Tarot Course03
Tarot Course03
In this course we will look at many such categories, but for this lesson let us just quickly survey some of these types of tarot.
Rider-Waite
Thanya
Ator
Mdival
Arcus Arcanum
Nimue
Saki-Saki
Here we have some examples of the playful way in which the various tarot designers have taken up the emblematised pip cards and reworked them in their own style. For those who have a reasonably large collection of tarots it is an interesting exercise to lay out the same pip card from various decks and see the variations and how the artist has used the tight structure of the Rider-Waite deck as a vehicle for their own creative explorations. This is the power of the tarot - it gives structure and freedom to the imagination at the same time. There are other cartomancy decks which create their own unique emblems for each of the pip cards and we will look at these in a later lesson.
Art decks.
As tarot emerged into mid 20th century culture, various artists became inspired to create artworks based on tarot. Often they chose only to illustrate the 22 major arcana, which to an artist was the exciting dramatic aspect of a tarot deck. We have already seen examples of such art decks in lesson two in the works of Renato Guttuso and Shandra MacNeill. There are some amazing tarots that fall into this group. A powerful and dramatic example is Alain Bochers Tarot de la Ra of 1982. Salvador Dal created a collage tarot in 1984 which has become quite well known and he incorporates various elements from his paintings, flowing clocks, his wife Gala as the Empress. Niki de Saint Phalle a sculptor and painter even created an amazing sculptural Tarot Garden in Tuscany, with Gaudiesque structures. She also produced a set of art tarot in 2000. On the right we see the art tarot of the Italian artist Franco Gentilini, whose tarot designs of 1975 pay homage to a number of 20th century, primarily surrealist, artists. Here in his Luna we are decidedly in a Giorgio de Chirico landscape.
These art tarots were made by established artists but there are many tarot made by lesser known and amateur artists with the same impulse, that of using the tarot structure as a vehicle for an art work. We will be exploring this in later lessons in the course as this is an important group of tarots.
Yeager
Analytical
Dance of Life
Universal
Designers of this class of tarot often felt the need to change the names of the trumps in order to give them some more accessible handles or hooks linking with the theme of inner development.
and painted by Lady Frieda Harris which they worked on during the war years and published in 1944 as a small limited edition within small circle of associates. It was later, in the 1960s, made more widely available through being issued by major card publishers and its flowing expressive artwork had a profound influence on modern tarot art. There are relatively small numbers of such magical decks and we will devote a couple of lessons to these later in the course. One of the key magical sources for tarot was the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn which spanned the 1890s and the first few years of the 20th century. As part of their magical instruction the adepts in this small Order had to make their tarot cards following the information in the restricted papers of the Order. These decks were not published and did not make a direct impact on tarot artists. In recent years much of this material has been published, so much so that in 2004 Richard Dudschus and David Sledzinki issued a Classic Golden Dawn Tarot deck in line drawings. One of the most weird of modern tarot decks is the Le Tarot Magique designed by Frederic Lionel and published in 1980. We are here far removed from the flowing interweaving of symbol, form and colour that is seen in the Crowley deck, and instead we are presented with what appear more like magical sigils used in ritual magic. With the more recent (2001) Golden Dawn Magical Tarot of Sandra Tabatha Cicero we return to more conventional tarot images, powerfully and boldly coloured.
Thoth - Crowley
Magic - Lionel
Golden Dawn-Cicero
Romany culture, even giving the cards Romany titles. The paintings are rather pleasant with good characterisation but they present a wholly romanticed world, in which one finds it difficult to believe. In the five of staves we even have a group of men doing Morris dancing. This is clearly a work of rhetoric, but since it went out of print the deck is much sought after. There are also a number of political issue decks such as the Anti-G7 deck of 1994 or the Anti-Nuclear Wendlndisches Tarot of 1980.
Theas Tarot
Brotherhood
Ravenswood Eastern
Romani
Phastasmagoric
FMurr
Goblin
Alcohol
Promotional Decks
As tarot became more popular during the 1970s and 1980s some organisations realised that they could hitchhike on this developing art form and use it to promote themselves, or some film, television show or pop music. We have already seen an example of this in lesson two, the Tattoo tarot, which was probably given away by a tattooist to promote their work. Some tarot were given away in magazines. An example of this is some small cards based on the Tarot of Marseilles, given away in the Spanish Rock and pop music magazine Super Pop. They seem to have issued a number of such tarots. In the May 1979 issue of the Italian fashion magazine Annabella, the Lancme cosmetics company created a rather fine majors only tarot designed by Giancarlo Carloni to promote its Magie Noire (Black magic) perfume. The artwork is of a stylish art deco nature, depicting rather sophisticated people, no doubt reflecting the image they wanted to associate with their product. In 2003-2004 HBO produced a television series called Carnivle, which was a very dark and almost surreal melodrama incorporating tarot images in its opening credits and a fortune teller as one of its main characters. In 2004 they decided to issue a tarot deck as a promotional item. This has no relationship to the tarot imagery used in the TV show and are simple oval mask like faces. In the major arcana the eye on the right bears a symbol associated with the tarot trump, while with the minors the eye on the left holds a symbol for the suit. Here we see the Wheel of Fortune card with the appropriate symbol in the eye on the right. The creators of this tarot had probably not even seen the television show as they base their designs on carnival mask forms, whereas the show is about a traveling circus. In Taiwan and China which has seen an explosion of tarot production in the past few years, tarot are often given away as promotional items. Some of these are trivial and of indifferent quality, but the Chinese National Geographic Magazine recently gave away, as a gift, the Cosway Tarot. This is a tightly composed 22 card photographic tarot in which various actors pose in tableau based on the tarot trumps.
Super Pop
Annabella
Carnivale
Regionalising decks
Some creators of tarot decks decide to structure their tarot designs around imagery from their own region or country. Thus in a sense they try to locate a tarot within their own culture, perhaps thinking that this might make tarot more accessible to their fellow countrymen (or even a group within a small region of a country), or on the other hand wishing to draw the wider tarot communitys attention to the delights of the culture of a particular place.
The Siamese Tarot by P. Sukij presents the conventional Rider-Waite designs but expressed in a Siamese style. He reflects a Thai Buddhist imagery in these delightful images. Osvaldo Menegazzi, the creator of a number of striking tarot designs, in his Sardinia Tarot of 1984, depicts images of various artefacts, bronze sculptures and pottery vases from Sardinia on his major arcana. The minor arcana pips reflect the different regions of Sardinia, while the court cards show people in the particular peasant dress of these regions. Amerigo Folchi, another prolific designer of tarot decks, created his I Tarocchi nei colori della Toscana (the tarot in the colours of Tuscany) in 1992. This 22 card deck takes the main image from the Tarot of Marseilles and places these beside an
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important building in Tuscany. Thus the Emperor is shown beside the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence, the Hierophant with the Cathedral in Siena. The already heightened colours of the images in this deck are further stressed by the inclusion in each design of a Swatch style watch. I am not sure if Swatch actually sponsored this deck, whether they had a manufacturing plant in Tuscany, or whether this was just a playful conceit of the artist. Our final example here is the Aztec tarot from 1986 designed and painted by Jane Denant and Gerard Martin, using imagery from Aztec manuscripts. This non-standard tarot attempts to locate tarot within the creators conception of Aztec mythology and culture and arises perhaps more from imaginative invention rather than an in-depth study of Aztec ideas.
So we have categorised tarot decks according to what we perceive as the intention of the creator of the tarot. Here we have just taken eight such ways of looking at tarot decks from a perspective of the motivation of the creators. If you have the enthusiasm, as an exercise do try and list other intention categories you might see expressed in the decks you have in your own collection, or can see as images on the internet.