Psychic TV

This post is part of an ongoing series featuring items recently cataloged from the Julio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.

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On Easter Sunday in 1984, English experimental video art and music group Psychic TV conducted a performance at the Massachusetts College of Art. Physic TV members Genesis P-Orridge and John Gosling were interviewed after this performance, an interview in which they were questioned about the various influences for their art, which included a focus on occultism, serial killers, and bondage, and body modification/mutilation. The performance in Boston included “a tape loop of Aleister Crowley chanting to evoke demons,” backing video featuring PTV members having their genitalia pierced, and “other assorted bondage and discipline films,” along with footage of Jim Jones, Charles Manson, and Roman Polanski. It was paired with a sister event in Reykjavik, Iceland on Good Friday, and Physic TV members hoped that there would be a noted “psychick” influence between the two.

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Genesis P-Orridge would continue Psychic TV through the present day, with some breaks in-between. Born in Manchester, Genesis founded the music and performance collective COUM Transmissions in 1969, which evolved into industrial band Throbbing Gristle in 1976. As with the Psychic TV performance previously described, Throbbing Gristle used disturbing and controversial imagery in their performances, including photographs of Nazi concentration camps. Their hope to provoke the audience into extracting themselves from the mainstream and thinking individually earned them an association with the rising anarchist punk scene. Throbbing Gristle disbanded in 1981, with Genesis P-Orridge and Peter Christopherson moving on to form Psychic TV. It has since had two revivals, from 2004-2010, and from 2011 to the present day.

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The pamphlet pictured here includes the transcription of the post-Massachusetts College of Art Easter Sunday performance interview with Genesis P-Orridge and John Gosling, in which the pair discuss their goals for their performance group, the often controversial influences upon their art, and the way the English government has attempted to silence dissenting voices. Accompanying the pamphlet is an audio cassette tape containing audio from the interview.

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To learn more about Physic TV and Genesis P-Orridge’s other projects, visit their website here. The Psychic TV interview pamphlet and accompanying audio cassette can be found in Widener’s collection: Boston: John Ze’Wizz, 1984.

Thanks to Irina Rogova, Santo Domingo Library Assistant, for contributing this post.

Undergraduates at Houghton, Part I: Consolidating Works on Manuscripts

This coming fall will see the opening of Beyond Words: Illuminated Manuscripts in Boston Collections, an exhibition of medieval and Renaissance books from local institutions.  The Houghton Library will loan the vast majority of the manuscripts on display, and the library will also act as one of three venues for the exhibition.  Preparations are not limited to the objects themselves, but also include the compiling of bibliographic resources.  Bibliographies for each manuscript feature articles that scholars, researchers, and cataloguers have produced after having cited, described, or partially reproduced Houghton’s manuscripts.

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Eccles Cakes from the Archives

MARY HYDE ECCLES, 1912-2003. Recipe for Eccles cakes (undated). MS Hyde 98 (286) - Bequest of Mary Hyde Eccles, 2003.

MARY HYDE ECCLES, 1912-2003. Recipe for Eccles cakes (undated). MS Hyde 98 (286) – Bequest of Mary Hyde Eccles, 2003.

Last December, in the first of a series of we’re now calling “Cakes from the Collection,” we made Emily Dickinson’s 20 pound black cake. Recently, Team Cake gathered again to produce the second in our series, a very different challenge in the form of delicately crisp Eccles Cakes. Our friends in England will not require any instruction on the nature of Eccles cake, but those reading from elsewhere in the world may be unfamiliar with the treat named for the English town in which they were first sold commercially at the end of the 1700s. The currant-filled buttery pastries are not necessarily immediately recognizable as cakes. Indeed, a colleague leaving early from the party at which we served our Eccles cakes lamented that she would be “missing the cakes.” Assured that the table was in fact currently full of Eccles cakes she could only nod and “oh.” While not much on offer in our neck of the woods, the cakes are still quite popular today in England, though the recipe has certainly changed over the years, as we discovered by working backwards from our source: a neatly penned 20th century index card recipe from the Mary Hyde Eccles papers.

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Cakes from the Collections and another birthday

Today at Houghton, July 8, we celebrated the birthday of our beloved patron Mary Hyde Eccles (1912-2003) with cake and a song. The cake, Eccles cakes to be specific, were spiced currant puff pastries, made (sort of) according to Mary’s own recipe (see here for more details on them!), which is housed here at Houghton in her papers.

Mary Hyde Eccles

KAI KIN YUNG, fl. 1961-1998 Portrait of Mary Hyde Eccles at her desk at Four Oaks Farm (1983) MS Hyde 98 (2866) – Bequest of Mary Hyde Eccles, 2003

The song, for countertenor and viola da gamba, performed live by our Public Services colleagues James Capobianco and Emily Walhout, was a birthday song for Mary. Admittedly, the song was originally for Queen Mary II of England, but the text seemed perfectly suited to this occasion, despite the fact that it was composed more than 300 years ago by Henry Purcell:

“Strike the viol, touch the lute,

Wake the Harp, inspire the Flute.

Sing your Patronesse’s praise

Sing in cheerfull and Harmonious Lays.”

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HENRY PURCELL, 1659-1695 Orpheus Britannicus (London: Printed by William Pearson, 1702-06) The song “Strike the viol” originally appeared as one of nine pieces in Come, Ye Sons of Art, a musical ode written by Purcell in 1694 for the birthday of Queen Mary II of England. *2005TW-948 – Gift of John Milton and Ruth Neils Ward, 2005

In 2003, Mary Hyde, Viscountess Eccles bequeathed to Harvard a gift of tremendous generosity, including a world-class collection of 18th century English literature, the family papers that document a lifetime of collecting, and a substantial endowment to permit Houghton to catalog, preserve, utilize, and add to the collection. This gift was the culmination of decades of generosity toward Houghton by Mary, her first husband Donald Hyde, and her second husband the Viscount Eccles.

Houghton is supported entirely by endowed funds. We literally could not open our doors every morning, nor would we have any reason to, without the generosity of donors like Mary Hyde. After the Harvard College Library was destroyed by fire in 1764, donors from throughout the colonies and Europe gave the books that rebuilt the library. They have been our indispensable partners in the work that we do ever since. Harvard is grateful, Houghton is grateful, we are all grateful.

Happy Birthday Mary Hyde, and thank you to all our donors.

Babar Comes to Houghton Library

Babar HoughtonHoughton Library is pleased to announce two important new acquisitions associated with the iconic children’s book character Babar the elephant.

The first of these, thanks to a generous gift from Laurent de Brunhoff and his wife Phyllis Rose, is the complete archive of preparatory materials for the book ABC de Babar by Jean de Brunhoff, Laurent’s father.

MS Typ 1186 cover Jean de Brunhoff, original cover design (not used) for ABC de Babar, ink and gouache on paper (Houghton Library, MS Typ 1186)

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