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Found 3 results

  1. WhiteMoon

    The Dalí Tarot

    From the album: Artistic Decks

    Author - Johannes Fiebig Artist - Salvador Dalí ISBN - 978-3836576123 Publisher - TASCHEN First Published - 1984 as a Limited Edition (probably after Live and Let Die's release, Dalí's made a prop deck for the film was not used in the movie ultimately) This Version (Complete Deck) - June 2022 Card Size - 3 x 5.5 Language - English, German and French Purchase here - https://www.amazon.com/Dalí-Tarot-Johannes-Fiebig/dp/3836576120/ https://www.taschen.com/en/books/art/44640/dali-tarot Note: Comes with a companion book by Johannes Fiebig, not to be confused with the US Games's Dali Universal Tarot Deck which is a cheaper version of the same art, or Salvador Dali's Tarot, a book by Rachel Pollack
  2. bookshop

    Sakki-Sakki Tarot

    From the album: Artistic Decks

    The Sakki-Sakki Tarot Creator: Monicka Clio Sakki Publisher: Self-published Year published: 2015 Colorful, vibrant, surreal deck designed for artists and creativity. It incorporates the structure and meanings of the Rider-Waite-Smith deck, together with Astrology, Kabbalah and personal symbolism. Contains an extra "Artist" card. Available: From the artist's website
  3. The Surrealistic Card game of Marseille. The Marseille Game. The Jeu de Marseille is an surrealist variant of the Tarot de Marseille created in March 1941 by artists in exile at Villa Air-Bel in Marseille . In August 1940, the American journalist Varian Fry (1907-1967), a hero who saved between 2000 and 4000 Jews arrives in Marseille as a representative of the Emergency Rescue Committee (American Rescue Committee). His mission was clear and very important for the future of the world: Allow personalities artistic, political or scientific, under the threat of the application of Article 19 of the Armistice Agreement which stipulates the delivery to Germany of all foreigners declared "prosecuted and undesirable", to leave the French territory. Fortunately he was financially assisted by Mary Jayne Gold, further Varian enjoys the patronage of Eleanor Roosevelt. Villa Air- Bell, an eighteen rooms country house was rented in order to accommodate refugees waiting for a visa to leave the territory, Begin October the first occupants arrived. André Breton was with them. Other surrealist artists join Breton: the painters Victor Brauner , Max Ernst , Wifredo Lam , André Masson and the poet Benjamin Péret . Magic in excile The surrealist met frequently at the Wolf Burner 2, a pub on the Old Port when someone launches the idea of creating a card game on the model of the Tarot of Marseille. They changed the names and appearance of the suits and the courts for the sake of national identity so the surrealists in fact attacked excisting social values. The suits are re-fashioned in a surrealist manner. The 2 reds and 2 black colour scheme is retained. Why change colours anyway when those colours are connected with strong revolutionary links during those days? Red and black, the colours of the Spanish Anarchist Organization CNT-FAI? De game of Marseille, Le Jeu du Marseille is limited to the standard 52 cards plus 2 jokers (Ubu Roi), The major arcana is excluded although the Marseille reference certainly suggests that one of its many purposes is divinatory. The suits are as follows Black: The locks – representing knowledge The stars – representing dreams Red: The wheels – representing revolution The flames- representing love The surrealist courts : Away with royalty! The court cards were banished and replaces by different figures of Genius, Siren and Magus. All figures comes from the surrealist pantheon. Locks: Genius ;Hegel Siren: Helene Smith Magus: Paracelsus Stars: Genius: Lautremont Siren: Alice (Wonderland) Magus: Freud Wheels: Genius: Sade Siren: Lamiel Magus: Pancho Villa Flames: Genius: Baudelaire Siren: La Religeuse Portugaise Magus: Novalis The game was first published in the surrealist magazine VVV in 1943 and later exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York . In 1983, the Game was published in a box set by André Dimanche, and reproduced in the catalog of the exhibition The Distraught Planet in 1986. In 2003, the twenty-two drawings of the Game were offered to the Cantini Museum by Aube Elléouët-Breton and her daughter Oona in memory of Varian Fry. This is the Dutch Box of 'De Woelrat Amsterdam 1985'
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