SACRIFICIAL LOVE SOCIETY Stephen Palmer
was a devout Catholic visionary with a strong personal
following. Christina
McCollum considers the mesmerising imagery of
his iconic paintings
Excerpt:
Stephen Palmer produced a massive record of Christian
faith in the guise of roughly 400 known and recently
rediscovered mixed media paintings and drawings on paper.
As private devotional art, the works announce the layered
complexity and subversive potential of religious imagery.
As artifacts uncovered, they speak about the Cold War
era in America. They collectively hold clues to reconstructing
the psychology and motivations of an individual.
Although Palmer’s death certificate lists New York
State as his birthplace, he was in fact born in Illinois,
in 1882. By 1910 he was living in Eau Claire, Wisconsin
with his mother and his brother, Fred, who was five
years his senior. When Palmer turned in a World War
I draft card in 1918, he was 36 years old and was living
in Nebraska with his uncle, whom he listed as his nearest
kin, his mother and brother having both died by then.
He was never called up to fight. In Nebraska, he worked
as a self-described ‘horse packer’.
By 1920 he was back in Wisconsin, and until at least
1930 he worked in the woods as a teamster for the paper
and pulp industry while living as a single lodger in
a men’s house. Palmer died in a Minnesota hospital three
days after suffering a stroke in the autumn of 1965.
He was buried in a single plot at the Catholic Calvary
Cemetery in Mankato.
Based on the French-Canadian heritage of both of his
parents, it is probable that Palmer was exposed to Roman
Catholicism in his youth. He sustained but complicated
his connection to the Catholic Church by affiliation
with fringe home-based worship groups and self-proclaimed
visionaries. These break-off sects of what might be
called religious fanatics provided a social network
for him, and he drew a small circle of the faithful
to listen to his own visions and prophecies. His paintings,
like his practices, are rooted in Catholicism but take
unsanctioned deviations.
left: Untitled
(Jesus in Heart) c. 1955 - 1965
mixed media on paper 31.5 x 22 ins 78.7 x 55.9 cm
right: Untitled (Infant of Prague) c. 1955-1965
mixed media on paper 31.5 x 22 ins 78.7 x 55.9 cm