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Dry Stone Walling: The art of Dan Snow

[soliloquy id=”8195″]   The urge to individuation gathers together what is scattered. Carl Jung Collected Works 11   All loose stone was at one time part of the living earth. In walling, I bring stone back together, even if artificially and only temporarily, and reunite it with the earth. Walling puts back what has come…

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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…

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Carl Jung, on the abundance of wealth in the unconscious

    Consciousness, no matter how extensive it may be, must always remain the smaller circle within the greater circle of the unconscious, an island surrounded by the sea; and, like the sea itself, the unconscious yields an endless and self-replenishing abundance of living creatures, a wealth beyond our fathoming.      Psychology of the…

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Carl Jung, on the symbolism of water

    Water is the commonest symbol for the unconscious. The lake in the valley is the unconscious, which lies, as it were, underneath consciousness, so that it is often referred to as the “subconscious,” usually with the pejorative connotation of an inferior consciousness. Water is the “valley spirit,” the water dragon of Tao, whose…

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Carl Jung: “Often the hands will solve a mystery that the intellect has struggled with in vain.”

Carl Jung, on the Importance of Drawing and Painting It does not suffice in all cases to elucidate only the conceptual context of a dream content. Often it is necessary to clarify a vague content by giving it a visible form. This can be done by drawing, painting, or modeling. Often the hands will solve…

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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…

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Carl Jung: The Collective Shadow — Living at the edge of a volcano

  Joseph Wright: Vesuvius in Eruption  Jung: “The change of character brought about by the uprush of collective forces is amazing.”   The change of character brought about by the uprush of collective forces is amazing. A gentle and reasonable being can be transformed into a maniac or a savage beast. One is always inclined…