Chapel of Extreme Experience: A Short History of Stroboscopic Light and the Dream Machine
by John Geiger ISBN: 1932360018
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: Chapel of Extreme Experience: A Short History of Stroboscopic Light and the Dream Machine by Nancy WigstonWhat a strange and delight-filled book is John Geiger's "short
history" of science, art and the brain. Plunging us back into
a time of idealistic and mind-expanding adventurers that included
Aldous Huxley, William S. Burroughs, and Allen Ginsberg, Geiger's
book reminds us that that psychedelic' journeys were originally a
serious business, and only gradually widened-many would argue
degenerated-into a mass cultural phenomena.
Geiger skillfully takes us through the earliest days when science
began to probe light and the mind, beginning in 1823 with a Goethe
disciple called Purkinje, who recorded the geometric patterns
produced by flickering light or by exerting pressure on the eyeballs.
Of particular interest is the 1946 introduction of the electronic
stroboscope by Dr.W.Grey Walter, a scientist and researcher in
Bristol who was also "a glider pilot," and according to
his biographer, "home guard explosive expert, wife swapper,
TV pundit, experimental drug user, and skin diver." No kidding.
No one Geiger introduces us to fits the average image of the plodding
scientist; Walter is one among many original minds that illuminate
his text.
The man central to the art-as opposed to the science-of the flicker,
or "Dream Machine," is Canadian-born artist and writer
Brion Gysin, who experienced a dizzying "fall out of rational
space-time" in 1958 while travelling on a road in France, as
light flickered through a row of trees. Inspired, he fashioned,
with the help of a Cambridge mathematician called Ian Somerville,
a revolving cylinder, cut with various patterns. Thus was born the
"Dream Machine." Designed to be experienced with closed
eyes-the expression "eyes wide shut" comes immediately
to mind-Gysin's machine had a vivid effect on viewers, many of whom
saw gorgeous, transcendent images and cinematic scenes, caused by
the rhythms of stroboscopic flickers. Others, like poet Allen
Ginsberg, who was subjected to flickering light under the influence
of LSD, intensely disliked the experience; still others found-and
still find-strobe lights and flickers can induce epileptic seizures.
Geiger traces the attempts by Gysin and various converts throughout
the Sixties and Seventies to market this drug free equivalent to
the ecstasies written about by psychedelic pioneers like Aldous
Huxley in his account of taking mescaline in Heaven&Hell, all which
came to naught. Although Gysin, near the end of his life, knew he'd
failed to share his invention with a wider public, Geiger's account
of his efforts never fails to fascinate. We might not be surprised
by Paul McCartney's interest, but who'd imagine cosmetics maven
Helena Rubinstein would have been an early Dream Machine fan?
Geiger traces the attempts by Gysin and various converts throughout
the Sixties and Seventies to market this drug free equivalent to
the ecstasies written about by psychedelic pioneers like Aldous
Huxley in his account of taking mescaline in Heaven&Hell, all which
came to naught. Although Gysin, near the end of his life, knew he'd
failed to share his invention with a wider public, Geiger's account
of his efforts never fails to fascinate. We might not be surprised
by Paul McCartney's interest, but who'd imagine cosmetics maven
Helena Rubinstein would have been an early Dream Machine fan?
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