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In
direct opposition to the outsider myth, though self-taught McKesson
came from a privileged background. Born in Monmouth Beach, New Jersey
to a wealthy New York City family, he was a Harvard graduate, served
in the U.S. Army and was socially well integrated. However, in 1961
he withdrew from his business and social life in order to devote
himself to his wife, the poet Madelaine Mason, and to art. Though
it lasted forty-eight years, the marriage was probably never consummated,
with McKesson adopting the role of devoted servant, in awe of what
he described as 'the strength and wisdom of the female'. He pursued
his art in private, only revealing its existence after the death
of his wife in 1990 and when he was well into his eighties. This
exquisite drawing possesses a general aura of sanctity and tenderness,
but characteristically it also has an unremittingly sexual undertone.
In the act of blessing we also witness the absolute submission of
the one being blessed. McKesson said that when he drew he wanted
to 'see the form of the undrawn' and 'to rediscover a buried tradition,
to rediscover the female in the man'. He professed to having 'never
had any sexual development'. As an adolescent he did not experience
sexual longing for girls or have feelings about masturbation, and
later declared himself 'basically oIsexual'. But some drawings were
produced in what one writer has described as a 'hypnagogic, febrile
state of sexual excitement coupled with anxious torment' (M. T.
Wilner, in Malcolm McKesson: An Exquisite Obsession). Yet their
sado-masochistic content is usually only revealed in titles or short
texts written on the drawings. McKesson's fantasy world of servitude
at the hands of powerful women is delineated in his 'autobiographical'
novel, Matriarchy: freedom in Bondage, but it is in the drawings
that he attains some kind of transcendence.
Malcolm McKesson's work is represented in many museum collections
worldwide including: The American Visionary Art Museum; Collection
de l'Art Brut, Lausanne; The Outsider Collection and Archive, London.
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