Tarot Universal Dali

Tarot Universal Dali
Dee Dee & Salvador Dali
Showing posts with label salvador dali. Show all posts
Showing posts with label salvador dali. Show all posts

Friday, January 22, 2010

El Ocho de Bastos


The Eight of Wands. El Ocho de Bastos. What a bloody card in the Dali deck.

Again Rachel Pollack ‘s “Salvador Dali’s Tarot” identifies the painting of a struggle within a cavernous background, made all the more ominous by Dali framing the details inside a succulent red womb. The surrounding gore is additionally off putting.

How to reconcile this with the harmonious, well balanced eights, particularly the Eight of Batons? Yes the Dali card shows balance in and off itself – and certainly energy, the new overtaking the old – so overtly showing rebirth – but the image is so full of batons’ work, work, work.

And out of it, in the Dali card, the clash is the triumph and the lack of mercy is elegant.

His detail of the saluting men comes from the Oath of Horatti by Jacques-Louis David http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/his/CoreArt/art/neocl_dav_oath.html which was painted before the French Revolution in 1784.

The Oath was David’s depiction of a story told in Lvius’ history of Rome. Patriotic, pre-revolutionary France saw the three brothers pledging defense of Rome as heroic. The weeping women were sidelined in the painting and ignored by Dali. (“The Oath of Horatti,” Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia)

This is not a card of going gently into any good night. This card is about the triumph of action and assault. Unexpected in a card traditionally reflecting balance and renewal.

Although the blood could be taken as birthing Dali is not content with merely framing the action. He fills the left side of the card with a blood saturated mosquito, that harbinger of death. Paint is smudged and drooled down the right side. This is not a gentle rebirth – it may be balanced but the medium is violent.

But what of the book speared by two of the batons and suspended above the action? That, too, is a new twist to the traditional card. Perhaps it tempers the intemperate action that the Eight of Batons can also depict. The wands, batons, scepters, regardless they are wooden and carry the element of fire within; purifying and sudden.

Indeed, sudden actions, thoughtless activity, jealousy and dissonance is captured in the Eight of Wands as well as the bloom of newness. It must always be considered that every action, every thought, every card, every heart holds its own opposite.

Comment: So. Well begun January: Let us hope this promise of violent rebirth shakes us from the thoughtless activities that would allow the Cabellero de Oros to not see the abandoned and now exploded wealth left behind. Let us accept the challenge that the trail itself, as promised last week and this week confirmed, will be harsh and sudden.

But the book. What shall I make of the book, the writings, the record?

It is this that we write here today.


Friday, January 15, 2010

CABALLERO DE OROS


The Tarot Universal Dali's Knight of Pentacles -- drawn at random from the full 72-card deck.
A fitting start to a journey into 2010. All that wealth exploded behind him. And he doesn't seem to notice.
Dali plucked his Caballero de Oros from the First King section of Benozzo Gozzoli's The Procession of the Magi frescoes. http://www.palazzo-medici.it/eng/sez_museo/viaggio.htm ilicomes -- Dali gave him the First King's horse.
The knight, snatched off the steep mountain of the magi's journey and dropped into a fiery desert, shifted his gaze to his new liege, his new creator -- Dali.
Dali further confirms his own powerful status as Rey de Oros making that card a self-portrait.
Gozzoli tucked a self-portrait into his frescoes as well, but lacked Dali's bravado and independence, casting himself as an adviser midst the rabble of the kings' retinue.
Meanwhile, perched upon the computer screen, my Knight of Pentacles opens the year and rides on, his world exploded behind him, his surrounds parched, his distraction letting droop his banner. Even his horse -- once the king's horse -- sinks unnoticed into the mud and the void below.
Comment: I will deliberate as I carry this card into my week in this way: Who will I become? Will I be the knight, the seeker, the rider across this desert? Will I follow a liege? Am I the liege?