The deck was originally created for the 1970s James Bond film Live
and Let Die, starring Roger Moore and Jane Seymour, but it never appeared in
the picture.
Hakim Bishara
The Impress card from Salvador Dalí’s tarot deck, featuring his
wife Gala Dalí (© Cartamundi, Turnhout Belgium © Salvador Dalí, Fundació
Gala-Salvador Dalí, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2019)
If you think you already know everything there is to know about
Salvador Dalí, this lesser-known factoid might change your mind: In the early
1970s, the surrealist artist ventured into the occult with a custom deck of
tarot cards featuring himself and his wife, Gala, as mystical figures. The deck
was originally created for the 1973 James Bond film Live and Let Die, starring
Roger Moore and Jane Seymour, but it never appeared in the picture.
In 1973, Albert R. Broccoli, a producer for
the 18th James Bond spy thriller, approached Dalí with an offer to create the
tarot deck for a scene in the film. The cards were needed as props for the
character of Solitaire, played by Seymour, a psychic who works for a menacing
drug lord. As Bond films typically go, the psychic changes sides to become the
spy’s collaborator and love interest.
Dalí accepted the offer and started working on
the cards, possibly encouraged by his mystically inclined wife Gala, but it was
rumored that the contract fell through when the artist demanded an astronomical
fee that was too high even for the film’s $7 million budget.
The Lovers (© Cartamundi, Turnhout Belgium © Salvador Dalí,
Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalí, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2019)
Dalí was eventually replaced by a much more affordable artist named
Fergus Hall, whose Tarot of the Witches card made a short appearance in the
film. Nevertheless, Dalí continued working on his deck, which he eventually
offered for sale in 1984. The deck came with a companion book that included
instructions on how to use the cards and a description of their making. Now,
Dalí cards are available to all in Taschen Books‘s reproduced edition of the
deck, released in October of this year. A deck will cost you $60.
The deck’s 78 cards combine classic tarot themes with Dalí’s
signature motifs: dissected faces, ants, roses, and butterflies. The deck
features the artist himself as the Magician, while his wife poses as the
Empress. Dalí’s Ten of Swords card — which can represent betrayal,
backstabbing, or the death of a relationship — is a depiction of the
assassination of Julius Caesar. The Queen of Cups is a play on François
Clouet’s portrait Elisabeth of Austria, Queen of France (circa 1571), whom Dalí
dresses with a goatee and mustache. The Moon is a woman’s face looking down on
at a modern metropolis and Death is an ominous skull in a floating, cut-off
cypress tree.
Death (© Cartamundi, Turnhout Belgium © Salvador Dalí, Fundació
Gala-Salvador Dalí, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2019)
As a poke at the producers of Live and Let Die, Dali gave the
Emperor’s face to actor Sean Connery, who was the first to portray Ian
Fleming’s literary spy character in a film. Connery and Moore were in public rivalry at the time, each criticizing the
other’s performance of the secret service agent.
Taschen Books’s edition of the deck comes with an explanatory
booklet authored by tarot expert Johannes Fiebig. It includes an introduction
about Dalí and a guide explaining the meaning of each card and how to perform a
reading.
https://hyperallergic.com/525929/salvador-dalis-tarot-cards-will-tell-your-surreal-future/?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=D111719&utm_content=D111719+CID_9391e8a51fc6dcb54197449d8ca3d87a&utm_source=HyperallergicNewsletter&utm_term=Salvador%20Dals%20Tarot%20Cards%20Will%20Tell%20Your%20Surreal%20Future
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario