Star Edition of The Tarot of Leonora Carrington Now Available for Pre-order

UK publishing house Fulgur Press has now opened pre-orders for various editions of The Tarot of Leonora Carrington by Susan Aberth and Tere Arcq included the Star Edition. To wit:

STAR EDITION
– Limited to 87 copies for sale in crushed white full morocco
– Signed by Gabriel Weisz Carrington
– Top edge gilt
– Inset silver-edged deck of Major Arcana Cards
– Introductory booklet by Rachel Pollack
– Custom silk-covered box

The publisher’s site says:

“The British-born artist Leonora Carrington (1917–2011) is one of the more fascinating figures to emerge from the Surrealist movement. As both a writer and painter, she was championed early by André Breton and joined the exiled Surrealists in New York, before settling in Mexico in 1943. The magical themes of Carrington’s otherworldly paintings are well-known, but the recent discovery of a suite of tarot designs she created for the Major Arcana was a revelation for scholars and fans of Carrington alike. Drawing inspiration from the Tarot of Marseille and the popular Waite-Smith deck, Carrington brings her own approach and style to this timeless subject, creating a series of iconic images. Executed on thick board, brightly coloured and squarish in format, Carrington’s Major Arcana shines with gold and silver leaf, exploring tarot themes through what Gabriel Weisz Carrington describes as a ‘surrealist object’. This tantalising discovery, made by the curator Tere Arcq and scholar Susan Aberth, has placed greater emphasis upon the role of the tarot in Carrington’s creative life and has led to fresh research in this area.

“The Tarot of Leonora Carrington is the first book dedicated to this important aspect of the artist’s work. It includes a full-size facsimile of her newly discovered Major Arcana; an introduction from her son, Gabriel Weisz Carrington; and a richly illustrated essay from Tere Arcq and Susan Aberth that offers new insights ­—­­­ exploring the significance of tarot imagery within Carrington’s wider work, her many inspirations and mysterious occult sources.”

Frater Lux Ad Mundi

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