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Despite the strange herbs and promising teas I've ingested over the years, I've never been lucky enough to have a lucid dream. Through their ceramic sculptures, paintings, films, charcoal drawings and photographs, six artists reveal that you don't necessarily have to close your eyes to dream — actually, the creative process of mental visualization is just as immersive as doing so. Their work gives a nod to the real REM cycle, too: Lindsay Pichaske's sculptures of waifs capture the strange dimensions of dreamt bodies, while Stacey Steers' collages of women walking on snakes (pictured) portray the hodgepodge of images our sleeping minds think up.
In these very pages, we've railed against Baltimore, Boston, Virginia, the Bronx and every other silly city that thinks it can lay claim to Edgar Allan Poe. To be honest, we've been a tad cocky about it. In fact, we could learn something from The Library Company of Philadelphia — their exhibit of photographs, old books, illustrations and paintings modestly, and indirectly, argues for our right to E.A.P. It focuses on Poe's love for the city's first prominent literary tradition, known as Philadelphia Gothic, and the macabre men who led it. Charles Brockden Brown's use of spontaneous combustion, Robert Montgomery Bird's shape-shifting characters, George Lippard's opium-smoking serial killers — how could Poe not have been influenced by them?
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