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Initiating readers in the fascinating and complex history of
witchcraft, from the goddess mythologies of ancient cultures to the
contemporary embrace of the craft by modern artists and activists,
this expansive tome conjures up a breathtaking overview of an
age-old tradition. Rooted in legend, folklore, and myth, the
archetype of the witch has evolved from the tales of Odysseus and
Circe, the Celtic seductress Cerridwen, and the myth of Hecate,
fierce ruler of the moonlit night. In Witchcraft we survey her many
incarnations since, as she shape-shifts through the centuries,
alternately transforming into mother, nymph, and crone-seductress
and destroyer. Edited by Jessica Hundley, and co-edited by author,
scholar, and practitioner Pam Grossman, this enthralling visual
chronicle is the first of its kind, a deep dive into the complex
symbologies behind witchcraft traditions, as explored through the
history of art itself. The witch has played muse to great artists
throughout time, from the dark seductions of Francisco Jose de Goya
and Albrecht Durer to the elegant paean to the magickal feminine as
re-imagined by the Surrealist circle of Remedios Varo, Leonora
Carrington, and Leonor Fini. The witch has spellbound through
folktales and dramatic literature as well, from the poison apples
of The Brothers Grimm, to the Weird Sisters gathered at their black
cauldron in Shakespeare's Macbeth, to L. Frank Baum's iconic Wicked
Witch of the West, cackling over the fate of Dorothy. Throughout
this entrancing visual voyage, we'll also bear witness to the witch
as she endures persecution and evolves into empowerment, a
contemporary symbol of bold defiance and potent nonconformity.
Featuring enlightening essays by modern practitioners like Kristen
J. Sollee and Judika Illes, as well interviews with authors and
scholars such as Madeline Miller and Juliet Diaz, Witchcraft
includes a vast range of cultural traditions that embrace magick as
spiritual exploration and creative catharsis. About the series The
Library of Esoterica explores how centuries of artists have given
form to mysticism, translating the arcane and the obscure into
enduring, visionary works of art. Each subject is showcased through
both modern and archival imagery culled from private collectors,
libraries, and museums around the globe. The result forms an
inclusive visual history, a study of our primal pull to dream and
nightmare, and the creative ways we strive to connect to the
divine.
Celebrating the magick of the natural realm, Volume IV of The
Library of Esoterica, delves into the symbolism, ceremony, and our
ritual relationships with the botanical world. A visual journey
through our interdependent evolution with nature, Plant Magick
celebrates botanicals as creative muse - from ancient Greek
sculptures to Renaissance paintings to visionary art inspired by
psychoactive plants, cacti, and mushrooms. Our myths, beliefs, and
shared stories are continually reflected in nature; purity
represented by the white lily or spiritual awakening by the bloom
of the lotus. Our joys and laments are mirrored in the cycle of the
seasons, in the seed birthing sprout, or in the dead leaf falling
softly from winter branches. Plants, trees, and flowers as
signifiers of transition are also deeply embedded within rites of
passage rituals across global cultures. Rose petals strewn along
the wedding aisle mark the evolution into womanhood and marriage. A
wreath of lilies stands sentinel over an open grave. A lover's
bouquet awaits on the doorstep. The wooden May Day pole is circled
by girls wearing crowns of woven daisies, celebrating the coming of
spring. Birth, unions, and burials - cycles of joyful celebration
and deep grieving, all are marked symbolically with herbs, flowers
or branches of a tree - the integration of nature into ceremony our
method of signifying catharsis. Since time immemorial, plants have
also served as potent symbols within the religions of the world;
Buddha attaining enlightenment under the Bodhi Tree, Eve plucking
the Apple of Knowledge in the Garden of Eden. From root to vibrant
blossom, Plant Magick explores the fertile, interconnected history
between plants and people, the multitude of ways in which we
embrace plants in spiritual ceremony, as healing medicine, as
creative muse and as gateways into deeper explorations of
consciousness. About the series The Library of Esoterica explores
how centuries of artists have given form to mysticism, translating
the arcane and the obscure into enduring, visionary works of art.
Each subject is showcased through both modern and archival imagery
culled from private collectors, libraries, and museums around the
globe. The result forms an inclusive visual history, a study of our
primal pull to dream and nightmare, and the creative ways we strive
to connect to the divine.
From the beginning of human history, individuals across cultures
and belief systems have looked to the sky for meaning. The movement
of celestial bodies and their relation to our human lives has been
the central tenant of astrology for thousands of years. The
practice has both inspired reverence and worship, and deepened our
understanding of ourselves and the world around us. While
modern-day horoscopes may be the most familiar form of astrological
knowledge, their lineage reaches back to ancient Mesopotamia. As
author Andrea Richards recounts in Astrology, the second volume in
TASCHEN's Library of Esoterica series, astronomy and astrology were
once sister sciences: the King's Chamber of the Great Pyramid at
Giza was built to align with constellations, Persian scholars
oversaw some of the first observatories, and even Galileo cast
horoscopes for the Medicis. But with the Enlightenment and the
birth of exact science, the practice moved to places where mystery
was still permitted, inspiring literature, art, and psychology, and
influenced artists and thinkers such as Goethe, Byron, and Blake.
Later movements like the Theosophists and the New Agers, would
thrust the practice into the mainstream. Edited by Jessica Hundley,
this vibrant visual history of Western astrology is the first ever
compendium of its kind, exploring the symbolic meaning behind more
than 400 images, from Egyptian temples and illuminated manuscripts
to contemporary art from across the globe. Works by artists from
Alphonese Mucha and Hilma af Klint to Arpita Singh and Manzel
Bowman are sequenced to mirror the spin of the planets and the
wheel of the zodiac. With wisdom from new interviews with
astrologers like Robert Hand, Jessica Lanyadoo, and Mecca Woods,
Astrology celebrates the stars and their mysterious influence on
our everyday lives. About the series The Library of Esoterica
explores how centuries of artists have given form to mysticism,
translating the arcane and the obscure into enduring, visionary
works of art. Each subject is showcased through both modern and
archival imagery culled from private collectors, libraries, and
museums around the globe. The result forms an inclusive visual
history, a study of our primal pull to dream and nightmare, and the
creative ways we strive to connect to the divine.
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Tarot. The Library of Esoterica (Book)
Jessica Hundley, Johannes Fiebig, Marcella Kroll; Designed by Thunderwing
2
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R968
R810
Discovery Miles 8 100
Save R158 (16%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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To explore the Tarot is to explore ourselves, to be reminded of the
universality of our longing for meaning, for purpose and for a
connection to the divine. This 600-year-old tradition reflects not
only a history of seekers, but our journey of artistic expression
and the ways we communicate our collective human story. For many in
the West, Tarot exists in the shadow place of our cultural
consciousness, a metaphysical tradition assigned to the dusty glass
cabinets of the arcane. Its history, long and obscure, has been
passed down through secret writing, oral tradition, and the
scholarly tomes of philosophers and sages. Hundreds of years and
hundreds of creative hands-mystics and artists often working in
collaboration-have transformed what was essentially a parlor game
into a source of divination and system of self-exploration, as each
new generation has sought to evolve the form and reinterpret the
medium. Author Jessica Hundley traces this fascinating history in
Tarot, the debut volume in TASCHEN's Library of Esoterica series.
The book explores the symbolic meaning behind more than 500 cards
and works of original art, two thirds of which have never been
published outside of the decks themselves. It's the first ever
visual compendium of its kind, spanning from Medieval to modern,
and artfully arranged according to the sequencing of the 78 cards
of the Major and Minor Arcana. It explores the powerful influence
of Tarot as muse to artists like Salvador Dali and Niki de Saint
Phalle and includes the decks of nearly 100 diverse contemporary
artists from around the world, all of whom have embraced the medium
for its capacity to push cultural identity forward. Rounding out
the volume are excerpts from thinkers such as Eliphas Levi, Carl
Jung, and Joseph Campbell; a foreword by artist Penny Slinger; a
guide to reading the cards by Johannes Fiebig; and an essay on
oracle decks by Marcella Kroll. About the series The Library of
Esoterica explores how centuries of artists have given form to
mysticism, translating the arcane and the obscure into enduring,
visionary works of art. Each subject is showcased through both
modern and archival imagery culled from private collectors,
libraries, and museums around the globe. The result forms an
inclusive visual history, a study of our primal pull to dream and
nightmare, and the creative ways we strive to connect to the
divine.
Out of print for more than half a century, LSD: A Journey into the
Asked, the Answered, and the Unknown, is now available in a
commemorative edition, with candid commentary, a new introduction
by counterculture journalist Jessica Hundley, and a photographic
portrait of a generation. In the midst of a raging national
controversy around the indiscriminate use of LSD, two authorities
– Richard Alpert, PhD (AKA Ram Dass) and psychoanalyst Sidney
Cohen, MD – spoke out on the dangers, merits, legal regulations
and control of the revolutionary psychedelic drug. Their book was
illustrated with a groundbreaking photo essay by journalist
Lawrence Schiller, whose cover story for Life magazine introduced
America to the sweeping new LSD epidemic and was a precursor to the
federal criminalization of the drug. As the first national
photojournalist to capture the American acid scene from the inside,
Schiller began with a single contact in Berkeley, California, and
built a large network of young, receptive subjects who allowed him
to document their private experiences with LSD. At first, his
contacts were few and difficult. “Many of them were afraid,”
and said no. There were others, however, who were trying to
exercise their rebellion, “and some…had a sort of missionary
quality. They not only wanted to tell about their experiences; they
seemed as though they had to.” Schiller’s reporting expanded to
include Timothy Leary, then on trial in Laredo, Texas, and the
Merry Pranksters, who stopped by his studio for stroboscopic photos
after the Hollywood Acid Test. The deeper he went into the story,
the more questions he had. Questions like, “Is the LSD state
reality or illusion?” and “Can you understand…without having
had “the experience?” Figuring others did as well, he asked
Alpert and Cohen to answer them for readers—from their two
opposing points of view. The unexpected result is perhaps one of
the most deeply informative documents on psychedelics ever
published. It sold close to a million copies. At a time when the
use of consciousness-expanding substances is again making
headlines, the moment that LSD burst out from the rarified world of
Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert’s experiments at Harvard to acid
parties on the Sunset Strip is worth a second look.
During the 1960s, Dennis Hopper carried a camera everywhere-on film
sets and locations, at parties, in diners, bars and galleries,
driving on freeways and walking on political marches. He
photographed movie idols, pop stars, writers, artists, girlfriends,
and complete strangers. Along the way he captured some of the most
intriguing moments of his generation with a keen and intuitive eye.
A reluctant icon at the epicenter of that decade's cultural
upheaval, Hopper documented the likes of Tina Turner in the studio,
Andy Warhol at his first West Coast show, Paul Newman on set, and
Martin Luther King during the Civil Rights March from Selma to
Montgomery, Alabama. From a selection of photographs compiled by
Hopper and gallerist Tony Shafrazi, this extensive volume, finally
back in print in a new edition, distills the essence of Hopper's
prodigious photographic career. Also included are introductory
essays by Shafrazi and legendary West Coast art pioneer Walter
Hopps, as well as an extensive biography and new afterword by
journalist Jessica Hundley. With excerpts from Victor Bockris's
interviews of Hopper's famous subjects, friends, and family, this
volume revives an unprecedented exploration of the life and mind of
one of America's most fascinating personalities.
There has never been a better time for a book on Gram Parsons. At
the thirty-year anniversary of his death, his sound, a mix of
country and rock 'n' roll, is absolutely everywhere. Popular
musicians of today trace their inspiration to pick up a guitar to
when they first heard his music. His songs and his style have had a
lasting effect on the music of our time. Now, together with
Parsons's daughter, Polly, Jessica Hundley has created an intimate
and extensive biography that brings together never-before-seen
photos and illustrations, unpublished letters, and in-depth
interviews with some of the many artists whose work was shaped by
Parsons, including Keith Richards, Emmylou Harris, Wilco, and Ryan
Adams, among many others. Grievous Angel is the tribute that the
legions of Parsons fans have been waiting for--a book that brings
to life the story of the Southern boy who revolutionized the way
music sounds.
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