The Journal of The Academy of The Enchanted Arts is a haven for poetic souls, dreamers, and seekers of beauty who long to live more enchanted lives. Rooted in the philosophy of light academia and the timeless romance of art history, literature, and music history, this journal is where wonder and scholarship intertwine.
In a world that often feels hurried and disenchanted, The Journal invites you to pause, linger, and reawaken your reverence for life. Here, you will discover essays on art history, music history, and literature through the lens of enchantment; where brushstrokes, melodies, and words unfurl as portals into wonderment, awe, and the soul’s own enchantment.
Written for those with tender hearts and poetic spirits, The Journal is a sanctuary for contemplative reading, soulful learning, and light academic reflection. Each entry is crafted to inspire you to slow down, savour beauty, and step into the great conversation of creatives, mystics, and visionaries who still sing to us across centuries.
Whether you are drawn to light academia aesthetics, enchanted storytelling, or the deep wisdom of art and culture, The Journal will be your companion in cultivating wonder, creativity, and quiet courage. This is not escapism, but enchantment as an anchor and a way of living with beauty and meaning in a fractured world.
Enter The Journal and let yourself be sung back to life.
The Art of Lingering and September’s Enchanted threshold through Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s The Day Dream'
Written as a keepsake, adorned with quotes and threaded with enchantment, this brochure will arrive to you as a storybook map to wonderment
A Retrospective of Enchantment: Taylor Swift's legacy and the dawn of 'The Life of a Showgirl' on October 2025
A guide to immersing yourself in the beauty, ritual, and rest of the Nymph’s World
Unveiling the vision behind Take Me to the Lakes, a deeply poetic and intentional retreat nestled in the Lake District in England.
A monthly invitation to slow, study, and savour the poetry of life and art for August through the lens of Dreamers by Albert Moore