I saw this on this in Hampton Terrace during this morning’s 10K bike ride.
I think I’ll close this post with something you might not have seen: A scene from Jim Jarmusch’sCoffee and Cigarettes that puts together Wu-Tang’s GZA, RZA, and Bill Murray at the same booth in a café:
Miss Piggy as Carrie.Gonzo as Jason Voorhees (with Camilla the chicken as Pamela Voorhees).The Swedish Chef as Leatherface (Texas Chainsaw Massacre).Kermit the Frog as Norman Bates.Rowlf as Dr. Hannibal Lecter.Animal as Jame Gumb (a.k.a. Buffalo Bill).Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem as the Devil’s Rejects.Scooter as Chucky.Sam the Eagle as Pinhead.Beeker and Dr. Bunsen Honeydew as Michael Myers and Dr. Loomis.Statler and Waldorf as the Grady Twins from “The Shining”.
I finally got around to framing and hanging our Le bateleur (which translates from French as “juggler,” “street performer,” or “busker”) tarot card woodcut print. It’s the perfect size to go under one of the sconces in the hallway leading to our offices, and it looks pretty damned good.
It’s a gift that our Toronto friends Natalie and Eldon gave to us during our visit to Toronto last October, just before we flew off to visit the Philippines.
(It’ll be nice to be able to travel again…someday.)
The earliest known tarot card decks date to the early 1400s, and for several centuries they were used simply as game cards, becoming associated with divination only after the 1780s. While the first tarot cards were hand-painted, for most of their existence they were printed from woodcuts using the same techniques that I use today.
This design is my North Atlantic interpretation of the first and one of the most famous trump cards – Le Bateleur – which traditionally depicts a sleight-of-hand magician sitting in front of his table of tricks, the image of a skillful trickster and master of the material world. In my version, the magician is an accordion-playing fisherman seated in front of a table overflowing with cod. On the deck of his ship are the tools of his trade – a cod jigger and splitting knife – and the tail of a humpback whale can be seen in the distance. This magician’s sleight-of-hand is manifest in the jigs and reels he coaxes from his accordion.