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The Gilded Tarot
 
 
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The Gilded Tarot [Paperback]

Barbara Moore (Author), Ciro Marchetti (Illustrator)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (95 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 8, 2004

The Traditional Tarot for the 21st Century

Most Tarot decks with really spectacular designs are really just art collections. The Gilded Tarot transcends this limitation by having some of the most strikingly beautiful art on any Tarot deck, yet follows the Rider-Waite-Smith model. The result is a unique deck that any person with some Tarot experience will find instantly familiar and usable. This deck can be used with any Tarot system or book.

You really must see the cards to believe their beauty. The High Priestess dances on water in a translucent dress of stars. She bends backwards in front of a crescent moon, looking like a classic lamp from the 1920s. The Wheel of Fortune shows the zodiacal wheel around a solar center as part of a bizarre, almost alien machine. The Hanging Man follows this machine concept, but he is dressed in brilliant reds and greens.

The colors are deep and intense, almost metallic. They draw you in and will have you staring at the images repeatedly. But this is more than a deck to look at, it's a deck to use! The Gilded Tarot Companion, a full book by Tarot expert Barbara Moore, is included with this deck. It's a complete introduction so that even a beginner can use this deck right away.

If you're tired of the old style of the RWS deck and its imitators, if you're looking for a familiar deck that will take you into the future, this is the deck you want to use.


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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Ciro Marchetti (Florida) is an award-winning artist from the United Kingdom. He studied art in London, followed by a career working in Europe and South America before settling in the United States where he opened a design agency in Miami. In addition to managing his company, Ciro also gives workshops and lectures on digital imagery and illustration at the Fort Lauderdale Art Institute, and continues to create his own visionary art.



The tarot has been a part of Barbara Moore’s personal and professional lives for over two decades. In college, the tarot intrigued her with its marvelous blending of mythology, psychology, art, and history. Later, she served as the tarot specialist for Llewellyn Publications. Over the years, she has been active in the American Tarot Association and has spoken at tarot conferences around the United States. Barbara’s articles on the tarot have appeared in several tarot publications and in Llewellyn Publications New Worlds of Mind and Spirit magazine. She has also sat on the Tarot Journal editorial board. Barbara’s own education in the tarot has been and continues to be broad and enlightening. She has studied under renowned tarot scholars Mary K. Greer and Rachel Pollack, and she has taught the tarot to all manner of would-be tarot readers.

Barbara enjoys the challenge of giving a voice to tarot cards and oracle decks.  She has had the good fortune to write books for several decks, including A Guide to Mystic Faerie Tarot, The Gilded Tarot Companion, The Hip Witch Tarot, Enchanted Oracle and The Mystic Dreamer Tarot.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

T H E
B a s i c s
You're probably anxious to get to know
your new deck. In this section you'll find a brief introduction
to the structure of the deck. This will help you
understand the meanings of the cards in general terms.
The later sections will help you provide more in-depth
interpretation. Think of this as the outline for the card
meanings. The details and nuances will come in time.

The Cards
Remember that the tarot is very personal and that the
cards are packed with many meanings. Use this text as
a guidebook, but let your own intuition be the final
word. If something here does not make sense, discard
it. Divination is not a hard science. Use the exercises
provided to help flesh out the meanings that you'll use
for your own readings. A journal or notebook will be
especially handy in keeping all your notes and observations
in order. Throughout this book, there will be exercises
to help you solidify your understanding of the
cards.

Seventy-eight cards may seem like a lot to learn.
Dividing the deck into sections makes it easier. The
first main division is in two parts: the Major Arcana
(twenty-two cards) and the Minor Arcana (fifty-six
cards). Arcana means "secrets"-so the Major Arcana
are the "big secrets." In practical terms, these are the
cards that represent important milestones, major
changes, events beyond our control, and spiritual
growth. The Minor Arcana, "lesser secrets," generally
depict events, situations, or people related to everyday
life. An important characteristic of the Minor Arcana
is personal control-that is, they represent aspects of
your life over which you have the control.

The Minor Arcana
The Minor Arcana are usually very simple to understand
because most people are familiar with the structure
already. Think of a pack of playing cards: four
suits (clubs, hearts, spades, and diamonds), with each
suit having ten pip cards numbered ace through ten
and three court cards (King, Queen, Jack). The Minor
Arcana is just like that, with the addition of one court
card for each suit. The court cards of the tarot reflect
their medieval roots: King, Queen, Knight, and Page.
The suits have different names and symbols but still relate
directly to the suits of playing cards [alternative
names are in brackets]:

WANDS [Rods, Batons, or Staves] = Clubs

CUPS [Chalices] = Hearts

SWORDS = Spades

PENTACLES [Coins, Disks, or Stones] = Diamonds

In addition to relating to playing-card deck suits,
the tarot suits are associated with the four elements.
This helps define the suit's relation to our daily lives.
The illustration below shows the four suits, and the list
below it reveals each suit's elemental association and
the aspects of life it represents.

WANDS (left). Fire or Air. Career, projects, inspiration.

CUPS (top). Water. Emotions, relationships, creativity.

SWORDS (right). Air or Fire. Challenges, intellect,
ways of thinking.

PENTACLES (bottom). Earth. Physical world,
money, resources.

Each Minor Arcana suit is associated with an area
of life. All the cards are numbered as well; each of
these numbers has meanings.

ACES: New beginnings, opportunity.
TWOS: Balance, duality, a crossroads or choice.
THREES: The full expression of the suit,
achievement.
FOURS: Structure, stability, stagnation.
FIVES: Instability, conflict, loss, opportunity
for change.
SIXES: Communication, problem-solving,
cooperation.
SEVENS: Reflection, assessment, motives.
EIGHTS: Movement, action, change, power.
NINES: Fruition, attainment.
TENS: Completion, end of a cycle.

Using this information, you can already get a sense
for a card's meaning. For example, the Seven of Pentacles
could represent an assessment of resources or
property. This card shows a woman looking at the fruit
on a tree. She might be contemplating the work invested
and comparing it to the harvest gained by that
investment. The Three of Cups could indicate the
achievement of relationships. This image shows three
woman celebrating the joy of their friendship.

While the numbered cards show different situations
of everyday life, the court cards bring personality to
these situations. They can represent other people or the
querent (the person asking the question). Because real
people are complex, the court cards usually represent
just a facet of a person-the part of the person engaged
in the particular situation being inquired about.

PAGES: Novices, eager and enthusiastic but sometimes
shallow; can indicate a message that the
querent will receive.
KNIGHTS: Extremists, very focused (like a knight
on a quest); can be unbalanced or fanatical; may
represent a fast-moving situation.
QUEENS: Mature and reflective; one who nurtures
others; can be prone to obsession.
KINGS: Mature and expressive; one who organizes
and controls external matters, sometimes at the
expense of internal or personal matters.

Exercise 1
Put your Minor Arcana cards in numerical
order. Look at each one and connect the image on
the card to the associations of the suit and the number
as described above. Write your observations in a notebook.
Note whether the connections were obvious or
subtle. Also note whatever details grab your attention.
Write down why a particular image intrigued you and
how it affects the meaning of the card for you.

Exercise 2
Lay out your court cards. Think about
the personality represented on each card. Match that
card with someone in your life, noting the particular
behaviors, characteristics, or habits that caused the
connection in your mind.

The Major Arcana
The Major Arcana are made up of twenty-two cards,
numbered zero through twenty-one. Just as the minor
suits have an elemental association, so does the Major
Arcana; it is connected with the element of Spirit. In
addition to being numbered, the Majors are also
named as follows:

0 The Fool
I The Magician
II The High Priestess
III The Empress
IV The Emperor
V The Hierophant
VI The Lovers
VII The Chariot
VIII Strength
IX The Hermit
X Wheel of Fortune
XI Justice
XII The Hanging Man
XIII Death
XIV Temperance
XV The Devil
XVI The Tower
XVII The Star
XVIII The Moon
XIX The Sun
XX Judgement
XXI The World

The names give some indication of the meaning. For
example, the Hermit means taking time to retreat from
the world and look inward. The Star brings hope and
guidance, a light to follow through otherwise dark
times.

Exercise 3
List the meanings or associations that
come to mind simply based on the name of each Major
Arcana card.

The Fool's Journey
Just as dividing the Minor Arcana into suits and learning
about the suit and numerological associations provide
a brief overview and introduction to these cards'
meanings, learning the Fool's journey helps introduce
us to the Major Arcana. The twenty-two Major Arcana
cards depict a journey through life, a journey of
self-development and spiritual growth. We all start as
the Fool, the first card of the Major Arcana, though all
our journeys are different.

To visualize the Fool's journey, lay out the cards,
placing the Fool alone at the top. Then lay out the rest
of the cards, in numerical order, underneath the Fool in
three rows of seven (1-7, 8-14, and 15-21).

1. The first row shows the steps we go through in our
basic development from birth to young adult and in
learning how to live in society.

2. The second row illustrates the universal laws or
rules of society that we must confront, question,
and come to terms with; it also is about discovering
who we are.

3. The final row is our spiritual development.
THE FOOL: The Fool marks the beginning of the
journey as an archetypal child, unformed and unlearned,
innocent and eager.
THE MAGICIAN: The Magician represents the male
principal or animus. This is our active or outgoing
energy, our skills and abilities in terms of the outer
world. In basic terms, it is how we do things and
how we learn.
THE HIGH PRIESTESS: The High Priestess embodies
the female principal or anima. This is our passive
or introspective energy, our skills as they relate to
our inner world and self-reflection. In short, this is
how we think or feel about things and what we
know intuitively.
THE EMPRESS: The Empress represents the Mother
archetype and our experience with mothering, nurturing,
emotions, and our creative impulse.
THE EMPEROR: The Emperor represents the Father
archetype and our experience with authority, reason,
and logic.
THE HIEROPHANT: The Hierophant is our formal
education within our society, including school, religious
training, and cultural traditions.
THE LOVERS: In a word, adolescence-our experience
of hormones, sex...

Product Details

  • Paperback: 168 pages
  • Publisher: Llewellyn Publications; Pap/Crds edition (September 8, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0738705209
  • ISBN-13: 978-0738705200
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.6 x 2.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (95 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #153,099 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

95 Reviews
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 (57)
4 star:
 (23)
3 star:
 (9)
2 star:
 (5)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (95 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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118 of 120 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Easy To Use and Beautifully Illustrated, August 25, 2004
By 
This review is from: The Gilded Tarot (Paperback)
First of all, let me say this is a beautifully illustrated deck. The graphics are stunning, realistic in the artistic approach and well thought through. There is no difficulty in understanding what the artist had in mind when he designed these cards. The imagery is clear as well as beautiful to look at.

The suits are visibly distinguishable, as opposed to other decks. Even if you are not sure, the Minor Arcana are clearly identifiable by a color 'jewel' at the top of each card, red for wands, blue for swords, yellow/gold for cups and green for pentacles.

The deck is based on the Rider-Waite deck, with 22 Major Arcana cards and the Minor Arcana comprised of 10 numbered cards and 4 court cards each. Ciro Marchetti maintains the Page, Knight, King and Queen court cards rather than changing their associations as many recent decks have done.

The reverse design is a 'jeweled' motif reminiscent of a sunburst, and is not too busy or distracting.

Intriguing is Ciro Marchetti's inclusion of some images that appear almost to be machine-like in quality. Going over the artists notes in the front of the book is his notation "A common theme in my work is the inclusion of mechanical devices, and this continued on various cards in the Major Arcana of the Gilded Tarot. These machines, which straddle the opposing worlds of science and magic, somewhat basic of their construction and clockwork movements of gears and cogs, are of an earlier times... while not of the world of microprocessors and chips, they are nevertheless capable of wonders beyond today's technology." I found this to be interesting, and appropriate, for a modern deck of tarot cards.

The emphasis on nature is also there, in carefully included animal images, natural settings and yet, it maintains a surrealistic feel in the almost vision-like quality of some of the Major Arcana cards. The deck has a renaissance motif at work in the costumes and architecture.

The swords and cups are obviously identifiable. The wands are distinctive in their design of being metallic in appearance, topped by what at first glance appears to be a 'torc' but could also be a dual power point. The pentacle design is unique in that the design is a pentagon within a pentagon on the numbered cards and the pentacle only appears behind the King of Pentacles. The Queen holds a pentagon with the jeweled sunburst within.

All in all, the designs appeal to meditation on the cards and are easily workable by those familiar with a standard tarot deck.

The book is a basic workbook for those not familiar with tarot decks. While the notes from the artist is a nice inclusion, the material provided by Barbara Moore is good for beginners. There is a little about the actual meaning of the cards, but as always, that is dependent on the reader and what he or she sees as she uses the cards. But the cards are so clear in their message; this would make an excellent first deck.

Finally, there is the bag. Please let me add that this is an excellent touch to the gift box presentation. Besides a lovely box to keep the book and deck in, which, again, is beautiful in its design, the bag gives you someplace to store the deck. It is an Organdy bag and I found that it was great to prevent the cards from sliding around in the box once I put the deck in the bag, and makes a handy carrying case as I showed the deck around to a few reader friends of mine, and also used the deck at one of my tarot reading. My clients were complimentary about the deck, and my fellow readers thought the deck was beautiful and well done.

All in all, if you are looking for a deck to give as a gift, or to add to your collection, or if you are looking for a first deck for yourself, this gift box would be a good choice. boudica
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40 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Stunning graphics, but far from perfect. Buy his follow-up "Tarot of Dreams", November 12, 2005
By 
KiWiSouP "kiwisoup" (Minneapolis, MN USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Gilded Tarot (Paperback)
I have sorted through hundreds of decks trying to find one to suit my tastes visually, but came up empty handed until I set my eyes on this deck...gorgeous, simply put. I love the modern computer generated graphics and the style and theme of what's depicted.
However, upon further investigation, I found this deck to have it's flaws. The first thing that comes to mind is the lack of symbolism. It claims to be based on the Rider-Waite-Smith deck, but a lot of the symbolism has been stripped to more simplified scenes that favor art more than symbolism. The high priestess has no scroll or veil. The devil's star is now rightside up and no signs of chains or struggling.
The next thing I can't help but notice is the overuse of the signs of the zodiac...which is obviously due to the artists previous experience in astrology. the symbols appear often for no rythme or reason.
My recommendation is to save up some money to buy the "Tarot of Dreams" his follow up deck. You have to buy it through his website as it is self published, but it's worth the extra money. It ties the tarot to both astrology and the tree of life, without overdoing it and still stays true to the RWS style of symbolism but reinventing it for the better. The 8 of swords which originally depicted a girl bound and blindfolded was afraid to move due to the risk of getting cut by the surrounding swords...now it shows a girl in a bubble sitting atop the points of 8 swords, the bubble sure to pop if she moves. see...still understandable, unlike some other decks that completely change both the card and the meaning. the next card in the suit of swords shows a scene similar with a girl waking from a nightmare, but in this version there is a tree branch that looks like an arm reaching towards her from outside her window. the empress is another favorite, which is now shown as an elderly hooded woman, her lower body is tree trunk rooted into the ground where various harvested crops lie. in her arms she holds a glowing baby that resembles an embryo. this deck is higher quality than any other tarot deck you will ever own as it is printed with archival 7 color ink on premium materials. comes with a bag and a companion cd with guide, orphalese tarot software, and animated versions of the major arcana...which greatly helps with readings for me. http://www.ciromarchetti.com/
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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Total Beginner's, Non-Technical Opinion, November 27, 2004
By 
Moonchilde (Los Angeles, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Gilded Tarot (Paperback)
Although I have long been interested in the tarot, this is the first deck I've ever bought, and it was the deck itself which was responsible. It really drew me to it, from the first moment I saw it. It's visually rich and stunning, yet at the same time, for me at least, warm and welcoming. Looking at the individual cards, I can get lost in them. For whatever reason, they speak to me, and that is apparently the most important criteria for choosing a deck, or rather, letting a deck choose you. This one really did. For some odd reason, although the faces are computer-generated, they seem more real and 'human' to me than in many other traditionally created decks I've seen. They seem like real people, which I find fascinating. I almost expect some of them to pop off the page and come to life. To me,the 'machineries' the artist includes do not disrupt the intricate warmth of the figures and symbolism, but meld seamlessly and charmingly. I in no way felt this was a 'cold' or 'technological' deck because of the artist's inclusion of this aspect.

I was also glad that the illustrations are based on the Rider-Waite deck, because whatever books I might buy to help me learn to interpret the cards will be easily relatable to this deck's illustrations.

I am VERY pleased with the accompanying book. I had thought to buy several "Tarot for beginners" books right away, but there is a lot of wonderful, very thoughtful exercise material for rank beginners (which is certainly what I am) which seems to me to be excellent grounding not only in this deck but any deck. I'm sure I will buy other books eventually, but this one seems perfect for me right now, especially in terms of getting in touch with the cards on a very personal level, which of course is the basis for successful readings. Simply memorizing a lot of information, as tarot beginners must do, has seemed pretty daunting to me, but the exercises in the books are geared to making your associations personal and intuitive rather than simply rote, hence more logical and easier to retain.

This deck and its accompanying book have made me eager to get started learning!
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