Pamela Colman Smith (1878–1951)
Forfatter af Rider-Waite Tarot Deck
Om forfatteren
Image credit: Biography card of the Rider Waite Tarot Deck, as published by U.S. Games Systems, Inc. Stamford, CT. 06902.
Værker af Pamela Colman Smith
The Green Sheaf 6 2 eksemplarer
The Green Sheaf 1 2 eksemplarer
The Green Sheaf 3 2 eksemplarer
The Green Sheaf 5 2 eksemplarer
The Green Sheaf 4 1 eksemplar
Pam's Vintage Tarot borderless text edition 1 eksemplar
The Green Sheaf 2 1 eksemplar
Tarot of the New Vision 1 eksemplar
The Green Sheaf 13 1 eksemplar
The Green Sheaf 12 1 eksemplar
The Green Sheaf 10 1 eksemplar
The Green Sheaf 9 1 eksemplar
The Green Sheaf 8 1 eksemplar
The Green Sheaf 7 1 eksemplar
The Green Sheaf 11 1 eksemplar
Associated Works
In Chimney Corners: Merry Tales of Irish Folk-Lore (1904) — Illustrator, nogle udgaver — 8 eksemplarer
Satte nøgleord på
Almen Viden
- Fødselsdato
- 1878-02-16
- Dødsdag
- 1951-09-18
- Køn
- female
- Dødssted
- Bude, Cornwall, England, UK
- Bopæl
- Kingston, Jamaica
London, England, UK
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Cornwall, England, UK - Uddannelse
- Pratt Institute (1897)
- Relationer
- Markino, Yoshio (friend)
Ransome, Arthur (friend) - Organisationer
- Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn
Medlemmer
Anmeldelser
Måske også interessante?
Associated Authors
Statistikker
- Værker
- 24
- Also by
- 4
- Medlemmer
- 793
- Popularitet
- #32,132
- Vurdering
- 3.2
- Anmeldelser
- 6
- ISBN
- 35
- Sprog
- 4
Different versions such as the "Original", "Universal", "Radiant", "Centennial" etc. should NOT be stacked under the same work since they are different as every discerning tarot collector knows.
This is NOT a "classic" deck! That denomination is only appropriate for the 15th, 16th and 17th century decks such as the Italian Tarocchi and the following several editions of the Tarot of Marseille (you can browse my books and decks).
This is a MODERN Tarot designed entirely for divination purposes and introducing controversial fundamental changes in the original names, symbols and order of the "Triumphs" (Aka "Major Arcana"): for example, the VIII (Justice) was swapped with the XI (Strength/Fortitude). The other cards were given pictorial "meanings" which, of course, facilitate (accounting for most of its popularity) but also seriously limit their interpretation.
The changes introduced followed pseudo-arcane turn-of-the-century mystical concepts developed inside the intellectual "Golden Dawn" sect based on a cosmological holistic "hermetic" miscellany claiming to be a tradition-of-the-ages endearing to the non-scientific elite of the time. The remade images of the Triumphs show lots of Egyptian, Hebrew and new-age elements irrelevant to the old tarot original symbolism.
It famously features the worst card design ever in its "Wheel of Fortune".
Unfortunately, after this deck's publication most modern English-speaking "Tarologists" follow Waite's short-sighted personal view of the tarot cards and the Tarot as a Renaissance allegoric and symbolic documentary statement lost much of its charm and archetypal potential to the general public.
It's a pity people keep following these misguided recent "traditions" thinking they are all about the real tarot. However they are unknowingly just "playing in the secondary league" with no further evolution in sight.
When this deceiving deck were first invented allegedly "to correct and perfect" the tradition (as unashamedly claimed by Waite in his book) tarot had already more than 5 centuries of history and even now we are only beginning to fully understand its mysteries.
This tarot deck published by US Games and AG Muller rates as a close (vastly overrated) second in influence ever, right after the Paul Marteau's edition of the "Tarot of Marseilles" today sold by publishers Grimaud and Dussere.… (mere)