Tag: Camelot Oracle

  • 30 Day Tarot Challenge | Day 7

    Tarot Thrones:  3 Cups from Mystic Faerie Tarot by Linda RavenscroftQuestion 7: What is my favourite card (both in terms of the decks artwork and divination meaning)


    Ooooh this is a tricky one!  How can you select a favourite card from the 78 available? And then how can I pick one image from the hundreds of decks out there?!


    Initially, I was going to say that it must be Death that is my favourite card, because when I’m buying a new deck, Death is one of the cards that I go straight to, to see how the artist has rendered it.  If Death appeals to me, then the chances are all the other ones are looking good too!

    I have been very greatly enamoured with the DruidCraft Tarot since I first met it in Glastonbury….and also Alexander Daniloff’s Tarot…. but as far as artwork that I loved so much that I wanted to hang it on my wall, it had to be The Archer from The Wildwood Tarot, painted by Will Worthington.


    The Archer, Wildwood Tarot, Will Worthington, Tarot Thrones
    The Archer


    I loved the image so much that I begged Will Worthington to sell me the painting! Which he did!  The Archer was delivered to me at TABI’s Tarot Conference a couple of years ago in Birmingham where Will Worthington had agreed to be interviewed by me, and I unwrapped it with shaking hands and a thudding heart.  Mr W makes these magnificent Arts & Crafts frames for his work too – isn’t it stunning?


    Words can’t express how much I loved her when I saw her – and still do,  The Archer hangs where she can regularly remind me to focus all my strength on my target, just as she does.  Even when I am lying on the sofa with a Crunchie and a cup of tea I know that she’s willing me to Get OFF my arse and DO something!


    I am also deeply besotted by Igraine in the Camelot Oracle, also painted by Will Worthington.

    Tarot Thrones: Igraine - Camelot Oracle - Will Worthington



    Like I said in another post….*creepy Stephen King voice* I’m his biggest fan 😀




    As far as having a favourite with regard to divinatory meaning – I think that it might be 3 of Cups and Celebration – what’s not to like?!  But what I REALLY like is a card that you can have a lot of discussion about, like Death or The Tower.  Not a barrel of laughs, but something meaty to talk about.


    So, what about YOU? Tell me what your favourite cards are (artwork and divinatory meaning)







  • John Matthews | Camelot Oracle

    In the first part of this two-hander, I spoke with Camelot artist, Will Worthington, with the focus on the portraiture and artwork of the new deck.  Today it’s the deck’s author, John Matthews who chats about Camelot.



    You are exceptionally prolific as an author!  It seems only a
    few weeks ago I was talking to you about the Tarot of Nostradamus and
    here we are again, talking about another new publication – The
    Camelot Oracle.  Do you ever sleep?

    Sleep?
    What’s that? I’m just a workhorse; I work all the time. Can’t
    remember the last time I had a holiday. No, wait, I
    did
    go
    on holiday to the Orkneys two years ago with some very dear friends.
    I remember I spent the first week trying to get used to not doing
    anything, then I did a bit of work on a children’s novel I was
    writing; then it was time to go home! 

    I work late into the night
    most days, sometime as late a 2 am, then sleep a bit longer in the
    morning, then start again…..In fact, there are three new projects
    just about to come out.
    The
    Lost Tarot of Nostradamus,

    which you mentioned, was finished last year, but got held up,


    and it’s only just released. Then there’s the
    Camelot
    Oracle,

    which is due any day; then there’s a third deck:
    The
    Steampunk Tarot: Gods of the Machine
    ,
    which is something I’m sure we’ll be talking about some other
    time. That’s due out in November. But really this is not because
    I’ve written and completed three big jobs in one year (though in
    fact I did do two other things as well as working on a documentary
    film I’m making for my own production company), but because there
    were various problems with the printing, so they all ended up coming
    out of the same time.
    You
    already have the Arthurian Tarot under your belt and many other
    Arthurian-inspired publications – including the Ladies of the Lake –
    what prompted the creation of the Camelot Oracle?
    I’ve
    been using The Camelot Oracle as a teaching device for several years.
    I used to draw a map on a flipchart, and put in the places and what
    was found there; then I’d tell people about the characters – little
    summaries of their lives – and invite participants to select one of
    these characters to journey with. It worked so well, that I started
    thinking: wouldn’t it be great if I could have a permanent map and
    information about the characters that anyone could work with.  
    That
    was the beginning. I put it together in such a way that we had cards
    with the characters on, and the map of the Lands Adventurous, which
    is where all the magical things from the Arthurian legend take place,
    in a huge forest. The publishers loved the idea, and it didn’t take
    much persuading to get Will Worthington involved, because this is the
    theme and subject that brought us together in the first place. He and
    I have always loved the Arthurian legends, and when I suggested to
    him that we do this project he jumped at the opportunity. The
    results, as you’ll see, are amazing. He’s given us 40 portraits
    of the most familiar and extraordinary characters from the Arthurian
    legend. It’s not hard to think how one great it would be to select
    one of these to be a champion – someone to go along with you on an
    adventure.
    My
    blog is about Court Cards, do the characters in the Camelot Oracle
    operate like Court Cards?  If so, are there any direct
    correlations between the citizens of Camelot and the citizens of the
    Tarot?
    The
    Camelot
    Oracle

    isn’t really a tarot in any sense of the word. The idea is that you
    take one of the archetypes as a champion, a companion on the quest.
    Then you take another one to be your challenger. Then you set out on
    your journey; your champion goes with you, your challenger awaits
    your coming, and has a question for you, a challenge. You answer to
    that, and the direction the path you take, and where it leads to,
    generates the Oracle. So the characters in the Camelot Oracle are a
    little bit like the courtiers in tarot in that they can be interacted
    with, and can help you find answers to issues.

    Can the cards be used as, say, a card of the day…. Or other quick spread (eg whose energies help/hinder me today)?


    Yes you can do that – most assuredly. One of the ideas is that you can take any one of the characters as a companion. Each entry includes a meditational sketch for this. And of course you can extend the reading experience by following several paths with several characters.


    Tell
    me about the Path cards?  
    The
    Path cards are intended to act as either randomly chosen or selected
    pathways to a particular place. So you might take one path leading to
    the castle of the Grail, or another to Lancelot’s Castle of joyous
    guard, and in each case this represents a different reality and helps
    you find an answer to your question.
    What
    does the Camelot Oracle bring to the divinatory table that other
    decks do not?  
    I
    think what makes
    The
    Camelot Oracle

    original is the opportunity gives all those who use it to actually
    interact directly with extraordinary archetypal characters from the
    Arthurian legend. Who can imagine not wanting to go with Arthur
    himself, or Guinevere, or Galahad, or Boars – or any of them, on an
    adventure. Not just any adventure, but one that will actually help
    you discover truths you did not know, answers to issues that may be
    troubling you, actual advice from the great heroes and heroines of
    the Arthurian world?

    Which
    is your favorite illustration?

    JM:
    Really
    I love them all. I think inevitably my favorites have to be Arthur
    and Guinevere; but I also have a special affection for Palomides, the
    Saracen knight – there’s something about that amazing face, the
    hawk on his wrist, his costume, that really inspires me. Plus of
    course he’s a great character anyway, though not so well known are
    some of them.
    Who
    is your favorite character in the deck and why?
    Again
    I have to say really it’s all of them. But if I answered the
    question in a different way by saying who my favorite character is in
    the Arthurian legend, then I would have to say Merlin. He just has
    everything. He’s a magician, a seer, a poet, and a warrior. What’s
    not to like?
    What
    are you currently working on and what is your next publication?
    I’m
    afraid the list is quite long! Partly this is again because of delays
    between books getting finished and actually getting into print. Right
    now I have just finished working on the
    Oracle
    of Dr John Dee
    ,
    which has amazing art by Will Kinghan, who did the Steampunk Tarot
    and a couple of other decks that I’ve created. This is going to be
    again quite different from a tarot, but involves all of the many
    disciplines that the amazing Dr Dee practiced. Then I have a couple
    of children’s novels, featuring a character called Henry Hunter,
    who’s a kind of young Sherlock Holmes crossed with the Young
    Indiana Jones. He solves mysteries using his intelligence and
    knowledge of books! It’s a departure for me, but I’m looking
    forward to seeing how they go, because if they go well I have a whole
    series worked out. I’m also just working on a short book about the
    history of shamanism. And if I survive all of those, there are a
    whole bunch of other projects in the wind – including a couple more
    with the amazing Mark Ryan. So plenty to look out for.
  • Will Worthington | The Camelot Oracle

    OK, I hold my hands up – technically this is nothing to do with Court Cards REALLY, but ooooh the gorgeousness of the characters in these paintings simply BEGS me to tell you about them!

    The other thing that I want to point out is that I do some work for Will Worthington and John Matthews on an ongoing basis, but neither of them has asked me to blog about this – but I think you can see from the images just why I HAD to tell you about them!

    I put some questions to the artist, Will Worthington:

    You’ve worked with John Matthews before – are you given free license to create the image that you want or are you given a brief?


    “I’m given a short brief explaining what John’s idea of the character is.

    “As both of us have been very imersed in the Arthuriad for most of our lives we seemed to have the same vision as to the appearance of each character.

    ‘There were some characters that I hadn’t heard of so I just did my interpretation from John’s brief.”

    I know that some of these faces in the Camelot Oracle are portraits – are you willing to divulge which portraits belong to whom?!

    “The first one was Gawain…we had a photo of [Will’s wife] Wendy’s son Paul looking grumpy and it struck me that he would be perfect.  Once I’d done that I felt that I should do my own son Nolan as well, so he turned out to be Gareth. As they worked well I then did Wendy’s daughter Jenny as Igraine.”

    What about the other faces – do you just make them up or do you have source material that you refer to?


    “As with all my previous decks I just make up the faces, just drawing and drawing until I get something that I feel connects.”

    Which portrait in this deck are you most pleased with?

    “That’s a toughie!…discounting the three portraits of our children, I’m particularly fond of Merlin….I’ve not seen any representation of him in any medium that I feel is right to the archetype so that’s my version.

    “I’m also quite happy with Elaine, but I have to say I was disapointed it wasn’t the other Elaine…the lily maid of Astolat…who died of love for Lancelot and whose body was barged down to Camelot and was painted numerous times by many victorian artists. The publishers felt it unwise to have a dead character in the deck! However I put in the barge in the background as a hint.”


    Which overall image are you most pleased with?

    “I guess it must be Arthur…John reckons it’s the best picture of him ever, and coming from him that’s one hell of a compliment.”

    [Dear Reader, you’ll be able to see Arthur on Friday’s post with John Matthews! – Ali]

    How long did it take you to complete all the paintings?

    “I was given six months to the deadline by the publisher which was tight, but I managed to finish before time.”

    Will there be prints available at some stage?

    “Hopefully…if enough people buy Wildwood ones* then I can afford the large cost of printing them.”

    What are you working on now?


    “I’m just starting on a Lenormand deck for Chloe McCracken which is very exciting and a pleasure to work with such a lovely gentle person.

    “Previous to that I was half-way through a painting of Edgar Alan Poe with his Raven….but that’s on hold for six months or so!’

    * Will has 10 fine art prints of the 7 most popular Wildwood Tarot Majors available to purchase via his own website and the Wildwood Tarot website.

    You can follow Will’s facebook page (not run by Will) here

    -o0o-
    Here’s a slideshow of all the images in the Camelot Oracle – I hope you enjoy looking at it as much as I did making it.  Part 2 of this session, where John Matthews helps us understand the Camelot deck’s uses as an Oracle will be up on Friday.  Hope you enjoy!