Magic Ancient and Modern: Materials and Imagination
Exhibit at the Museum of Antiquities features texts, nebulous shapes and magical tools that provoke the imagination
An exhibit by Frank Klaassen and David Porreca
Feb. 17 – Apr. 21, 2017
Museum of Antiquities
106 Peter MacKinnon Building
University of Saskatchewan
Read more about the creation of this exhibit on the news website: Living in a world of enchantment
Throughout the ages, both magic and divination have attracted attention because they offer various ways to predict or control the future as well as ways to fantasize about it (as evident in the popularity of the Harry Potter series). The boundlessly fertile nature of human imagination keeps the belief in magic alive, and magic is often simply a technique for unleashing our natural imaginative inclinations.
Many of the techniques in this exhibit seek to provoke the imagination through texts, nebulous shapes, or magical tools and these can often render convincing, startling and evocative results. We also use our imagination to create or imagine what magic should look like. What appears magical to us might not do so in another part of the world or another period. Thus, new forms of magic are constantly being created, and all of us participate in evaluating them. In this exhibit, you will see how magic persists in the modern world in forms very much like those practiced in the premodern world.