Adam McLean (born 7 March 1948 in
Glasgow) is a Scottish writer on
alchemical texts and
symbolism. In 1978 he founded the Hermetic Journal which he published until 1992 during which time he also started publishing the Magnum Opus Hermetic Sourceworks, a series of 55 editions (to 2018) of key source texts of the
hermetic tradition. From 2004 he began collecting tarot cards in order to document tarot art and built up a collection of 2500 items.[1] In 2016 he set up the Surrealism Website in order to document surrealist painters. This currently shows the work of 100 surrealist artists.[2] He also created a series of 20 video lectures on many facets of surrealist paintings.[3] In 2017 he set up an art gallery The Studio and Gallery in
Kilbirnie in
North Ayrshire in order to promote the work of emergent and lesser-known artists.[4][5] In 2023 McLean began publishing, in book form, his Alchemical Translations Series of translations of 16-18th Century German, Latin and French alchemical works previously unavailable in English. This project is intended to expand the public's perception of the richness of alchemical literature. [6]
Career
McLean developed an interest in alchemy in his youth which has continued throughout his life. Located in Glasgow, McLean accessed the wealth of alchemical texts located in The Ferguson Collection in
Glasgow University Library, the Young Collection also in Glasgow, and the John Read Collection at
University of St Andrews. From 1990 to 2002 McLean’s work was supported through the
Bibliotheca Philosophica Hermetica.
Aside from his prolific writing and publishing efforts, McLean has contributed to the study of alchemy through the collecting, cataloguing and archiving of alchemical texts; the creation of alchemical art and study courses; and the establishment of web resources that bridge the interests of scholars and esotericists.[7]
Influence
Since the early 1980s, Adam McLean has been credited as a pioneer in the resurgence of English language alchemical texts, creating a huge expansion in interest at both a scholarly and popular level.[8][9] In 1995, he founded The Alchemy Website, greatly increasing the availability of alchemical texts and art for a general audience.
John Granger named McLean as one of the three figureheads of modern alchemical influence alongside
Carl Jung and
Titus Burckhardt.[10]