19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An interesting art card set, May 9, 2002
This review is from: Dante Tarot (Cards)
If you look up Dante Algheri using google.com, you can find translations and images through the Digital Dante projects. I've not come across anything else in this style other than Dali's paintings of Dante's cantos. Other artists such as Botticelli, Dore, Blake and others all reinterpreted Dante in different ways--so I find these images interesting and the cost quite reasonable.
I look at these 78 images as a surrealistic walk inspired by Dante Algheri's collective works. This landscape of images might be nicely accompanied by the short biography of Dante by RWB Lewis. (Some people think the book is a good introduction to the Divine Comedy.)
I actually cut the outside of the box to make two extra cards (cover and back) and also kept the side illustrations as bookmarks. The images on the front and back aren't duplicated in any of the cards.
If you dislike surrealistic art or believe Dante's three books are too dark for your tastes, then this is not for you. If you
like the images, you may find them as I do. Sometimes they are dreamlike, sometimes they are nightmarish---but they are archetypes in a symbolic landscape.
You may like the internet reviews (Tarot Passages or Aecletic Tarot) and images, but not know about Dante Algheri--this might be an interesting starting point.
I don't think of this as a standard tarot, but as art cards. They're a nice addition to my Dante Algheri and Italian literature collection.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A fantastic, dreamy deck made for collectors, December 17, 2009
This review is from: Dante Tarot (Cards)
I love The Dante Tarot for its bright vivid colors and how they contrast to the dark symbolism many of the cards represent. I have always been a fan of Dante's Inferno and when this deck got published, I immediately ordered a copy. The imagery does not disappoint me at all. This deck offers a rather interesting and unique perspective into tarot and its meanings. However, the design of the deck being radically nontraditional in suite and meanings, does tend to make me think that this tarot deck is better for collectors than for doing readings. It's certainly not for the faint at heart.
The Dante Tarot is a non-traditional 78 card deck. Black backgrounds with the title (and/or number) of the card appear on top of every card. In typical Lo Scarabeo style, the names of the cards are printed in 4 other languages below the central artwork. The design of the card's backing appears like a chess board, with a castle one one side with a person writing and a landscape with a knight riding a dark horse on the other.
Andrea Serio painted the artwork and it's her unique style that makes this deck noteworthy. Done in watercolor and pencil, Serio's images are rather dreamy and does a good job of representing Dante's ideals. Even the box the cards are kept in contains original artwork. However, I found it hard to associate many of the images on the cards to their meanings (traditional or otherwise) as the arcana switch between ideas and people throughout the entire deck. The Dante Tarot also comes with 2 variations of the King of Fire (Swords). One depicting an beast-like character while the other is more scenic in nature. The pamphlet that comes with the deck does not give any explanations as to why they did this.
The deck deviates from a standard deck with its minor arcana names. It replaces Swords with Fire, Coins (pentacles) with Clouds, Wands with Bricks and the Cups with Lights. The deck comes with a LWB; according to it, the symbolism was changed to conform more to the standards Dante wrote about in his works, mainly The Divine Comedy. The second way the Dante Tarot deviates from standard decks is in it's interpretations. It does not follow the Rider-Waite and Crowley interpretations of the cards. For example, the Fool, normally represented by most decks as new beginnings and adventures now becomes "Need. Eccentric behavior, recklessness, and material or psychological problems".
The card stock used to print the cards on is thicker and glossier than other decks. At first I thought this was a good thing making the deck appear as if it would last longer. However, this made shuffling the cards harder to do without damaging the darker edges of the cards. The LWB seems to be designed as a reference guide only and it does not go into great depth on each card's imagery and meaning. This was a bit disappointing since The Dante Tarot seems different from other decks. However, there are two different layouts inside the booklet.
Because of the dramatic changes in the meanings and the inability to quickly "connect" with the cards, they make the deck almost unapproachable for me as a reader to utilize quickly as a divination deck. It would take a great deal of studying this deck and practicing readings using the methods the LWB describes for one to adequately use the Dante Tarot for divination. I do, however, love the imagery and believe that it would make a great companion to those studying Dante and his Divine Comedy.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Profound Deck, June 20, 2007
This review is from: Dante Tarot (Cards)
I found this deck very exciting. It has a high learning curve and the intended spreads are definitely recommended over traditional spreads. I'm a huge "Dante's Inferno" fan already and can understand how some people would shy away from such a deck. It's definitely non-traditional but if you have even a small foundational knowledge of purgatory, heaven and hell, I think you'll find this deck worthwhile.
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