Pharos Tarot by MM Meleen
Posted: 10 Jan 2020, 13:41
Hi friends!
After a couple of years of preparation and painting, Pharos Tarot Majors are ready!
The Pre-order phase has begun, and the decks will ship in February. You can see cards at the following link. At the top of the page are examples of a few in three versions, and near the bottom of the page are links to every card except the last two which aren't yet shown, to give some surprise http://www.tabulamundi.com/pharos/
Tarot, like a lighthouse, is a guidance device. Pharos Tarot was named after the Lighthouse of Alexandria, the world's first lighthouse and one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. It is a Majors only deck as it's function is to illustrate hiw the Major Arcana are facets of the One, by correlating each part of a Lighthouse system (the Lighthouse itself and its related peripherals the sea, ship, and navigation) to one of the Majors and its Qabalistic Hebrew letter correspondence. Each card is given a name in addition to the standard (Thoth based) title.
So if you are curious about the Pharos card names I can tell you a little about them. They aren't trying to reinvent Tarot titles. They reference the different parts that make up a Lighthouse system. The Lighthouse pillar represents the One, that all of the Majors are different facets of. The muse spoke to me one evening and said that every part of a lighthouse system could correspond to a Major card and it's Hebrew letter.
The examples I have been using to exolain how it works to those who haven't been following the creation process are The Empress and Death as they illustrate how it works. Sometimes it is so simple it's obvious, like in the case of The Empress, who is the Gate of Heaven. Her letter Dalet means Door - so her Pharos title is "The Door", and she corresponds to the door of the Lighthouse.
Other times it is more complex. The Death card has a Pharos title of "The Walk". It fits because Death is a transition, a journey to a new reality. But it also corresponds to a part of the Lighthouse called "The Widow's Walk", a walkway around the Lighthouse that was used as an observation deck, sometimes by women waiting for the ship of their mate to return from sea. The skeleton in the card is female - Isis the widow of Osiris, god of death, the afterlife, and rebirth.
Osiris was killed by his brother Set, and his corpse was cut into fourteen pieces and thrown into the Nile. Isis searched out all the pieces except one. Thirteen pieces of Osiris were found, but there was one unfortunate loss: the phallus had been swallowed by a fish. The all important organ for life and procreation was missing. Isis, with her sister Nepthys and with the help of Anubis, embalmed the parts remaining. Isis fashioned a new phallus from clay, and through magic, they breathed new life into him long enough for Isis and Osiris to conceive the child Horus, avenger of his father.
The Hebrew letter for Death is Nun, meaning fish. You can see it in the card in her glowing glass lantern, and perhaps carried by Scorpio's eagle in the distance.
Anyway, the Pharos titles are not meant to change or soften the meanings of any title, they are meant to enhance and illustrate the Lighthouse correspondence. Because the Majors are divine guidance from the One.
It is set in a dream space, as the inspiration came in a liminal state, so the images have a surreal quality and aren't meant to be realistic.
The art is all hand drawn and painted in watercolor, because the deck is also an exploration of color and the intersection of Water and Light - in keeping with the Lighthouse theme.
Each card is done in the colors of the Golden Dawn color scales.
The originals are on A3 cold pressed paper (about 12x16).
The decks come with an comprehensive text explaing the meanings, symbols, lighthose part and Pharos title, and analysis of the GD color scales and meanings behind them, for each card. And more.
The cards are extra large Majors only, sized 4x6.25 inches and come in three choices of styles:
Bordered cards have cream colored borders with Thoth based titles and Pharos based titles as subtitles. The attribution symbols are in the lower corners.
Completely borderless cards have only the Pharos titles which are all one word (not including "The"), in a color readable but relating to the art so that it isn't obtrusive. The minimal titling enhances the spacious borderless feeling and allows for concentration on the art. No need to be concerned about which card is which in spite of the alternate titles - it will be obvious to anyone familiar with tarot. These are Thoth based, so expect a Lust and Aeon rather than Strength and Judgement, though.
Then there is an option that is borderless on three sides but has a black bottom border. These have the Roman numeral of the card and the Pharis title, done in the Golden Dawn King Scale color, since that's the scale of the Major Arcana. This option gives max readability and identification with still a borderless feeling. Plus the appropriate color for pathworking.
Hopefully between the three versions there is something to please everyone! Each deck comes with 24 cards plus a signed numbered title card. 24 not 22 as there are alternate versions of some cards. Each version gets different alternates.
You can see more here http://www.tabulamundi.com/Pharos/ and pre-order here http://www.tarotcart.com. This is the pre-order price and there is a 13% discount if you want all three.
I hope it sheds some light upon your tarot journey and increases vision in 2020.
After a couple of years of preparation and painting, Pharos Tarot Majors are ready!
The Pre-order phase has begun, and the decks will ship in February. You can see cards at the following link. At the top of the page are examples of a few in three versions, and near the bottom of the page are links to every card except the last two which aren't yet shown, to give some surprise http://www.tabulamundi.com/pharos/
Tarot, like a lighthouse, is a guidance device. Pharos Tarot was named after the Lighthouse of Alexandria, the world's first lighthouse and one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. It is a Majors only deck as it's function is to illustrate hiw the Major Arcana are facets of the One, by correlating each part of a Lighthouse system (the Lighthouse itself and its related peripherals the sea, ship, and navigation) to one of the Majors and its Qabalistic Hebrew letter correspondence. Each card is given a name in addition to the standard (Thoth based) title.
So if you are curious about the Pharos card names I can tell you a little about them. They aren't trying to reinvent Tarot titles. They reference the different parts that make up a Lighthouse system. The Lighthouse pillar represents the One, that all of the Majors are different facets of. The muse spoke to me one evening and said that every part of a lighthouse system could correspond to a Major card and it's Hebrew letter.
The examples I have been using to exolain how it works to those who haven't been following the creation process are The Empress and Death as they illustrate how it works. Sometimes it is so simple it's obvious, like in the case of The Empress, who is the Gate of Heaven. Her letter Dalet means Door - so her Pharos title is "The Door", and she corresponds to the door of the Lighthouse.
Other times it is more complex. The Death card has a Pharos title of "The Walk". It fits because Death is a transition, a journey to a new reality. But it also corresponds to a part of the Lighthouse called "The Widow's Walk", a walkway around the Lighthouse that was used as an observation deck, sometimes by women waiting for the ship of their mate to return from sea. The skeleton in the card is female - Isis the widow of Osiris, god of death, the afterlife, and rebirth.
Osiris was killed by his brother Set, and his corpse was cut into fourteen pieces and thrown into the Nile. Isis searched out all the pieces except one. Thirteen pieces of Osiris were found, but there was one unfortunate loss: the phallus had been swallowed by a fish. The all important organ for life and procreation was missing. Isis, with her sister Nepthys and with the help of Anubis, embalmed the parts remaining. Isis fashioned a new phallus from clay, and through magic, they breathed new life into him long enough for Isis and Osiris to conceive the child Horus, avenger of his father.
The Hebrew letter for Death is Nun, meaning fish. You can see it in the card in her glowing glass lantern, and perhaps carried by Scorpio's eagle in the distance.
Anyway, the Pharos titles are not meant to change or soften the meanings of any title, they are meant to enhance and illustrate the Lighthouse correspondence. Because the Majors are divine guidance from the One.
It is set in a dream space, as the inspiration came in a liminal state, so the images have a surreal quality and aren't meant to be realistic.
The art is all hand drawn and painted in watercolor, because the deck is also an exploration of color and the intersection of Water and Light - in keeping with the Lighthouse theme.
Each card is done in the colors of the Golden Dawn color scales.
The originals are on A3 cold pressed paper (about 12x16).
The decks come with an comprehensive text explaing the meanings, symbols, lighthose part and Pharos title, and analysis of the GD color scales and meanings behind them, for each card. And more.
The cards are extra large Majors only, sized 4x6.25 inches and come in three choices of styles:
Bordered cards have cream colored borders with Thoth based titles and Pharos based titles as subtitles. The attribution symbols are in the lower corners.
Completely borderless cards have only the Pharos titles which are all one word (not including "The"), in a color readable but relating to the art so that it isn't obtrusive. The minimal titling enhances the spacious borderless feeling and allows for concentration on the art. No need to be concerned about which card is which in spite of the alternate titles - it will be obvious to anyone familiar with tarot. These are Thoth based, so expect a Lust and Aeon rather than Strength and Judgement, though.
Then there is an option that is borderless on three sides but has a black bottom border. These have the Roman numeral of the card and the Pharis title, done in the Golden Dawn King Scale color, since that's the scale of the Major Arcana. This option gives max readability and identification with still a borderless feeling. Plus the appropriate color for pathworking.
Hopefully between the three versions there is something to please everyone! Each deck comes with 24 cards plus a signed numbered title card. 24 not 22 as there are alternate versions of some cards. Each version gets different alternates.
You can see more here http://www.tabulamundi.com/Pharos/ and pre-order here http://www.tarotcart.com. This is the pre-order price and there is a 13% discount if you want all three.
I hope it sheds some light upon your tarot journey and increases vision in 2020.