Sunday 13 February 2011

MEDI 236: About the Tarot deck used.


The Manga Tarot deck draws heavy inspiration from the east and keys into the "fantastic oriental imagination, particularly Japanese, as depicted in the artwork of the comics of the land of the rising sun, called manga." 

It is a very pictoral deck based on the waite deck but expanded with adding symbology and meaning. 


Taken from the deck's instruction booklet:

The Deck's Structure

"The deck has 22 Major Arcana and 56 Minor Arcana, divided into 40 numbered cards and 16 Court cards. The Minor Arcana are divided into four suits, Swords, Pentacles, Wands and Chalices. Each card has two sturctural characterisitcs a dominant colour and a glyph.

The dominant colour indicates a suit of the Minor Arcana and an aspect of human nature, of our surrounding world or the how "with what eyes" we veiw others ourselves and things. It therefore represents the card's internal theme. This brief summary can be of help

Blue = Swords, Air, interllect
Green = Pentacles, Earth, Nature
Red = Wands, Fire, Personality
Yellow = Chalices, Water, Feelings

Each glyph indicates a season: Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter. the four season's refer to the temporal and cyclic element of the cards.

Spring = Birth, Beginning, Sunrise, Adolescence
Summer = Growth, Culmination, Moon, Maturity
Autumn = Decline, Stagnation, Sunset, Old age
Winter = Death, Minimum, Night, Silence

Spring naturally follows Winter.

Some card's are an execption to this basic structure. The Fool does not have a dominant colour or a glyph ( the fool cannot be forced into a structure). The Wheel contains all four glyphs, representing the cyclic  passing of time. The World does not have a dominant colour because it represents completeness and therefore is the sum of all four of the elements. The Ace's contain all four of the season's (the ace represents potential and the potential for the entire journey is therefore within each Ace) The Ten's contain three glyph's. Attention must be placed on the missing glyph before those that are present. In this sense The ten's must be interpreted as the absence of the fourth gylph (for example the absence of Spring)

A final consideration regards the Type of the characters represnted. The traditional inconography was inverted in this deck, representing as men those normally appearing as women and as women those were depicted as men.   The names of the Court card's were therefore modified. The Queen changes places with The King, Whereas The Knight becomes The Princess and The Knave becomes The Prince. This is also useful for making the internal relationships of the Court card's more obvious and intuitive: Mother, Father, Daughter, Son."



Hopefully this explains a little more about the deck that the reader used in my photos.

MEDI 236: Tarot in the Media

Ironically at the same time as I am doing a project on Tarot the car company Volvo relase an ad which I think is a brilliant showcase of the media portrayal of Tarot.

The Advert:

It showcases the full extent of the 'myth and magic' attitude that the media has towards Tarot.

I also found a video reaction to the advert which was very insightful.

Friday 11 February 2011

MEDI 236: Photographic Insperation



One artist that has always been inspirational in terms of photography is Sophie Calle. I love the way she displays her work in sequence and I like the composition of her photographs esspecially the way she brings objects to life. That is what I would like to achive, to bring the objects I am photographicing to life and let people see the personality of the objects. 


I also have an interest in the style of Ian Aitken, whom I found on the internet, I especially like the composition of his panoramic landscapes but also of his work with people and objects. While I can't say his style is especially applicable to my work it is defiantly inspirational. 

MEDI 236: Documentary Reasearch

There are a lot of inspiring documentaries, the ones that most appeal to me are on total opposite ends of the scales this being participatory and observational.

The most notable documentary of the participatory style that has influenced me has been 'Bowling for Columbine'


While I really love this style and think it is hard hitting and impacting I do not personally think it is suited to Tarot.

So I chose to be observational in my documentation and let myself be taken along with the experience. To merely capture its essence in everyday life.

MEDI 236: Ethics

Where ethics are concerned I wanted to be absolutely sure that I was ethically sound. I know there are a lot of photographers that have achieved this and thus I have drawn my inspiration from them.

Mainly I have looked at the work of KayLynn Deveney who actually asked her subject to participate. While I have asked neither of my subjects to write on the pictures I have at every stage consulted with them and ensured that they actually felt they had some control over the project as well.

I got both of my subjects to sign consent forms so that everything was all above board.

I have also looked into the work of Susan Meiselas but since I am working more with objects than humans her methods are only applicable in the sense that I too wish to tell the story that happens outside of the frame. I do however very much like her style.

At the opposite end of the scale for ethics would be someone like Paul Kransler with 'Land of Milk and Honey' in which his subjects had no recompense or ownership over the photos he took. Although his images are both beautiful and jarring I fundamentally object to the lack of ethics displayed. It is for this reason that I have chosen to be eithically responsible to my subjects and have offered them some control over the images.

I do not think this is bad documentary just good and just practice.

Wednesday 9 February 2011

MEDI 236: The Art of Tarot

The ‘Manga’ Tarot deck used by the reader in the reading I am documenting was created by Riccardo Minetti and Anna Lazzarini who is a well-known comic artist in Italy. While the basic foundation of the cards is following the Rider-Waite deck the symbolism and the art are much more individual and portray the eastern style of Manga/Anime. It is a very human-centered deck with most of the cards having people depicted on them. It is also a very female centered deck with most of the cards typically having men on are now women and vice versa.



Anna Lazzarini who was born in Italy in 1969 is now part of the Bonelli staff of 'Legs Weaver' pictured above.




One of the most interesting new additions are in fact the Japanese season glyphs on the cards, drawing in another layer of symbolism from a totally different culture.



Artistically the deck is very subtle and stunning with a painterly feel to it.


Monday 7 February 2011

MEDI 236: Modern Interpretations of Tarot

Ok so as part of my research (and an odd social experiment to see how the modern media portrayal of Tarot has influenced people) I decided to send out a questionnaire via Facebook to best gauge the modern opinions of Tarot. I took a random selection of people that I know so that the results would be reflective of general opinion. I used a sample size of 20 people between the ages of 19 and 64 years. Of these 12 were female and 8 males. I received 9 responses of these 6 were female and 3 were male.

Questionnaire: 
Q1; Do you believe that they can tell the future? 
Q2a; If no explain why not? 
Q2b; If yes what leads you to believe they do? 
Q3; When or how do you think Tarot originally started? 
Q4; Would you consider what you believe to fall under the blanket term of Pagan? 
Q5; Do you know someone that owns a tarot deck? 
Q6; Do you personally own a Deck? 

I decided to split the replies into male and female responses so that I am able to draw comparisons on this and yet have the responses remain anonymous.

Female Responses:

Q1; I'm not sure... Yes and no!!
Q2a; I've never really tried it, or had my future told or anything so I would say not since I believe things once I've seen them...
Q2b; However, I like to believe that some things are magical and mysterious!! I've had other things like Horoscopes and dreams and things like that come true before, so I don't see why Tarot would be any different!! Perhaps more so if it was a proper Tarot reader rather than someone who was just starting out?
Q3; I know it's clichéd to say so, but I always think of gypsies when I think of Tarot haha!! You know, the reading the future for money etc... Also, gypsies were chased and killed etc in early periods of time because people thought of them as witches, right? So if that's true, then maybe that means that Tarot can tell the future!!
Q4;  I don't know... I'm not too knowledgeable on religion and whatnot, so probably not lol!! Although I did look into Wicca a little because I love the idea of magic and, after reading a book that had lots of references to Wicca, I was really interested... After looking at that I would say it kind of ties in with aspects of Pagan belief (don't hate me if it doesn't - I literally don't know anything haha) which, in my mind, also links to witches, then to gypsies and back to Tarot... So maybe!!
Q5; Yes ^.^ one of my friends' mum (back home) has lots of Tarot decks and took a couple of classes in... *forgotten what it's called... begins with 'S' I think?*... erm some sort of thing to do with healing by using decks/scented candles/massage/etc!! It was really interesting!!
Q6;  No, but I've been meaning to buy some for a while haha just waiting for a bit of spare cash!!

~~~

Q1; Undecided.
Q2a; Fate is in ones own hands.
Q3; By Readers back in time.
Q4; Paganism covers lots of sources but not necessarily.
Q5; Yes.
Q6; No but members of my family have them and Runes.

~~~

Q1; No.
Q2a; Our destiny is already mapped for us, i think they just make us think about what we are doing.
Q3; It was a parlor game.
Q4; Yes.
Q5; Many people.
Q6; Yes 3 but only i only really use one of them.

~~~

Q1; No.
Q2a; I don't believe anything has the ability to tell the future.
Q3; Ancient times, maybe in royal courts, may have been used as entertainment or to influence decisions.
Q4; No, I wouldn't pigeon-hole it to just Pagan.
Q5; Nope.
Q6; Nope.

~~~

Q1; I believe that tarot card can offer an archetype to try and live by (or avoid living by) at any given point in time, or can offer certain forms of advice which can be followed, but I don't believe that Tarot cards necessarily tell the future, no.
Q2a; As above, I feel they more offer archetypal guidance, which can allow a person to go down certain paths in their future, rather then indicate a set-in-stone future.
Q3; Probably a long time ago, and probably as more of a novelty or nuance.
Q4;  More Neo-pagan. 
Q5;  More then one person, yes.
Q6; I own more than one deck, but never use them I prefer cards based around animal totems.

~~~

Q1; Yes.
Q2b; I don’t no why i just do.
Q3; Many, many years ago.
Q4; Yes. 
Q5; Yes lots of people.
Q6; No.

Only one female believed that the cards tell the future. This actually surprised me because the media these days represent them as cards that can tell the future. The more popular opionin is that they merely offer guidance, with the only person that believed they could tell the future not really knowing why they believed so.

Interestingly enough the women all agree that they are a very old invention with a few prescribing to the myths and a surprising number actually drawing very close to what is believed to have been historically accurate.

I am actually shocked that of the 6 responding half the women considered themselves Pagan or Neo-Pagan with the rest not giving an outright no...

Over half the women knew one or many people that owned a Deck, this shows just how widespread they are. Compared to this however over half do not have a deck of their own.  

Male Responses:

Q1; Not really, but never had a reading... 
Q2a; I don't believe in fate as such, and how else will a desk of cards reliably tell the future? 
Q3; Probably as a concentration technique for the naturally gifted, or a distracting pastime for rich women. 
Q4; Not reliably 
Q5; At least one 
Q6; Nope... I own Runes though... 

~~~

Q1; No. 
Q2a; Their pieces of card. Nothing can tell the future. 
Q3; Ancient Egypt, maybe. 
Q4; No. 
Q5; No. 
Q6; No. 

~~~

Q1; Yes but more than just that, they can open up your past and define your present. 
Q2b; From both having and doing readings in the past.
Q3; Back gods knows when. As for why that is not so easy to say, I would like to think it was a way to show some one else what the reader was seeing in their head but I also think it was a way for shady people to scam money out of people.
Q4; More Wiccan then Pagan.
Q5; Yes.
Q6; Yes.

Two of the three male respondents do not believe that Tarot tell the future. Their reasoning's on why differed greatly but only one of them thought that they were nothing but cards.  

The men also tended to follow the myths about their creation but also came close the historical theory.

Only one of the men even remotely considered themselves Pagan.

Two of the men knew people that owned Decks and one himself owned a Deck, however interestingly another owned a set of Rune Stones. (Widely considered a similar tool for divination).

It is interesting that the participant with no experience of the Tarot cards had absolutely no belief in them. This is however what I would expect as these things can be cause and effect. If you don't see something you don't tend to believe in or likewise if you don't believe in something you don't go out of your way to own it or seek it.
That being said maybe its a statement on how the cards work? Perhaps for them to actually be effective you need to have a little faith or at least believe in something.  

One of the most interesting responses I received was from a friend of mine who is a Druid.
“Cards don't tell the future.
Tarot images have been found from medieval times - rumored earlier but none have survived. They originally appealed to the French romantic courtly class, with their popularity growing throughout the West. Last century theorists such as Jung have suggested their enduring appeal is due to the images tapping into enduring human archetypes, inspiring 'messages' from the subconscious to apply to life situations.
I am Pagan in belief and practice. I know many readers and myself have several sets, but do not rely on them! Fascinating to see them used well, however. If they inspire and help people, that's positive, but like anything, but be respected for what they are/do (including potential for misuse).” -Cat Treadwell a Druid

Wednesday 2 February 2011

MEDI 236: History of Tarot

There are a lot of myths and legends surrounding Tarot. One of the most common myths is that Gypsies invented them, some others still site their place of inception to be Morocco or Egypt. However no one knows for definite where they came from or how they came to be.  The first mentions of the cards are under a slightly different name in the 14th century however these were used in games and as educational tools for the rich and not as the divination tools they are known as today.

Historically its widely believed that the cards first developed in Italy as playing cards based on grand parades and were then adopted as a divination tool in France. This theory was proposed and most prolifically written about by Decker, Dummett et al, 1996, "A Wicked Pack of Cards: The Origins of the Occult Tarot" There is then no mention of the cards for around three hundred years, until the late 1700's. At this point it is believed that Antoine Court de Gébelin a reported Occultist and Freemason saw the card game of 'Tarocchi' being played, he was said to see great symbolism in the cards that he attributed to the Ancient  Egyptians. 

Very soon the idea of the cards being symbolic and having great meaning spread, hence Tarot as a divination tool is born!  It was also then linked to the Gypsies who absorbed parts from different cultures, which were then amalgamated and the new over-culture then disseminated wherever they went (Like a pre-internet, internet like communication system), furthering the spread of Tarots popularity and also the spread of its myths.

The popularity of Tarot steadily grew into the 19th century when another Occultist by the pseudonym of  Eliphas Levi linked the cards to the Hebrew Mystic faith of Kabalah and the 'Tree of Life'. Earlier De Gébelin had linked the cards to Kabalah since there are 22 major or 'trump' cards and also 22 letters in the Hebrew alphabet but it was Eliphas Levi that expanded on this.

The next set of people to champion the Tarot Deck were the 'Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn' in the late 1800's; these along with Aleister Crowley and Arthur Edward Waite are notable for having the most influence on modern Tarot Decks and practices. Crowley is considered an important part in the Neo-Pagan movement.  Thus we are, in modern times left with most Tarot Decks being copies of either Waite's or Crowley's. However nowadays there are so many Decks with such a wide variety of artwork that they seem to have a life of their own and are now being constantly reinvented and linked to new symbols or spiritualism and used by a wider range of people from a wider range of belief.

To summarise, although Tarot has constantly evolved over the ages it is still in a state of flux especially as Paganism is thrust more and more into the public eye and cultures merge through use of the melting pot that is the internet. Therefore Tarot is and will continue to develop and grow as a divination tool for the foreseeable future.


MEDI 236: Change of Plan...

Ok so going with the Pagan idea that I orriginally had is not feasable as all of my models have droped out or not been able to make it or lived to far away. So I have been thwarted in my original idea because of cost and time and the fact that mostly Pagans are a private bunch.

The new idea then is to focus on Tarot. Speciffically one reading between two reliable friends of mine. This is still along the same lines as the Reader is Pagan herself.

I will be photographing the reading and also I will record it for transcription purposes. I would like to include a very brief text with my photos so that a veiwer can understand the general idea of what is happening a lot better.