Magic and Shaker spirit drawings deeply inspired Joy Feasley and Paul Swenbeck’s FWM installation, A Hatchet to Kill Old Ugly. The exhibition illustrated Feasley and Swenbeck’s fascination with invisible powers that are all around us. They derived the show title from a Shaker name for the Devil—“Old Ugly”—seen in spirit drawings, which the Shakers create to describe symbols seen in their visions.
The main gallery housed what at first appeared to be a faithful reproduction of a Shaker domestic interior but is actually a set for an illusionist performance. The front window ledge displayed a Mager Disc—a tool used to divine the quality of water as it reacts to the harmonies in nature—and a collection of ceramic plants that suggest a charming yet menacing indoor garden. Paintings hanging on a peg rail portrayed otherworldly landscapes imbued with arcane magic. Hanging above the fireplace was a black slate dodecahedron on loan from the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. This mysterious object was found on the banks of the Ohio River in 1792 and is presumed to be a Native American shaman’s calendar. Visitors could enter an unexpected passageway through the fireplace, which revealed a back room full of strange color, light, and musical elements, contrasting the front space’s proto-modernist Shaker austerity. Through A Hatchet to Kill Old Ugly, the artists proposed that science, asceticism, and magic are all possible methods of exploring our world.