Archetypal Patterns in Ancient Art: Dwarfs, Giants, and the Spirit of Nature

Olena Provencher
Start Date: 05/10/2023
End Date:25/10/2023
Scheduled course
Online

Overview

The course is dedicated to Jung’s idea of human wholeness.

Participants are invited to dive deep into a study of several selected works of ancient art through the archetypal lens. The selected works belong to widely differing epochs and cultures. The course avoids the common art historical practice to analyze art through a rational narrative and the reductionist approach of translating visual imagery into a verbal ‘story.’ Each piece is considered a fractal reflection of the idea of wholeness (the Self archetype). The universal archetypal structure associated with wholeness, the quaternity, is located in each work of art to elicit the archetypal meaning of the unique imagery of each piece. Locating such a universal structure of wholeness in works of art helps to elicit their deeper overall meaning and restore the numinosity to our experience of them. We will discuss artistic imagery in relation to such archetypes as the Great Mother, Divine Child, Puer and Senex, the dying and resurrecting god, and the World’s Tree, with the main emphasis on the archetype of the quaternity. We will look into the wholeness-making, healing, and meaning-producing qualities of art. The course also makes connections between early art and ancient astrological beliefs.

Four Thursdays – October 5, 12, 19, 26, 2023 | 7-9pm UTC-5 on Zoom

>> The course is for everybody interested in art and art history and doesn’t require any specific knowledge in this area.

>> The course is offered for those who have at least an initial familiarity with and some interest in Jungian ideas, but it doesn’t require deep knowledge of them.
>> The course is recommended for Jungian practitioners as it expands the understanding of ancient symbolic imagery and mythology, deepens the understanding of the Jungian idea of wholeness (the Self), and supports the amplification work in dream analysis.
>> The course is also for Art Therapy and counseling trainees.

>> The course was created to give a deep intellectual, intuitive, creative, and imaginative understanding of art based on the archetypal perspective.
>> The course offers a universal, unified vision of ancient art of widely various cultures and epochs, zooming on the archetypal structure common to all ancient art, and human consciousness in general.

Jung directly connected this universal structure—the quaternity— with the idea of wholeness and healing, the idea of the Self. The course reflects this idea, considering every work of art as an imprint of wholeness.

>> In our postmodern Western materialistic, literalistic culture, ancient art pieces are often perceived as nothing but (Jung): a sex object, an idol, a fertility amulet, an unskilled attempt at realism. The course aims to restore numinosity to our vision of ancient art. The symbol as a window into the world of the numinous is emphasized.

>> The course is designed to hone the participants’ archetypal eye (James Hillman) in art analysis and expand their understanding of ancient art and mythological imagery.

Jung noted that seeing colorful and imaginative art awakens and invites the unconscious to actively participate in the dialogue. This course is designed to be a real journey to the heart of the numinous universe populated by living archetypes, magical colors, infinitely rich images, mystery, freedom, beauty, and meaning. The universe that is our true Self.
>> The auxiliary advantage of the material is its affinity with the language of dreams. The course can serve as a foundation for the study of the amplification method in Jungian dream interpretation.

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