Visionary Arts and Esoteric Spirituality at the Quinta de São Bento: Lady Carrick’s Seasons in Sintra (1931–1946)

Keywords: Lady Carrick, Quinta de São Bento, Esotericism, Clairvoyant art, Sintra
Agencies: Este estudio se ha llevado a cabo en el marco de las siguientes ayudas a la investigación autonómicas y nacionales: Ayuda de consolidación ED431C-2023/21. GI IDEAHS (GI-1510, USC) / IP. Jesús Ángel Sánchez García; Proyecto de Investigación PID2022-137098NB-I00/ IP. Jesús Ángel Sánchez García y Julio Vázquez Castro; Proyecto de Investigación PID2023-149178NB-I00/ IP. Miguel Anxo Rodríguez González.

Abstract

Lady Carrick, an Anglo-Irish aristocrat forgotten by official historiography, was a central figure in international esotericism and in the cultural life of interwar Sintra. Residing at the Quinta de São Bento from 1931 until her death in 1946, she created together with Elisabeth Pierce a unique space of spirituality, clairvoyant art, and alternative sociability. She travelled to India to meet Meher Baba, became involved in the British Poetry Society, and was honoured with a poem by Regina Miriam Bloch, a prominent occultist writer. In Sintra, she hosted mystical gatherings and welcomed writers such as Isherwood and Auden, both fascinated by her mediumistic world. As Pierce’s patron, she actively supported the dissemination of her work, and the two travelled to London to present Pierce’s visionary paintings, which included spectral portraits of Stephen Spender and Charles Williams. Her tomb, now abandoned in the São Marçal cemetery in Sintra, is at risk of disappearing, a reflection of institutional neglect toward figures who, like her, transcended the cultural conventions of their time, bringing a thoroughly heterodox aesthetic and spiritual sensibility.

View Citations

Crossmark

Metrics

Published
2026-01-09
How to Cite
Moure-Pazos, I. (2026). Visionary Arts and Esoteric Spirituality at the Quinta de São Bento: Lady Carrick’s Seasons in Sintra (1931–1946). Arte, Individuo Y Sociedad, 38(1), 151-164. https://doi.org/10.5209/aris.103848
Section
Articles