When Aleister Crowley
died in 1947 Kenneth Grant became heir apparent of the esoteric magical order
Ordo Templis Orientis (OTO). Alongside his artist wife Steffi, Grant was one of
few to attend Crowley's funeral service, becoming the last living link with
"the Beast", whose work he championed, nurtured and refined for over
six decades. From his New Isis Lodge, established in London in 1955, through to
his final organizational vehicle, the Typhonian Order, Grant's occult
credentials are without parallel.
Typhon, the Greek god
of chaos and destruction, was Grant's chosen deity, and he wrote a series of
trilogies in the 1970s including The Magical Revival, Cults of the Shadow and
Nightside of Eden, that fashioned his own brand of occultism. With a fusion of
science, fantasy and metaphysics he offered a radical decoding of Crowley, the
artist Austin Osman Spare and the author HP Lovecraft, alongside healthy doses
of astral projection. An integral part of the emergent occulture, his work was
consumed by a new generation of cultural provocateurs and occultniks searching
for a more esoteric identity. For the artist Alan Moore, in his essay "Our
Ken", he was a "paranormal pit-canary and point-man" who was
"prepared to roll his sleeves up and plunge elbow deep in the 'Qlipothic
slime' of his imagination."
In fact Crowley
chastised Grant for this trait. "You cannot be content with the simplicity
of reality and fact," the cantankeous master wrote to his pupil in 1945.
"You have to go off into a pipedream." Grant continued to map this
spiritual topography, however, penning Typhonian travelogues Moore describes as
"an information soup, an overwhelming and hallucinatory bouillon of arcane
fact, mystic speculation and apparent outright fantasy."
He nurtured a deep
appreciation for occult art and with Steffi was the first to introduce the work
of Austin Spare to modern occultists. As a contributor to the best-selling Man,
Myth and Magic magazine series Grant championed and popularised the work of
Crowley and Spare for a new generation, making them key cultural figures in the
magical revival of the 1970s. "The key to the principal occult mysteries
of the present age," wrote Grant, lay in Crowley's philosophy of Thelema –
a synthesis of Nietzschean and Buddhist ideas that sought to harnass willpower
for magical ends – in particular his The Book of the Law written in 1904.
Grant was born in
Ilford, Essex, the son of a Welsh clergyman. He first encountered Crowley at
the age of 15 in a Charing Cross Road bookshop via a copy of his book Magick in
Theory and Practice. Grant craved more Crowley and devoted himself to the
pursuit of oriental mysticism.
Hoping to be posted to
India, where he could find a guru, Grant volunteered for the army aged 18. A
health breakdown 18 months later, though, saw him discharged and the
convalescent sought enlightenment closer to home, entering into correspondence
with the 68-year-old Crowley, who was then living in Buckinghamshire lodgings.
A short stint as personal secretary to the demanding master saw Grant running
errands between London and Hastings, fetching Turkish cigarettes and whiskey
and in return snatching pearls of wisdom from a Crowley who was, he said,
"almost, but not quite, at the end of the road".
In 1944-45, by his own
account, Grant wrote many magical papers at Crowley's suggestion. Apparently
the acolyte sufficiently impressed the master, who initiated him into his
magical fraternity Argentum Astrum in 1946 and confirmed him as an IX° in the
OTO.
Crowley died in 1947
without nominating a clear heir or successor but in 1946 had written a memo:
"Value of Grant: if I die or go to USA, there must be a trained man to
take care of the English OTO." This memo became the key building block
supporting Grant's succession to the leadership, and thus began his rise to
prominence.
In 1951 Grant was
authorised by Crowley's successor Karl Germer and received permission to form
an English branch of the OTO, which he called the New Isis Lodge, formed as a
conduit and magical cell in 1954 "for the influx of cosmic energy from a
transplutonic power-zone known to Initiates as Nu-Isis". The lodge aligned
the sexual magic of the OTO with Indian Tantric principles and aimed to
reorganise the entire system of the old order.
A displeased Germer
grew more infuriated when a German Thelemite group published an excerpt of the
Lodge's manifesto announcing Grant's discovery and promotion of a new
"Sirius/Set current" in Crowley's work. Grant's obsession with this
extra-terrestrial dimension was heresy to Germer, who excommunicated him from
the OTO. Despite his expulsion Grant assumed leadership of the Order, and the
New Isis Lodge operated until 1962 on the basis of what Grant claimed were
"inner Plane" powers.
A key figure in Grant's
development was David Curwen, a member of the OTO Sovereign Sanctuary. Grant
met Curwen shortly after Crowley's death and his influence left a deep
impression on Grant, who proceeded to immerse himself in eastern mysticism. His
work with the Advaita Vedanta, the most influential sub-school of the Vedanta
school of Hindu philosophy is detailed in a number of essays for Indian
journals in the 1950s and 1960s.
Accounts of temple
meetings suggest salons of sorts taking place in Curwen's fur shop in London,
with Kenneth, Steffi and one or two others. Other meetings were essentially
tantric rituals performed by the Grants, but an oath of silence lends an air of
mystery to the meetings.
In 1969 Germer died
without naming a successor and Grant declared himself Outer Head of the order
inside the book jacket of The Confessions of Aleister Crowley. In the same year
an American, Grady McMurty, initiated a claim to the deeds and title of the OTO,
declaring himself Frater Superior. The self-styled "Caliphate" branch
of the organisation attained tax emeption as a religious entity under
Californian State Law in 1982.
Grant's scene revolved
around his suburban semi in Golder's Green, where the reclusive wizard avoided
litigation and the legal registration of his Order, confident that he
represented the real OTO. Using Crowley's basic system, the Typhonians
discarded rituals of initiation, instead conferring degrees on members on the
basis of personal development. Perceived to be more occult and autonomous,
Grant's group exerts a tremendous influence that far outweighs that of other
OTO groups.
In his later years
Grant produced more works of fiction and poetry such as Beyond the Mauve Zone
and Snakewand. The closest we have to an autobiography is the beautifully
crafted Zos Speaks!, which provides a rare glimpse of the Grants' more earthly
correspondence through their eight-year friendship with Austin Spare.
Sumptuously illustrated with many of the artist's most significant work, from
the Grant's personal collection, Zos Speaks! re-introduces the London artist
for contemporary appreciation.
No matter the changes
of nomenclature, Grant served his time as sorcerers' apprentice to both Crowley
and Spare, and as editor and interpreter of their work his magical provenance,
authority and pedigree is without equal. Grant's take on Thelema transformed
him into a guru of sorts, and to his countless followers and friends he will be
best remembered as a man of much warmth and wit, a life summed up in the words
of the occult historian PR Koenig as "a metaphor for the continuity of the
strategies of illumination."
Declan O'Neill
Kenneth Grant, writer
and occultist: born Ilford, Essex 23 May 1924, married 1946 (one son); died 15
January 2011.
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