Welcome to the Art Historian's Toolbox
Posted: 01 Jun 2019, 15:11
As some of you may know, I'm an art historian. That means I have a specific set of skills that help me in my tarot practice. As art historian, I constantly move from the mute, artistic right-brain that thinks in forms and colours to the talking, counting, rational left-brain (let's accept this as metaphor, okay?)
Tarot cards give a visual language. And the visual message doesn't use words. Obviously, each card also gives verbal messages: it has a name, number, astrological associations or other information, and we can name symbols and depictions on the cards: that's a crown, that's a dog, and that's a snake.
I hope that knowledge from my art historian's tool box will help others to understand how "reading a picture" works. I don't have a very clear plan yet but I want to open a new thread every week (at least, maybe more, we'll see) and explain a different set of terms and techniques how to de-code a visual message.
Artists, by the way, work intuitively. They don't say: I want to express anger, so let's look it up in the encyclopedia of artistic expression - ah, red and spiky it must be! They just express what they want to express. And much of it is obvious to us. We simply know to read visual messages from a young age. We SEE what our parents' faces tell us, we understand whether it's night or day, we orient ourselves in the space around us, all this is natural and instinctive for us. (If we have full sight, of course).
So why this thread?
Well, if we read for others, we need to put these visual messages into words. And in order for that to work, we can use every tool in the box. The personal association, intuition, book knowledge, esoteric theory, certain reading techniques - everything.
I'd like to add one thing here.
If you have ideas or questions, tell me so.
My idea is to structure this sub forum like a little course. I start with one card and what we can see there, and then we'll move to spreads, i.e., the interaction between cards.
What do you think?
Tarot cards give a visual language. And the visual message doesn't use words. Obviously, each card also gives verbal messages: it has a name, number, astrological associations or other information, and we can name symbols and depictions on the cards: that's a crown, that's a dog, and that's a snake.
I hope that knowledge from my art historian's tool box will help others to understand how "reading a picture" works. I don't have a very clear plan yet but I want to open a new thread every week (at least, maybe more, we'll see) and explain a different set of terms and techniques how to de-code a visual message.
Artists, by the way, work intuitively. They don't say: I want to express anger, so let's look it up in the encyclopedia of artistic expression - ah, red and spiky it must be! They just express what they want to express. And much of it is obvious to us. We simply know to read visual messages from a young age. We SEE what our parents' faces tell us, we understand whether it's night or day, we orient ourselves in the space around us, all this is natural and instinctive for us. (If we have full sight, of course).
So why this thread?
Well, if we read for others, we need to put these visual messages into words. And in order for that to work, we can use every tool in the box. The personal association, intuition, book knowledge, esoteric theory, certain reading techniques - everything.
I'd like to add one thing here.
If you have ideas or questions, tell me so.
My idea is to structure this sub forum like a little course. I start with one card and what we can see there, and then we'll move to spreads, i.e., the interaction between cards.
What do you think?