SELF PORTRAIT
Face detail
About this
painting, the theosophical researcher Marina Cesar Sisson wrote:
« In early March 1875, HPB wrote General Lippitt that she would be sending
him a self-portrait of John King, in which he appeared "on his balcony, in Summer-land"
(HPB Speaks I, 57).
In bright colors over white
satin, the painting shows centrally the head and part of the trunk of a
black-bearded man wearing a turban and white garments. He is standing on a
balcony surrounded by foliage and a large flower garland. In the background, to
the right, there are some pale human figures and, to the left, a building which
reminds us of a castle by a lakeshore. In the picture, John King is holding a
large book with signs on its cover, while the symbols of Solomon and a swastika
are shown on the column of the balcony. It is important to note that these two
symbols are also present on the Theosophical Society logo and in HPB’s crest.
Gomes informs us about the
picture that:
"This picture is preserved
at the headquarters of the Theosophical Society at Adyar, India. The colors are
still remarkably bright for its age; only in one place has the satin become discolored.
It was brought over to London in June 1893 by William Q. Judge, then general
secretary of the American Section of the society, as a present from General
Lippitt to Annie Besant". (Gomes
1987, 211)
Olcott was there at the time and
described how the portrait was made in a letter to General Lippitt (HPB Speaks I, 78). Madame Blavatsky
purchased a piece of fine white satin in the appropriate size: 1 yard square
(0,91m²). This was placed over a board, together with brushes, paints and
water. The material was covered with a cloth and left overnight in the room
dedicated to the "spirits".
By morning, the whole upper part
of the portrait and John King’s face had been outlined and there was some
coloring around the human figures in the background. Next, John King asked HPB
to begin painting a flower garland around the picture, as if it were a frame.
Madame Blavatsky, however, did not work very fast. She said: "I work very slow when he does not help me or
do it himself." (HPB
Speaks I, 57) Thus John King became impatient with her work and
dismissed her. When he called her back, HPB found the whole upper foliage and
the marble balcony already outlined and she began working on the foliage and,
hence, limited herself to painting this part of the picture.
Olcott wrote:
"John doing everything else
himself – piecemeal, sometimes by day and sometimes by night. I was in the
house most of this time and on more than one occasion sat near her [HPB] while
painting, and with her stepped out for a few minutes while the spirit artist
drew some portion of the picture, beneath the cloth that was spread over its
face. The Greek and Hebrew words and the cabalistic signs were put in last of
all." (HPB Speaks I, 78)
By early April the painting had
been sent to General Lippitt with a request that he never part from the
portrait, and not let "too many
persons touch it, not even approach it too close." (HPB Speaks I, 65). Madame Blavatsky
remarked on Lippitt’s reaction to the painting:
"I am glad you like Johny’s
picture, but you must not call him a Turk, for he is a noble dear sprite and
loves you much. It is nobody’s fault, if you did not see him till now, as he is in reality, and always
thought him to be like the old Jewish half-materialized phyz. you were
generally treated to at the Holmes. In London only, he appears as he is; but bearing still on his dear
countenance some likeness to his respective mediums, for it is hard for him to
change completely the particles drawn by him from various vital powers." (HPB Speaks I, 65)
An interesting note is HPB’s
remark that "In London only, he
appears as he is". At a séance with medium Williams held in London
in March 1873, a portrait of John King was also outlined, and it is quite
similar to that made for Lippitt, except for the flowers and the background
around the main figure (Cooper,
145). This indicates that John King’s self-portrait must have reproduced very
well the image that he wanted to show of himself to the public.
On sending the portrait to
Lippitt, Madame Blavatsky also said:
"John asks you to give your
attention to the flying figure of the spirit above – "mother and child". Says you will recognize
her. I do not. Johny wants you to try
and understand all the symbols and masonic signs." (HPB Speaks I, 64). »
(Source)
PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS
I have only
found one painting on the internet that looks like the self-portrait above, and
it is this one:
In 1932, a
writer named David Anrias published a book called "Through the Eyes of the
Masters, Meditations and Portraits" in which he claimed that the masters
had psychically imprinted their portraits on his head and given him the
permission for him to show those portraits to the world.
And Hilarion's
portrait was as follows:
As you
can see for yourselves, it doesn't look anything like the real portrait of
Hilarion, which shows that David Anrias was a liar.
And since
the metaphysicians did not know of the existence of that self-portrait that I
put above, they have painted master Hilarion in different ways depending on
their imagination:
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