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Dali Universal Tarot - tarot decks

Playing Cards
Playing Cards -> Tarot decks

Price: US $13.38

ProductID: alt823

Shipping and handling:   US $4.99
Each additional item:    US $0.00

Quantity:              0  available  /  21  sold


About this item
  • The Dali Universal Tarot was purportedly created by Salvador Dali himself, as a commission in the 1970s. The 78 card
  • has been published in two editions: the rare gold enhanced version and now this less pricey and more obtainable edition
  • from Taschen.


Specifications
Name Dali Universal Tarot
Creators Juan Llarch, Salvador Dali
Publisher US Games
Publisher Taschen 2014
Deck Type Tarot Deck
Cards 78
The Fool is 0


Reviews

Last week I unshelved the Tarot Universal Dali, to share with a friend, and found myself taking a second and much deeper look. The deck is packaged in a box within a box. The outer box is covered in burgundy-red velvet with gold lettering, and the inner case containing the cards is a sturdy, dark brown, cardboard affair, also with gold lettering. Dali as The Magician (El Mago) graces the cover of the inner box, and he immediately confronts the Reader with his amazed countenance over a work table that holds a broken loaf of bread, a glass of half-consumed wine, a roll of parchment, and a clock face melting off the table away from the artist.

And so, I searched the deck for ants, grasshoppers, female genitalia, and more fabulously melting clocks. I did not find many more trademarks of Salvador Dalis early surrealist years. Instead, I stepped into a collaged world of clipped, classical Western art and Dali doodles which mimic and mock the very art upon which they are superimposed. I realize that is a lot of alliteration for one sentence, but after looking at this deck more closely, I have added brooding and bruised to Blood and Butterflies.

The edges are gilt and the borders are white and narrow. The cards are larger than standard at about 3 by 5 inches, and the deck feels and looks rich. The card stock is not heavy, but sturdy.

The book that comes with the deck was written in Spanish, with English, French and German translations, and provides brief descriptions of the Major Arcana, hinting at alchemical symbolism. It also contains diagrams for three layouts, but fails to describe any method for interpreting the cards within any of the spreads shown.

The Major Arcana bear English titles on top and Spanish titles below, each upon a broad, gold band, and are numbered I through XXI from the Magician to the World. Justice is numbered VIII and Strength is XI. Hebrew letters are assigned to the cards starting with Aleph at the Magician through Resh at Judgment, and Tau is assigned to The World. The Fool is unnumbered and the Hebrew letter Shin graces the top band. Planetary and Zodiacal associations are somewhat different from those found on many modern decks. For instance, The Empress is Earth, Temperance is Aquarius, and The World is Taurus.

With few exceptions, the Majors are active, masculine and forceful. Even cards that traditionally feel contemplative, are interpreted with a sense of urgency in Dalis world. The High Priestess is almost standing, her eyes are open, and she leans forward toward the Reader as if SHE is asking the question! The Lovers, classically nude or would be if the artist had not placed that great, blue butterfly over the male lovers mid-section, while leaving the female lover quite unclothed watch a bright red, doodled snake drip down between them from the red, doodled tree above. And all the imagery of The Lovers is placed upon a red background that simply screams, Do something even if its wrong!

The Minor Arcana Ace through Ten in each suit have no writing upon them, but are easily identifiable from the pictures which are similar, if only Dali-skewed, to those of a Rider-Waite-Smith deck. And each Ace through Ten contains the requisite number of staffs, cups, swords or discs upon its face. Court Cards are titled in Spanish. The Suits Bastos, Copas, Espadas and Oros refer to Rods or Staffs, Cups, Swords and Discs, respectively. And the Court Cards Sota, Caballero, Reina and Rey are Page, Knight, Queen and King, in that order.

Most of the Staffs scenes are set upon a light gray backwash, and are graced with bright green staffs with even brighter yellow leaves. In a display of hands one holding playing cards, one with a bottle, and two womens hands (both left hands, and obviously not the same woman) Dali places the passions of gambling front and center on the Ace of Staffs. With a slight reprieve at the Four of Staffs for celebration and a bit of dancing, this suit grows heavier. Perhaps Dali thought that he was too heavy handed and decided to hide all but a bit of the action of the Five and Ten with massive butterflies. My favorite card of this suit is El Rey de Bastos. It is a child king that is seated on the throne, and he holds a massive staff upright between his legs in a purely phallic gesture.

The scenes of the Cups are set primarily upon shades of blue. The Ace of Cups is beautiful in its simplicity. A blue sky, a lone sail boat on a beach, a lone fisherman with a net, a great golden chalice with cloudy, white wings is centered above the horizon. In comparison, the rest of the cups cards contain simple line drawings of goblets colored yellow. It is as if at the Ace of Cups, Dalis own ability to be open to relationships is a far more real and greater treasure than the actual pursuit of emotional attachment or attainment of love.

The Swords are played out against a pale blue or light gray background, though the Three of Swords is red, Red, RED, and perhaps, one of the most painful of its kind that I have ever seen. Angels battle sea demons as our fair maiden (Andromeda?) is chained to a rock awaiting rescue all within a great black heart pierced by silver gray broadswords with yellow hilts, and surrounded by RED!

The Discs are shades of blue and gold, and all but the Caballero de Oros contain pentacles drawn in red or black against a yellow disc outlined in red. The Page of Discs stands out from the entire deck in a singular, sincere moment of peace as a young girl reaches for a shiny button. Even here, Dali scribbles a dark dragon rising behind her, though it faces away from her as if it isnt prepared to steal her innocence just yet. As the cards come packaged, Dalis is the first face you see on the brown box in the image of The Magician, and he takes the throne on the last card of the deck as El Rey de Oros. Our King of Discs is dressed well in black suit, white shirt and shiny black shoes, and it appears that he is holding the leash of a cheetah. He has scribbled over the image and left his fingerprints in red ink, of course.

Dali turned 80 in 1984, the year this deck was first published in Spain. Rumor has it that he created this deck at the behest of his wife, Gala, who was fascinated with the Tarot. More plausible an explanation is that the artist accepted a commission to create a Tarot deck at the behest of his wife who handled their financial affairs to make money to support the couples extravagant lifestyle in their waning years.

If it isnt enough that Dali signed every single card in the deck with a flourish, the card backs are a symmetrical design of Dalis famous signature (approximately 95 of them). Lets see: 78 + 95 = 173. Wait while I do the math. At the going retail price of $100.00 (US) per deck, thats 57.8 cents per signature and enough reason for a true Dali fan to purchase the deck.

Have I read with Tarot Universal Dali? No. I just cant get over the unbalanced feel of the deck. Do I love these cards? I have peeked into the mind of the aging Dali skewed, human, and found blood and butterflies, brooding and bruises and I do love this deck. Yes, its a collectible, and one that I will share often. And perhaps, one day, when I'm brooding, I'll even read with it.


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