|
Introduction |
 |
This edition of the newsletter is a fine example of the many ways in which
ARAS Online embodies ARAS as a living history of images and their evolving
meaning. Harry Prochaska, a long time curator of San Francisco ARAS, shows
how the image of the divine child has expressed itself in different cultures and in different eras. His lead
article, an excerpt from his book, Amplification of Symbols, demonstrates
how the method of amplification can bring to life the primordial image and its
essential meanings. Now deceased, Harry spent many years as a devoted scholar
of ARAS and the newsletter will be featuring chapters from his unpublished book
over the next several issues. The ARAS Hint section of the newsletter discusses
the "alternative commentary" feature of the Online archive. Not only do images
and their meanings change over time, but the commentaries of ARAS itself have
transformed over time. In many cases, the commentaries have become richer on
their second or third incarnation, but we wanted the user of the archive to be
able to track the evolution of ARAS scholarship itself by having access to
earlier commentaries. Just as an archetypal image itself may change over time,
so too our understanding of that development may also evolve. And, finally, the
continuing fascination with images and our understanding of them spawns even
further exploration in the spirit of ARAS--as in the upcoming Art/Psyche
Conference that Ami Ronnberg, Curator of National ARAS, announces in this
newsletter. This is not an ARAS-sponsored event, but it certainly is in the
tradition of ARAS and its original Eranos conferences in which images and their
meanings were given deep consideration.
Tom Singer, M.D.
Co-Chair of the ARAS Online Committee |
ARAS in New York City |
 |
The archive in New York City fills many file cabinets!
 |
Send Us Your Questions |
 |
| If you have questions about specific images, searching, how to use ARAS,
or archetypal symbolism in general, please email them to us at
info@aras.org. |
|
 |
|
Images of the Divine Child |
 |
From Amplification of Symbols by Harry Prochaska
Mythologies are stories of the birth and childhood of gods, of the exploits
and encounters with each other and their excursions in the human world. Even
when these stories center around a single god or goddess, they do not
comprise a biography; they are not chronological narrative. Instead they
relate a manifestation of a god and his interactions with other beings of
the cosmos. Carl Kerényi writes: "The gods are so 'original' that a new
world is always born with a new god -- a new epoch or a new aspect of the
world. They are 'there,' not only in the beginning when they themselves
originated, and not only in the periodic repetitions of that first
origination, i.e., cosmic reappearances and representations on festal
occasions. Though they are present all the time, the mythologems which
unfold in narrative form what is contained in the figures of the gods are
always set in a primordial time. This return to the origins and to
primordiality is a basic feature of every mythology."
A particular aspect of this "primordiality" becomes concentrated in the
appearance of the god as divine child and since this is a psychic genesis,
everything must happen non-empirically, e.g. by a virgin birth, a miraculous
conception or birth from unnatural organs. "The motives of 'insignificance,'
exposure, abandonment, danger, etc., try to show how precarious is the
possibility of psychic wholeness, that is, the enormous difficulty to be met
with in attaining this 'highest good.'" These stories show the
god in the "full perfection of his power and outward form."
The stories of the birth of Hermes and his exploits as a child serve as fine
examples of the essence of the god (or a particular power) at his beginning
to be retold many times over in many other situations. Maia and Zeus
conceived Hermes, in the deepest night when heavy sleep had overtaken Hera
protecting them from her jealousy. Hermes was born at dawn, and by evening
had stolen the herd of cattle which belonged to his brother, Apollo.
Click here to see images and the rest of this article
|
 
Art and Psyche Conference |
 |
By Ami Ronnberg, Managing Editor and Curator - ARAS New York
It is a pleasure to announce the first international conference on Jung and
the visual arts called ART AND PSYCHE: REFLECTIONS ON IMAGE organized by the
Art and Psyche Group and hosted by the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco.
The focus on the image mirrors ARAS' tradition of approaching art from a
psychological and archetypal perspective, across disciplines and cultures.
The enthusiastic response to our invitation for proposals made it clear that
there is a great interest in this meeting place between the arts and a
Jungian perspective. A wealth of proposals arrived from all continents and
it was both moving and exhilarating to review the range of creative ideas
presented. We decided to be as inclusive as possible, resulting in this
extraordinary offering. It includes artists, art historians, critics,
curators, Jungian analysts and analysts of other schools - all inspired by
the image.
If you are interested in attending, please see
more information. |
ARAS Hint: Alternate Commentaries |
 |
|
When you explore ARAS Online, you may encounter records that
say Alternate Commentaries near the bottom of their
descriptions. The links there take you to other, generally older,
commentaries different ARAS researchers wrote over the years to describe the
same image. If you're studying a particular image in depth, you may
find the alternate commentaries provide other perspectives and information
and are well worth reading. Alternate commentaries often arose
when we reworked an earlier commentary for publication in a book or
elsewhere. For example,
record 2Co.002
has two alternates. You normally see the "Main" commentary, which is from
the second volume of ARAS' Encyclopedia of Symbols – The Body. The
alternate commentaries were written earlier - one was even handwritten!
Record 2Bt.600
has three alternates. The "Main" commentary is the most complete, alternate
1 was a shorter format we once used, alternate 2 is an earlier formal
commentary, and alternate 3 is a handwritten note one researcher left.
When we put the entire ARAS archive online, we didn't want to lose any of
the archive's past 70-plus years of scholarship. That's why you'll
find all these alternate commentaries preserved for you to use. |
|