|

Carl Jung: “If you can prove receptive to this ‘call of the wild’…”

  If you contemplate your lack of fantasy, of inspiration and inner aliveness which you feel as sheer stagnation and a barren wilderness, and impregnate with the interest born of alarm at your inner death, then something can take shape in you, for your inner emptiness conceals just a great a fullness if only you…

| | |

Carl Jung and the Rosarium Philosophorum

    The Rosarium Philosophorum is a sixteenth century alchemical treatise, with a series of twenty woodcuts.       Jung’s comments on the first image, the image with the fountain, include the following:   This fluid substance, with all its paradoxical qualities, really signifies the unconscious which as been projected on to it. The “sea” is its…

|

Carl Jung: “The idea became fixed in my mind that I must live near a lake.”

  My mother took me to the Thurgau to visit friends, who had a castle on Lake Constance. I could not be dragged away from the water, the waves from the steamer washed up on the shore, the sun glistened on the water, and the sand under the water had been curled into little ridges…

| |

Carl Jung, on Art and the Collective Unconscious

Carl Jung, on Art and the Collective Unconscious The rapid and worldwide growth of a psychological interest over the last two decades shows unmistakably that modern man is turning his attention from outward material things to his own inner processes. Expressionism in art prophetically anticipated this subjective development, for all art intuitively apprehends coming changes…