TAROT AND ARCHETYPES OF THE UNCONSCIOUS COLLECTIVE
The symbols of the Tarot are a valuable poetic and imaginal map of the human soul and of our particular individual and collective odyssey through the evolution of individual and collective consciousness.
In the Onyric Theatre, the symbols and archetypes present in the Theatrical Anthropology are studied through the archetypal images of the Tarot, which encode archetypes of collective transformation and serve as imaginary and poetic material for acting training (physical and mental) and creation of contemporary works, where the creators preserve the primitive root of the myth in a current context. From Homer's Odyssey to George Lucas's Star Wars, the Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious that Carl G. Jung has already investigated are present throughout the history of human beings, past and future. Also in our lives, in each of our creations.
The Dream Theatre rejects the aseptic gaze of postmodernity and its dogma 'everything is relative', to embrace the eternal collective imagination of the Archetypes. It restores the struggle of a life with feeling and meaning, full and fruitful, beyond the cynicism of postmodernity and the art of mass entertainment that empties the soul. To live you have to die. As on the stage. So in life, in its cycles.
In the Onyric Theatre, the symbols and archetypes present in the Theatrical Anthropology are studied through the archetypal images of the Tarot, which encode archetypes of collective transformation and serve as imaginary and poetic material for acting training (physical and mental) and creation of contemporary works, where the creators preserve the primitive root of the myth in a current context. From Homer's Odyssey to George Lucas's Star Wars, the Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious that Carl G. Jung has already investigated are present throughout the history of human beings, past and future. Also in our lives, in each of our creations.
The Dream Theatre rejects the aseptic gaze of postmodernity and its dogma 'everything is relative', to embrace the eternal collective imagination of the Archetypes. It restores the struggle of a life with feeling and meaning, full and fruitful, beyond the cynicism of postmodernity and the art of mass entertainment that empties the soul. To live you have to die. As on the stage. So in life, in its cycles.
The Birth of Psicotarot
At the beginning of 2010, Orland Verdú made his personal vision of the symbols and archetypes of the Tarot public and official under the name of Psicotarot. A humanistic vision that delves into the psychological and spiritual ramifications of the Tarot as a tool for self-knowledge, a creative instrument in the arts and an oracle for the unfolding of consciousness.
For more information: www.psicotarot.es
For more information: www.psicotarot.es