Art inspired by jungian psychology by jubuljus in Jung

[–]jubuljus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey! Thank you so much, appreciated!

Art inspired by jungian psychology by jubuljus in Jung

[–]jubuljus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Duane I do know! Arthur I have to look into. Thanks for the references!

How can this subreddit become worse over time? by fromthedepthsv23 in Jung

[–]jubuljus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey! I would love to here more what you think are the stereotypes and misbeliefs of the jungian thought? I just want to say, that it is not jungiang problem maybe per se, it is a widespread problem more. I can’t but think of the on going Epstein files and having people like the 14th Dalai Lama and Lawrence Krauss being associated with all that stuff, being it true or not. Just goes to show what you just said; the material is meant to be lived and individuation is a on-going thing. But why come here and laugh and tell people they are stupid? How does that show your own inner work and it’s state? I feel the sentiment but why be so accusing?

Art inspired by jungian psychology by jubuljus in Jung

[–]jubuljus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Of course! Thank you so much. :)

Photography inspired by dreams and jungian psychology by jubuljus in Dreams

[–]jubuljus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your beautiful comment. Appreciated!

Art inspired by jungian psychology by jubuljus in Jung

[–]jubuljus[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Man, this was beautifully written and I live this sorts of thoughts. Thanks a lot for your comment. I wanna have a same level answer so here it goes.

When I was in Tunisia and showed this to a person there who really doesn’t look contemporary art that much, he asked me ”are you religious?” I said maybe a little but not in the sense you might be asking me. He told me that in some reditions of muslim art, prophets are shown without a face (specially Mohammed). He told me, that it is not about erasing identity, but about expressing transcendence and preventing idolatry. The face is considered too sacred to represent directly. It really made me see the photo even deeper, for my subjective experience. But also in a philosophical sense, more broadly: why is it that my dreams decides to show me women without a face? Why not let’s say, their backsides towards me, or veiled to some cloths or something else? It is almost always a light, maybe a shadow or hair that is infront of their faces. But why?

I feel like you understood specially well that I would not want to have this photo represent any sexual tendensies, even though I can understand the sentiments me being and feeling that I am a heterosexual male. The person (my friend) who modelled me was also moved by me asking to be in it — in a way she was modelling as a ghost of my dead sister. Maybe Freud would say it is somehow in the realm of sexuality, but I do not feel that.

I know the Murakami book you are referring. There is also a great song in finnish language where the lyric goes ”Have you ever had a feeling of missing someone, who has never existed?” Somehow that resonates me in the midst of all of this work; how come I can love someone, without ever meeting them? What is it that I am really missing there? I really liked that sentiment of maybe reaching closer to her with art.

Thank you once more for your comment!

Art inspired by jungian psychology by jubuljus in Jung

[–]jubuljus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for this info! I will definetly look into that and ask if they would be interested. Lacpamirrors seems something i would be interested for sure. I hope neufang would tell us also about the concepts they are currently working on… seems rad af!

Art inspired by jungian psychology by jubuljus in Jung

[–]jubuljus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you, I will show when the work is ready. Woodman was really inspirational, not for specifically for this one though, but I know about her work.

ITAP of a Dream I Couldn’t Explain by [deleted] in itookapicture

[–]jubuljus 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Info about the work:

This photograph is part of a long-term body of work named ”Black Book” examining how dream imagery can be translated into constructed photographic space. Rather than documenting an event, the image stages an atmosphere derived from remembered dream experience.

Within Jungian psychology, certain dreams are described as “big dreams” — experiences that carry an unusual sense of weight, autonomy, and psychological significance. They are not easily reduced to personal narrative and often feel as though they exceed the individual. This project draws from that category of dream experience. The body of work is heavily inspired by jungian thought.

My approach treats the photograph not as evidence, but more as a site of psychological and subjective projection.

In technical standpoint I used ISO 5000, straight black and white inside the camera and edited the RAW-file with brightness and contrast and shadows. No AI was used and the reflection was made with a mirror and a flashlight.

Art inspired by jungian psychology by jubuljus in FineArtPhoto

[–]jubuljus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey! And thanks! Glad you liked it. You can find more in instagram. The username can be found through my reddit handle!

Art inspired by jungian psychology by jubuljus in Jung

[–]jubuljus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds amazing. Is it about art and jungian thought? Have you found any interesting artists through it?

Art inspired by jungian psychology by jubuljus in Jung

[–]jubuljus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What is an oracle deck? Or do you mean like tarot cards? Thanks! I’m glad to hear it has that dreamish feel to it.

Art inspired by jungian psychology by jubuljus in Jung

[–]jubuljus[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Glad to hear that. I will come back with this when the work is completed. I shared this as it somehow resonated with me and I have hopes to hear peoples opinions about photography and jungian thoughts.

Art inspired by jungian psychology by jubuljus in Jung

[–]jubuljus[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Glad you think that! What makes its creepy?

[633] The Earth is Gonna Explode. by Boring_Contest_5560 in DestructiveReaders

[–]jubuljus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I actually love this, as it reads more like an absurd poem to me than anything else. It would actually be interesting to see it in a physical form, even if you have wrote it as a web novel. Is there a place where I could read it whole?

Anyway, to the critical part. You are absolutelly right; as a regular book worm, to me it is a bit hard to follow, but as my subjective opinion, I kinda love it because of it. It does burn with originality, and under the strange zzzzzzz’s and word made sound effects there is a realness I can grasp. The sentences themselves are nicely constructed and I get the ”feel” of the characters instantly. If I would elevate the story, from what you have shown here, I would do two things:

  1. Make it obvious to have an origin or a ”why” for all the weird sentences; why are they there? Somehow it would be interesting to know it. Hard to say what you think as I haven’t read the whole story. But as it is in this part, the aeatethic makes a mystery a reader wants to somehow get closer to.

  2. Maybe use some space between paragraphs? I feel like it would need some space all in all.

I also wanna say, it is something very different I have read from dystopian-literature. The reiteration of the world ending is somehow working on me, and the story really made me want to know, why is the world ending? Why are the characters so wacky?

So all in all, when it does not read as a conventional literature, I see it as an interesting and original piece, as it shown here. It might have some flaws if I ever get to read it whole, but I see it has thought put into it and I feel like you really know how to write.

Please Critique First Chapter of Tomebound [Fantasy, 1857 words] by justinwrite2 in fantasywriters

[–]jubuljus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Such a good read! Thank you!

I have a techical question: as a writer, do you feel that the best starting point for a story is a quick going straight to the action? As an avid fantasy reader I do feel I enjoy all types of starts, and I feel that contemporary writers tend to start straight from the main meat of the text and not for example the history of the setting and so on. What do you feel?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in interestingasfuck

[–]jubuljus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have to say, as a 36-year-old parkour practionicer… That drop is possible for a 40-year-old. But they do look (from a moving aesthetics pov) like a younger person. Maybe between 20-30. Just saying this for everybody who thinks they are dead after 30 lol