Stephen McNeilly

Stephen McNeilly (born 1968) is a London based artist and writer whose research-lead practice includes photography, filmmaking, curating and book publishing.[1] He is Editor of the Swedenborg Society, London,[2] and Curator of its annual Swedenborg International Short Film Festival[3] and Artist in Residence programme.[4] In 2010 he curated Fourteen Interventions,[5] a multi-disciplinary site responsive exhibition at Swedenborg house, which included work by Jeremy Deller, Bridget Smith, Iain Sinclair, Ben Judd and Olivia Plender.[6]

His long-standing interest in the work of Emanuel Swedenborg informs much of his recent work[7] and he has published on writers as diverse as Ralph Waldo Emerson[8] and Arthur Cravan. In 2011 he set up the Swedenborg Archive imprint,[9] a collaborative project which has included contributions from the writers Iain Sinclair[10] and Brian Catling,[11] and the publisher Book Works. As series editor of the Journal of the Swedenborg Society[12] he has produced a number of volumes exploring the cultural influence of Swedenborg including Between Method and Madness,[13] The Arms of Morpheus,[14] In Search of the Absolute[15] and On the True Philosopher.[16] Notable contributors to the Journal include the poet Czeslaw Milosz and the Cambridge linguist John Chadwick. Annalisa Volpone has described the Journal as a 'mapping of the impact of Swedenborg's thought on the western literary imaginaire from romanticism to contemporary times'.[17]

McNeilly is a founding editor of Dedecus Press,[18] an interdisciplinary and collaborative publishing project, and is the overseeing editor for the Dedecus Dictionary and the Dedecus Picture Archive. Between 2004 and 2012 he was a visiting lecturer in Art, Philosophy and Critical Theory at the University of Creative Arts (Canterbury).[19]

Selected works

External links

References

  1. Arts, Limbo. "Art Lands on Alien Landscape". Retrieved 14 May 2010.
  2. Sandhu, Sukhdev (2007). Society. SteidlMACK. ISBN 978-3865214058.
  3. British Council, Film. "Film Festivals". Retrieved 23 February 2009.
  4. Lines, Richard (2011). A History of the Swedenborg Society. South Vale Press. p. 161. ISBN 978-1471012747.
  5. Suchin, Peter (April 2010). "Swedenborg House: Fourteen Interventions". Art Monthly (335).
  6. Jones, Jonathan (March 2010). "Swedenborg – the man who invented the Romantics". The Guardian.
  7. Arts, Limbo. "Definitions Towards a Philosophy of Alienation". Retrieved 14 May 2010.
  8. Rowlandson, William (2013). Borges, Swedenborg and Mysticism. Peter Lang. p. 171. ISBN 978-3034308113.
  9. "Publishing". The Swedenborg Society. Retrieved 6 June 2012.
  10. Finlayson, Iain (24 March 2012). "Review". The Times.
  11. Marshal, Richard. "Exquisite Corpses". 3AM MAGAZINE. Retrieved 30 January 2013.
  12. "British National Bibliography". British Library.
  13. Crawford, Gary Williams (November 2012). "Review". Le Fanu Studies 7 (2). ISSN 1932-9598.
  14. Davies, Keri (September 2009). "Review: Arms of Morpheus.". British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies 32 (37).
  15. Volpone, Annalisa (Summer 2009). "Review". The Journal of the Friends of Coleridge. 33.
  16. Lines, Richard (2011). A History of the Swedenborg Society. South Vale Press. p. 160. ISBN 978-1471012747.
  17. Volpone, Annalisa (Summer 2009). "Review". The Journal of the Friends of Coleridge. 33.
  18. "Directors". Dedecus Press. Retrieved January 2013.
  19. Postgraduate Prospectus (PDF). University for the Creative Arts at Canterbury. 2009–2010.
  20. "Several Clouds Colliding". Book Art Newsletter (Impact Press) (76). Sep–Oct 2012. ISSN 1754-9086.
  21. "D T Suzuki: an exhibition of manuscripts, letters and other items". Retrieved June 2011.
  22. Brock, Erland (Jan–Jun 2012). "Book Reviews". The New Philosophy (The Swedenborg Scientific Association).
  23. Carrier, Dan (23 Feb 2012). "Blake's London". Camden New Journal.
  24. "Heaven, Hell and Other Places". Retrieved 4 April 2010.
  25. "14 Interventions". resonance fm. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
  26. "Art Lands on Alien Landscape". Critical Network. Retrieved March 2011.
  27. "RUB-A-DUB-DUB". exex. Retrieved June 2007.
  28. Henke, Ulrike (24 May 2007). "Review". Tagblatt.
  29. "Live Art Archive". Bristol University.
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