Sermons to the Dead |
ABRAXAS.
In Gnosticism the Great Archon.
The god above the Judeo Christian god and devil -
combining all opposites into one Being.
What the hell is an Archon, you may ask. Archon was
originally the Greek word for king or ruler, but the Gnostics used the word to
denote the seven lower emanations of the Godhead - demons if you like.
As I understand it, Abraxas was called the GREAT Archon
because he/it was supposed to embody both good and evil.
I.A.O. (see Abraxas' shield in my picture) is an
abbreviation of Jehovah, with the original Hebrew characters changed into Roman
equivalents as follows:
I = Hebrew Yod
A= Hebrew He
O= Hebrew Vau
On the sleeve of Santana's 1970 album Abraxas is the
following excerpt from Herman Hesse's Demain:
"We stood before it (referring to a painting of
Abraxas) and began to freeze inside from the exertion. We questioned the
painting, berated it, made love to it, prayed to it: We called it mother,
called it whore and slut, called it our beloved, called it Abraxas...."
ABRAX-ASS
Now, although I find the Gnostic texts interesting - I
love their imagery, and also love Herman Hesse's novels, Jung (who some believe
to have been a latter day Gnostic), and the music of Santana, I have to say
that on reflection they seem to me to be basically nonsense - or as I put it
Gnostic gnonsense. Hence Abrax-Ass, or in English: Abrax-Arse.
Of course I may be wrong - it may be that one of the
other evil Archons has got possession of me and has blinded me to the 'truth',
whatever that is!
IF YOU'RE INTERESTED
In
finding out more about Abraxas and Gnosticism check them out on Wikki.
There are also a number of Gnostic Sites on the Web. But don't look for
Abrax-Ass there - you won't find it!
Sailing across a lake at night with a Red Indian Chief stood up in the bows like the figure in Arnold Bocklin's Isle of the Dead. Did I dream it, or did I read it somewhere, does it matter? Who cares, anyway?
Alchemica Deus Ex Machinan |
I had this crazy dream that I had painted this picture, and someone said to me "Oh yes - that's the old Alchemica Deus Ex Machina". Later, when I was awake, I actually created the picture from my dream.
I have no idea what, if anything 'Alchemica Deus Ex Machina' means, or indeed the picture itself - possibly something to do with my obsession with C G Jung...
The Jungconscious |
Babylonian Moon Goddess |
I must admit that this one is not all my own work. I adapted a photograph from a book about Jung.
The original photograph was black and white. I provided the colours.
I believe the woman is Astarte or Ishtar. But I called her Moon Goddess because of the repeated crescent motif.
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