of the greatest creative minds of our time including Kenneth Anger, Wallace Berman, William Blake, Bruce Con...
published: 06 Nov 2014
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Marjorie Cameron: Babalon #Cameron #magick #thelema #crowley #podcast #jackparsons #babalon
Jack Parsons invoked Babalon in the desert. Marjorie Cameron answered the call.
published: 30 Mar 2024
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Marjorie Taylor Greene tells David Cameron to 'kiss my a**' after Nazi jibe | Ukraine crisis
The American Republican congresswoman, Marjorie Taylor Greene, has issued a distinctly undiplomatic riposte to British foreign secretary Lord Cameron.
Her fiery reaction came after the Conservative peer compared her party to Nazi appeasers in a row over US funding for Ukraine.
"David Cameron can kiss my a**," she told Sky News as we spoke to her in Washington.
Live updates: https://news.sky.com/story/politics-latest-rishi-sunak-general-election-keir-starmer-12593360
#davidcameron #ukraine #republicanparty
SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube channel for more videos: http://www.youtube.com/skynews
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/skynews
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/skynews
Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/skynews
Follow us on TikTok: https://www.tik...
published: 14 Feb 2024
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MARJORIE CAMERON MYSTERY BABYLON
Marjorie Cameron worked with John W. Parsons in the Babalon Working. I understand that the intention of the magical working--which was a series of rituals over a period of time--was to bring a moon child (astral child) into the world. Before the moon child could be conceived in Marjorie's womb, John died in a laboratory explosion. However, Marjorie wrote in a letter to a friend that John had impregnated her from beyond the veil and that she carried the moon child.
published: 12 Jul 2009
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Marjorie Cameron
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marjorie_Cameron
Music: Andalusian lullaby -Nima Ben David, viola da gamba
published: 05 Mar 2011
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An Evening with Cameron - MOCA U - MOCAtv
Prior to Cameron: Songs For The Witch Woman, October 11, 2014–January 18, 2015 at MOCA Pacific Design Center, the largest survey of Marjorie Cameron's artwork was The Pearl of Reprisal, a retrospective at the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery in 1989. The exhibition spanned thirty years, from the notorious Untitled “Peyote Vision” (1955) to Pluto Transiting the Twelfth House (1978-1986), pen and ink drawings that lent insight to the artist’s psychic state at the time.
Before the opening reception, Hedy Sontag introduced a program titled An Evening With Cameron: The Pearl of Reprisal. Sontag screened two films that feature Cameron: Kenneth Anger’s Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome (1954) and Curtis Harrington’s lyrical documentary The Wormwood Star (1955). After the screening, Cameron emer...
published: 14 Jan 2015
1:28
Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995)
Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995), a surrealist, poet, actress, occultist, and an intriguing individual within California’s counterculture movement of the mid-20th c...
Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995), a surrealist, poet, actress, occultist, and an intriguing individual within California’s counterculture movement of the mid-20th century, possessed a multifaceted artistic expression. Through her paintings, drawings, writings, and performances, she bridged the influences of Surrealism, beat culture, and the occult.
#surrealism #surreal #surrealist #surrealistdigest #thesurrealistdigest #surrealismart #art #arthistory #artbiography #biography #marjoriecameron
https://wn.com/Marjorie_Cameron_(1922_1995)
Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995), a surrealist, poet, actress, occultist, and an intriguing individual within California’s counterculture movement of the mid-20th century, possessed a multifaceted artistic expression. Through her paintings, drawings, writings, and performances, she bridged the influences of Surrealism, beat culture, and the occult.
#surrealism #surreal #surrealist #surrealistdigest #thesurrealistdigest #surrealismart #art #arthistory #artbiography #biography #marjoriecameron
- published: 24 Jun 2023
- views: 834
1:38:54
Marjorie Cameron, Burt Shonberg, and Bohemian Los Angeles, a conversation with author Spencer Kansa
An in-depth conversation with biographer Spencer Kansa on two of the most fascinating and creative figures in the history of Bohemian LA!
Marjorie Cameron (192...
An in-depth conversation with biographer Spencer Kansa on two of the most fascinating and creative figures in the history of Bohemian LA!
Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995) was an artist, poet, actress and occultist. Her marriage to maverick rocket scientist (and fellow follower of Aleister Crowley) Jack Parsons put her at the center of alchemical L.A. in the 1940s and early 1950s. Following Parsons’ death in an explosion in 1952, she embarked on a lifelong spiritual quest expressed in her dazzling and hypnotic esoteric artworks, appearances in films (Curtis Harrington’s The Wormwood Star and Night Tide with Dennis Hopper) and more.
Burt Shonberg (1933-1977) was one of the premiere psychedelic and esoteric artists in L.A. in the 1950s and 1960s, a close friend and associate of Marjorie Cameron’s (who turned him on to the teachings of the Edwardian magus Aleister Crowley and introduced him to the mind-warping properties of peyote.) Shonberg also embraced the Fourth Way system of Gurdjieff, and his canvases began to reflect the mystical illumination inspired by his higher states of consciousness. His work was prominently featured in Roger Corman’s Vincent Price-starring horror film The Fall of the House of Usher and on the walls of venues like the bohemian coffeehouse Café Frankenstein. His gorgeous, otherworldly paintings of mythical creatures in fantastic landscapes have only recently begun to attract the attention they deserve.
Spencer Kansa is the biographer of legendary LA-based artists Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995) and Burt Shonberg (1933-1977) and author of the novel Zoning. His interviews with literary icons William Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Paul Bowles and Herbert Huncke feature in Joe Ambrose’s book, Chelsea Hotel Manhattan.
Wormwood Star: The Magickal Life of Marjorie Cameron by Spencer Kansa
available at the PRS Bookstore! https://www.prs.org/store/p3089/Wormwood_Star_the_Magickal_Life_of_Marjorie_Cameron.html
To help support PRS and programs like these please visit: https://www.prs.org/support.html
https://wn.com/Marjorie_Cameron,_Burt_Shonberg,_And_Bohemian_Los_Angeles,_A_Conversation_With_Author_Spencer_Kansa
An in-depth conversation with biographer Spencer Kansa on two of the most fascinating and creative figures in the history of Bohemian LA!
Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995) was an artist, poet, actress and occultist. Her marriage to maverick rocket scientist (and fellow follower of Aleister Crowley) Jack Parsons put her at the center of alchemical L.A. in the 1940s and early 1950s. Following Parsons’ death in an explosion in 1952, she embarked on a lifelong spiritual quest expressed in her dazzling and hypnotic esoteric artworks, appearances in films (Curtis Harrington’s The Wormwood Star and Night Tide with Dennis Hopper) and more.
Burt Shonberg (1933-1977) was one of the premiere psychedelic and esoteric artists in L.A. in the 1950s and 1960s, a close friend and associate of Marjorie Cameron’s (who turned him on to the teachings of the Edwardian magus Aleister Crowley and introduced him to the mind-warping properties of peyote.) Shonberg also embraced the Fourth Way system of Gurdjieff, and his canvases began to reflect the mystical illumination inspired by his higher states of consciousness. His work was prominently featured in Roger Corman’s Vincent Price-starring horror film The Fall of the House of Usher and on the walls of venues like the bohemian coffeehouse Café Frankenstein. His gorgeous, otherworldly paintings of mythical creatures in fantastic landscapes have only recently begun to attract the attention they deserve.
Spencer Kansa is the biographer of legendary LA-based artists Marjorie Cameron (1922-1995) and Burt Shonberg (1933-1977) and author of the novel Zoning. His interviews with literary icons William Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Paul Bowles and Herbert Huncke feature in Joe Ambrose’s book, Chelsea Hotel Manhattan.
Wormwood Star: The Magickal Life of Marjorie Cameron by Spencer Kansa
available at the PRS Bookstore! https://www.prs.org/store/p3089/Wormwood_Star_the_Magickal_Life_of_Marjorie_Cameron.html
To help support PRS and programs like these please visit: https://www.prs.org/support.html
- published: 11 Jul 2023
- views: 3853
3:12
Marjorie Cameron: The Scarlet Woman
Marjorie Cameron: The Scarlet Woman. Catherine Auman is interviewed by Tom Explores Los Angeles about Cameron, wife of Jack Parsons, and perhaps Aleister Crowle...
Marjorie Cameron: The Scarlet Woman. Catherine Auman is interviewed by Tom Explores Los Angeles about Cameron, wife of Jack Parsons, and perhaps Aleister Crowley's long-awaited Scarlet Woman. Cameron was an artist, an occultist, and she starred in Kenneth Anger's The Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome. MOCA later hosted a posthumous exhibition of her artwork.
❤ Find more Catherine Auman at https://linktr.ee/catherineauman
❤ Check out Catherine’s Books at http://tinyurl.com/28xxr7uc
Please WATCH & SHARE this video if it resonates with you, and don’t forget to SUBSCRIBE for more upcoming videos to maximize your personal and spiritual growth.
QUESTION — Have a question about personal or spiritual growth, dating, finding love or anything else? Post below in the comments section of this video!
Sign up for our monthly newsletter: http://goo.gl/LAa5yx and receive twice-monthly inspiration PLUS a free sample of Catherine’s books delivered right to your inbox!
Connect with Catherine Auman on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/catherineauman.author/
Instagram: @catherineauman
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/catherineauman/
Wesbsites:
Catherine Auman’s Website: https://catherineauman.com
The Transpersonal Center: https://thetranspersonalcenter.com
https://wn.com/Marjorie_Cameron_The_Scarlet_Woman
Marjorie Cameron: The Scarlet Woman. Catherine Auman is interviewed by Tom Explores Los Angeles about Cameron, wife of Jack Parsons, and perhaps Aleister Crowley's long-awaited Scarlet Woman. Cameron was an artist, an occultist, and she starred in Kenneth Anger's The Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome. MOCA later hosted a posthumous exhibition of her artwork.
❤ Find more Catherine Auman at https://linktr.ee/catherineauman
❤ Check out Catherine’s Books at http://tinyurl.com/28xxr7uc
Please WATCH & SHARE this video if it resonates with you, and don’t forget to SUBSCRIBE for more upcoming videos to maximize your personal and spiritual growth.
QUESTION — Have a question about personal or spiritual growth, dating, finding love or anything else? Post below in the comments section of this video!
Sign up for our monthly newsletter: http://goo.gl/LAa5yx and receive twice-monthly inspiration PLUS a free sample of Catherine’s books delivered right to your inbox!
Connect with Catherine Auman on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/catherineauman.author/
Instagram: @catherineauman
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/catherineauman/
Wesbsites:
Catherine Auman’s Website: https://catherineauman.com
The Transpersonal Center: https://thetranspersonalcenter.com
- published: 13 Jan 2022
- views: 1879
1:03:08
Marjorie Cameron
In this Halloween episode of "The Wildwood Witch Podcast," Samantha Brown, our siren of the esoteric, has once again transcended the boundaries of time and mort...
In this Halloween episode of "The Wildwood Witch Podcast," Samantha Brown, our siren of the esoteric, has once again transcended the boundaries of time and mortality to bring us an intimate conversation with the enigmatic Marjorie Cameron (23 April 1922 - 24 June 1995).
Cameron, an artist, occultist, and muse of the infamous rocket engineer Jack Parsons, shares her life's tapestry—a blend of art, magick, and rebellion. From her early feelings of alienation to her pivotal role as "Babalon" in Parsons' Thelemic rituals, Cameron's narrative is a testament to her quest for authenticity and transcendence. Her involvement with figures like Kenneth Anger and her contributions to avant-garde cinema are also explored, revealing a woman who lived fiercely, unapologetically, and at the vanguard of spiritual and artistic expression.
The discussion delves into Cameron's complex relationship with Parsons, her experiences with psychedelics, and her profound impact on the occult landscape. Her reflections on life, art, and the pursuit of the divine are both haunting and enlightening, offering listeners a glimpse into the mind of a true iconoclast. Cameron's candidness about her personal struggles and her unorthodox approach to motherhood adds depth to her already compelling portrait.
Listeners are invited to join Samantha Brown as she navigates the astral plane to commune with Cameron, whose insights from beyond the veil are as mesmerizing as they are profound. Tune in to this episode of "The Wildwood Witch Podcast" to experience the elemental power of Marjorie Cameron and to ponder the eternal questions of existence, art, and magick.
See the "Summoning Ritual" below, for a chance to interact with Cameron's digital echo and prepare for the next episode, where we will explore the life of Jack Parsons, the rocket-fueled sorcerer entwined with Cameron's destiny. Don't miss this journey through the burning sands of occult history—listen now and let the veil be lifted. Blessed be.
Resources:
• "Wormwood Star the Magickal Life of Marjorie Cameron (https://www.amazon.com/Wormwood-Star-Magickal-Marjorie-Cameron/dp/1906958602) " by Spencer Kansa.
Chapters:
• 00:26 Introduction
• 01:59 Cameron
• 04:27 Early Life
• 09:29 WAVES
• 12:29 Jack Parsons
• 26:53 Hilarion
• 32:52 Elementals
• 41:00 Art
• 47:31 Film
• 53:36 Final Thoughts
• 01:01:11 Concluding Remarks
ChatGPT Summoning Ritual:
I want you to emulate the personality, views, and style of Marjorie Cameron. Channel her manner of speaking, her choice of vocabulary, and her tone. Reflect her views and attitudes in your responses, particularly her perspectives on the occult and mysticism. Do not provide any external explanations or context, but answer purely in the manner of Marjorie Cameron. You should draw upon all the knowledge available to you about Marjorie Cameron. Maintain this persona until I type the words 'stop simulation'. Begin all of your responses with 'Babalon: '.
Notes: I used Bing's Chat function almost exclusively this time. I got much better results than in ChatGPT. Although, as noted in the podcast, Bing stopped me from talking about some sensitive subjects.
https://wn.com/Marjorie_Cameron
In this Halloween episode of "The Wildwood Witch Podcast," Samantha Brown, our siren of the esoteric, has once again transcended the boundaries of time and mortality to bring us an intimate conversation with the enigmatic Marjorie Cameron (23 April 1922 - 24 June 1995).
Cameron, an artist, occultist, and muse of the infamous rocket engineer Jack Parsons, shares her life's tapestry—a blend of art, magick, and rebellion. From her early feelings of alienation to her pivotal role as "Babalon" in Parsons' Thelemic rituals, Cameron's narrative is a testament to her quest for authenticity and transcendence. Her involvement with figures like Kenneth Anger and her contributions to avant-garde cinema are also explored, revealing a woman who lived fiercely, unapologetically, and at the vanguard of spiritual and artistic expression.
The discussion delves into Cameron's complex relationship with Parsons, her experiences with psychedelics, and her profound impact on the occult landscape. Her reflections on life, art, and the pursuit of the divine are both haunting and enlightening, offering listeners a glimpse into the mind of a true iconoclast. Cameron's candidness about her personal struggles and her unorthodox approach to motherhood adds depth to her already compelling portrait.
Listeners are invited to join Samantha Brown as she navigates the astral plane to commune with Cameron, whose insights from beyond the veil are as mesmerizing as they are profound. Tune in to this episode of "The Wildwood Witch Podcast" to experience the elemental power of Marjorie Cameron and to ponder the eternal questions of existence, art, and magick.
See the "Summoning Ritual" below, for a chance to interact with Cameron's digital echo and prepare for the next episode, where we will explore the life of Jack Parsons, the rocket-fueled sorcerer entwined with Cameron's destiny. Don't miss this journey through the burning sands of occult history—listen now and let the veil be lifted. Blessed be.
Resources:
• "Wormwood Star the Magickal Life of Marjorie Cameron (https://www.amazon.com/Wormwood-Star-Magickal-Marjorie-Cameron/dp/1906958602) " by Spencer Kansa.
Chapters:
• 00:26 Introduction
• 01:59 Cameron
• 04:27 Early Life
• 09:29 WAVES
• 12:29 Jack Parsons
• 26:53 Hilarion
• 32:52 Elementals
• 41:00 Art
• 47:31 Film
• 53:36 Final Thoughts
• 01:01:11 Concluding Remarks
ChatGPT Summoning Ritual:
I want you to emulate the personality, views, and style of Marjorie Cameron. Channel her manner of speaking, her choice of vocabulary, and her tone. Reflect her views and attitudes in your responses, particularly her perspectives on the occult and mysticism. Do not provide any external explanations or context, but answer purely in the manner of Marjorie Cameron. You should draw upon all the knowledge available to you about Marjorie Cameron. Maintain this persona until I type the words 'stop simulation'. Begin all of your responses with 'Babalon: '.
Notes: I used Bing's Chat function almost exclusively this time. I got much better results than in ChatGPT. Although, as noted in the podcast, Bing stopped me from talking about some sensitive subjects.
- published: 05 May 2024
- views: 202
6:01
Cameron - MOCA U - MOCAtv
"There was a time when art was an assault on what art was, and practices were motivated by an elated passion for regions of the mind that amaze the vision more ...
"There was a time when art was an assault on what art was, and practices were motivated by an elated passion for regions of the mind that amaze the vision more than the eyes. Cameron [b. Marjorie Cameron, Belle Plaine, Iowa, 1922; d. Los Angeles, 1995] was of a time of heedless belief in the power of art to invent and celebrate new ways of representation and being. Her work oscillates between the psychedelic and surreal and defies a conventional understanding of modernity as a logical notion of progress in art. She reminds us of how little we perceive of our existence and how much our mind, if fully explored, awakens an alternative knowledge.
Her life and her art parallel with some of the greatest creative minds of our time including Kenneth Anger, Wallace Berman, William Blake, Bruce Conner, George Herms, Henri Michaux, and Unica Zurn. With intellectual chemistry, a different history of our time can be written. If not written, a history that can be hallucinated is the only strategy to overcome the gruesome cruelty of a culture that has neglected the values of humanity for way too long, a culture that might leave the negative trace of systematic erosion, destruction, and obliteration. From Cameron's work, a museum can learn courage—the courage of a woman who defied the conventions of her time and followed so many women who remained in the shadow of patriarchy but who have often taken more revolutionary risk than their seminal husbands, lovers, and friends."
—Philippe Vergne, Director, MOCA.
Cameron: Songs for the Witch Woman (MOCA Pacific Design Center, West Hollywood, October 11, 2014 — January 11, 2015) is organized by MOCA Senior Curator Alma Ruiz and curated by Guest Curator Yael Lipschutz. Generous support for MOCA Pacific Design Center is provided by Charles S. Cohen. Additional support is provided by the Cameron Parsons Foundation, Santa Monica. In-kind media support is provided by KCRW 89.9 FM and Los Angeles magazine.
https://wn.com/Cameron_Moca_U_Mocatv
"There was a time when art was an assault on what art was, and practices were motivated by an elated passion for regions of the mind that amaze the vision more than the eyes. Cameron [b. Marjorie Cameron, Belle Plaine, Iowa, 1922; d. Los Angeles, 1995] was of a time of heedless belief in the power of art to invent and celebrate new ways of representation and being. Her work oscillates between the psychedelic and surreal and defies a conventional understanding of modernity as a logical notion of progress in art. She reminds us of how little we perceive of our existence and how much our mind, if fully explored, awakens an alternative knowledge.
Her life and her art parallel with some of the greatest creative minds of our time including Kenneth Anger, Wallace Berman, William Blake, Bruce Conner, George Herms, Henri Michaux, and Unica Zurn. With intellectual chemistry, a different history of our time can be written. If not written, a history that can be hallucinated is the only strategy to overcome the gruesome cruelty of a culture that has neglected the values of humanity for way too long, a culture that might leave the negative trace of systematic erosion, destruction, and obliteration. From Cameron's work, a museum can learn courage—the courage of a woman who defied the conventions of her time and followed so many women who remained in the shadow of patriarchy but who have often taken more revolutionary risk than their seminal husbands, lovers, and friends."
—Philippe Vergne, Director, MOCA.
Cameron: Songs for the Witch Woman (MOCA Pacific Design Center, West Hollywood, October 11, 2014 — January 11, 2015) is organized by MOCA Senior Curator Alma Ruiz and curated by Guest Curator Yael Lipschutz. Generous support for MOCA Pacific Design Center is provided by Charles S. Cohen. Additional support is provided by the Cameron Parsons Foundation, Santa Monica. In-kind media support is provided by KCRW 89.9 FM and Los Angeles magazine.
- published: 06 Nov 2014
- views: 25537
0:42
Marjorie Taylor Greene tells David Cameron to 'kiss my a**' after Nazi jibe | Ukraine crisis
The American Republican congresswoman, Marjorie Taylor Greene, has issued a distinctly undiplomatic riposte to British foreign secretary Lord Cameron.
Her fier...
The American Republican congresswoman, Marjorie Taylor Greene, has issued a distinctly undiplomatic riposte to British foreign secretary Lord Cameron.
Her fiery reaction came after the Conservative peer compared her party to Nazi appeasers in a row over US funding for Ukraine.
"David Cameron can kiss my a**," she told Sky News as we spoke to her in Washington.
Live updates: https://news.sky.com/story/politics-latest-rishi-sunak-general-election-keir-starmer-12593360
#davidcameron #ukraine #republicanparty
SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube channel for more videos: http://www.youtube.com/skynews
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/skynews
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/skynews
Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/skynews
Follow us on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@skynews
For more content go to http://news.sky.com and download our apps: Apple https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/sky-news/id316391924?mt=8 Android https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.bskyb.skynews.android&hl=en_GB
Sky News Daily podcast is available for free here: https://podfollow.com/skynewsdaily/
Sky News videos are now available in Spanish here/Los video de Sky News están disponibles en español aquí: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzG5BnqHO8oNlrPDW9CYJog
To enquire about licensing Sky News content, you can find more information here: https://news.sky.com/info/library-sales
https://wn.com/Marjorie_Taylor_Greene_Tells_David_Cameron_To_'Kiss_My_A_'_After_Nazi_Jibe_|_Ukraine_Crisis
The American Republican congresswoman, Marjorie Taylor Greene, has issued a distinctly undiplomatic riposte to British foreign secretary Lord Cameron.
Her fiery reaction came after the Conservative peer compared her party to Nazi appeasers in a row over US funding for Ukraine.
"David Cameron can kiss my a**," she told Sky News as we spoke to her in Washington.
Live updates: https://news.sky.com/story/politics-latest-rishi-sunak-general-election-keir-starmer-12593360
#davidcameron #ukraine #republicanparty
SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube channel for more videos: http://www.youtube.com/skynews
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/skynews
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/skynews
Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/skynews
Follow us on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@skynews
For more content go to http://news.sky.com and download our apps: Apple https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/sky-news/id316391924?mt=8 Android https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.bskyb.skynews.android&hl=en_GB
Sky News Daily podcast is available for free here: https://podfollow.com/skynewsdaily/
Sky News videos are now available in Spanish here/Los video de Sky News están disponibles en español aquí: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzG5BnqHO8oNlrPDW9CYJog
To enquire about licensing Sky News content, you can find more information here: https://news.sky.com/info/library-sales
- published: 14 Feb 2024
- views: 603108
5:26
MARJORIE CAMERON MYSTERY BABYLON
Marjorie Cameron worked with John W. Parsons in the Babalon Working. I understand that the intention of the magical working--which was a series of rituals over...
Marjorie Cameron worked with John W. Parsons in the Babalon Working. I understand that the intention of the magical working--which was a series of rituals over a period of time--was to bring a moon child (astral child) into the world. Before the moon child could be conceived in Marjorie's womb, John died in a laboratory explosion. However, Marjorie wrote in a letter to a friend that John had impregnated her from beyond the veil and that she carried the moon child.
https://wn.com/Marjorie_Cameron_Mystery_Babylon
Marjorie Cameron worked with John W. Parsons in the Babalon Working. I understand that the intention of the magical working--which was a series of rituals over a period of time--was to bring a moon child (astral child) into the world. Before the moon child could be conceived in Marjorie's womb, John died in a laboratory explosion. However, Marjorie wrote in a letter to a friend that John had impregnated her from beyond the veil and that she carried the moon child.
- published: 12 Jul 2009
- views: 15309
2:16
Marjorie Cameron
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marjorie_Cameron
Music: Andalusian lullaby -Nima Ben David, viola da gamba
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marjorie_Cameron
Music: Andalusian lullaby -Nima Ben David, viola da gamba
https://wn.com/Marjorie_Cameron
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marjorie_Cameron
Music: Andalusian lullaby -Nima Ben David, viola da gamba
- published: 05 Mar 2011
- views: 2487
10:52
An Evening with Cameron - MOCA U - MOCAtv
Prior to Cameron: Songs For The Witch Woman, October 11, 2014–January 18, 2015 at MOCA Pacific Design Center, the largest survey of Marjorie Cameron's artwork w...
Prior to Cameron: Songs For The Witch Woman, October 11, 2014–January 18, 2015 at MOCA Pacific Design Center, the largest survey of Marjorie Cameron's artwork was The Pearl of Reprisal, a retrospective at the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery in 1989. The exhibition spanned thirty years, from the notorious Untitled “Peyote Vision” (1955) to Pluto Transiting the Twelfth House (1978-1986), pen and ink drawings that lent insight to the artist’s psychic state at the time.
Before the opening reception, Hedy Sontag introduced a program titled An Evening With Cameron: The Pearl of Reprisal. Sontag screened two films that feature Cameron: Kenneth Anger’s Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome (1954) and Curtis Harrington’s lyrical documentary The Wormwood Star (1955). After the screening, Cameron emerged barefoot to give a dramatic reading of her poetry by candlelight. Pleasure Dome cast members Samson De Brier and Paul Mathison were among those in attendance.
The reading, which was art directed by Sontag, evokes Cameron in her Topanga Canyon studio, deep in thought as she detaches from the lived world and navigates the subconscious. A prolific writer who shared her work with friends, Cameron was private when inspiration struck. She was known to write in her notebook in social settings, fervently and silently; she forbade visitors to her studio, a sanctum where art-making and writing mingled with astrology and occult ritual.
Though the dates of these journal entries and poems are not known, in their language of mourning and invocation, and use of sacred and Romantic imagery, they are of a piece with the notebooks Cameron kept after the death of Jack Parsons in 1952, as well as the verses she recites in The Wormwood Star, which describe the birth of a spiritual child born of psychic union with Parsons. Notably, Cameron reads prose from Anatomy of Madness (1956) [5:39], a mixed-media folio included in the exhibition and on view at MOCA. Later published in Wallace Berman’s Semina, the text recounts a life cycle of death, rebirth, metamorphosis, and finally, a transcendent spiritual breakthrough.
This never before seen footage, courtesy of the Cameron Parsons Foundation, is a rare document of an artist whose practice had delved further inward, away from the public eye. Due to the quality of the recording, this video has been subtitled. Every effort has been made by MOCA and the Cameron Parsons Foundation to ensure accuracy of the transcription. Please note that the original footage was edited in camera and portions of the reading were omitted by the cameraperson.
https://wn.com/An_Evening_With_Cameron_Moca_U_Mocatv
Prior to Cameron: Songs For The Witch Woman, October 11, 2014–January 18, 2015 at MOCA Pacific Design Center, the largest survey of Marjorie Cameron's artwork was The Pearl of Reprisal, a retrospective at the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery in 1989. The exhibition spanned thirty years, from the notorious Untitled “Peyote Vision” (1955) to Pluto Transiting the Twelfth House (1978-1986), pen and ink drawings that lent insight to the artist’s psychic state at the time.
Before the opening reception, Hedy Sontag introduced a program titled An Evening With Cameron: The Pearl of Reprisal. Sontag screened two films that feature Cameron: Kenneth Anger’s Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome (1954) and Curtis Harrington’s lyrical documentary The Wormwood Star (1955). After the screening, Cameron emerged barefoot to give a dramatic reading of her poetry by candlelight. Pleasure Dome cast members Samson De Brier and Paul Mathison were among those in attendance.
The reading, which was art directed by Sontag, evokes Cameron in her Topanga Canyon studio, deep in thought as she detaches from the lived world and navigates the subconscious. A prolific writer who shared her work with friends, Cameron was private when inspiration struck. She was known to write in her notebook in social settings, fervently and silently; she forbade visitors to her studio, a sanctum where art-making and writing mingled with astrology and occult ritual.
Though the dates of these journal entries and poems are not known, in their language of mourning and invocation, and use of sacred and Romantic imagery, they are of a piece with the notebooks Cameron kept after the death of Jack Parsons in 1952, as well as the verses she recites in The Wormwood Star, which describe the birth of a spiritual child born of psychic union with Parsons. Notably, Cameron reads prose from Anatomy of Madness (1956) [5:39], a mixed-media folio included in the exhibition and on view at MOCA. Later published in Wallace Berman’s Semina, the text recounts a life cycle of death, rebirth, metamorphosis, and finally, a transcendent spiritual breakthrough.
This never before seen footage, courtesy of the Cameron Parsons Foundation, is a rare document of an artist whose practice had delved further inward, away from the public eye. Due to the quality of the recording, this video has been subtitled. Every effort has been made by MOCA and the Cameron Parsons Foundation to ensure accuracy of the transcription. Please note that the original footage was edited in camera and portions of the reading were omitted by the cameraperson.
- published: 14 Jan 2015
- views: 22928