
A course in Color Therapy introduced me to Carl G. Jung’s The Red Book [1], a mystical picture book, painted by his own hand, serving as a visual and symbolic exploration of his principles of analytical psychology.
Symbols hold power. Drawing is a conduit to the subconscious. Wisdom is creative. Creativity is wisdom in action. The cosmos is creative. Chaos is creative. Destruction is creation.
Many pages, which I’ve been privileged to turn, are illustrated with Dragons and serpents, representing the shadow archetype: darker aspects of the self; the conscious mind confronting the unconscious; and psychological insights leading to growth. [View more images in links at the end of this essay]
The Reddening
So why call it The Red Book? Almost certainly the name comes from Rubedo, meaning “reddening,” or “wholeness,” the ultimate stage of alchemy. Alchemy attempts to explain material, psychological and spiritual transformation through color changes. Nigredo [corrosion / swallowing the sun / the Green Lion] is the blackening; Albedo [purification] is the whitening; and Citrinitas [transition] the yellowing. The intention is to turn base metals and the soul/psyche/ego into their highest forms, which are gold, spiritual gold and/or enlightenment, and/or immortality, resulting from a fusion of opposites, expressed as a hermaphrodite, as the alchemic journey proceeds.
Medieval dragons and alchemy
In many mythologies, the Dragon represents primordial chaos and cycles of destruction and creation. *European Medieval alchemists, (12th-13th centuries) and *Renaissance and *Early Modern alchemists (14th-17th centuries) sought to harness this power for their process, so they drew Dragons.
* From here on, when I use the term *alchemy, it refers to European, Medieval, Early Modern and Renaissance alchemy, not Arabic, Egyptian, Post Modern, or New Age alchemy, unless stated.
It could be argued *alchemy could be an art genre. Carl G. Jung’s gouache paintings drew inspiration from these illustrations. His “active imagination” tapped into Dragon consciousness, [2] meanwhile his “genius” paintbrush transformed cosmology to mandalas, and *alchemy to psychology.
*Alchemy distills mythology and can be considered polarizing when viewed through a feminist lens. It seeks to harness the energy of opposites, including the [polarized] feminine principle, expressed as the White lion, passivity, mercury and moon; and the masculine principle, expressed as the Red lion, sulphur, active energy, and sun. It appears the dynamic sun and warrior Goddesses, including Sól, Anat and Nana, none of whom are passive, and the rampaging lion Goddess Sekhmet, who “sees and drinks red,” are overlooked in *alchemy.
The Arabic Alchemists
The alchemy of Hermes Trismegistus, was a fusion of Egyptian mysticism, Greek mythology and Christianity. However *alchemy took root in Europe when Arabic alchemical texts [3] were brought here by, those self-righteous invaders, the Crusaders. Liber de compositione alchemiae (“Book on the Composition of Alchemy”) was translated into Latin circa 1144 [4]. The crusaders also brought the myth of George and the Dragon to Europe.
Limiting beliefs and male power
In *alchemy, chemical process entwines with egotistical quests for immortality, as man seeks a god-like status. Gnosis means direct knowledge of God. Even though the female principles, including Sophia (wisdom) and Venus, are part of the *alchemic process, because wisdom has been in the male domain, *alchemy is often portrayed as centering on the divine male wisdom of Hermes Trismegistus, Thoth, Hermes, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Paracelsus and God.
In my view, *alchemy was destined to fail because, even though it sought to harness female power, which would have been quite radical at the time [when women were spiritually silence by the church], the ultimate container was Christian doctrine, where ALL possibilities lead to the godhead. It could be said, science and religion should not mix, although science and spirituality should.
It was also destined to fail because, according to current scientific theories, gold forms in space, not on Earth.
At a time when patriarchy was seizing control of female wisdom, *alchemists sought to distill metals and philosophies, in the same way wise women healers distilled herbs at home, for medicinal remedies, using clay pots, alembics and condensers. [5]
…….continues in part two
View images from the Red Book here.
[a] The Visionary Mystical Art of Carl Jung: See Illustrated Pages from The Red Book, January 28th, 2020 Open Culture https://www.openculture.com/2020/01/the-visionary-mystical-art-of-carl-jung.html
[b] Kriegman, Mitchell Carl Jung’s Red Book – The Visionary Swiss Psychoanalyst’s Secret Book of Dreams. Mar 20, 2014. Santa Barbara Independent. https://www.independent.com/2014/03/20/carl-jungs-red-book/
[c] Carl Jung The Red Book. Jan 2.2025. The Doors of Perception. https://doorofperception.com/2025/01/carl-jung-the-red-book-liber-novus/
With thanks to Portal Ibis for their fantastic collection of imagery.
References
[1] The Red Book The Red Book (Philemon) 1st Edition
by C. G. Jung (Author), Sonu Shamdasani (Editor, Translator), Mark Kyburz (Translator), John Peck (Translator) amazon.https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0393065677/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=openculture-20&creative=9325&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=0393065677&linkId=d9fffbb88eba29f2c8f312acb2da8dcb
[2] The Red Book of Carl G. Jung: Its Origins and Influence
The Red Book and Beyond. Library of Congress. https://www.loc.gov/exhibits/red-book-of-carl-jung/the-red-book-and-beyond.html
[3] The Muslim Alchemists. Science Abbey https://www.scienceabbey.com/the-muslim-alchemists/
[4] No. 10. The book of the Composition of Alchemy, Transcribed with an introduction by Adam McLean. Alchemic Texts. Alchemy website. https://www.alchemywebsite.com/hrs10.html#:~:text=The%20translator%20was%20Robertus%20Castrensis,the%20Algebra%20of%20al%2DKwarizimi.
[5] Wise Women: Traditional Cures and Remedies. Museum of Cambridge. https://www.museumofcambridge.org.uk/wise-women-traditional-cures-and-remedies/
[6] Egyptosophy. Echoes of Egypt. https://echoesofegypt.peabody.yale.edu/egyptosophy/narrative
[7] Isoora. March 29. 2014. Isis the Alchemist. Isiopolis. https://isiopolis.com/2014/03/29/isis-the-alchemist/
[8] De Abreu, Kristine. October 17, 2023. Six Women Alchemists: Their Obsessions and Inventions. Explorers Web. https://explorersweb.com/women-alchemists/
[9] Translated by G. S. R. Mead, Gnostic Scriptures and Fragments. Pistis Sophia. The Gnostic Society Library. http://www.gnosis.org/library/pistis-sophia/index.htm
[10] M. Rieder, Paula. On the Purification of Women : Churching in Northern France, 1100-1500. (The New Middle Ages.) Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. Pp. 257. scholarworks. wmich.edu https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1012&context=mff
[11] Lishtar, ALCHEMICAL SYMBOLISM IN SUMERIAN MYTH AND RELIGION. https://www.gatewaystobabylon.com/religion/sumalch1.htm
[12] Dieu-Le-Vent, Annie. Ishtar, the real holy whore of Babylon, May 14, 2023. https://anniedieuleveut.com/2023/05/14/ishtar-the-real-holy-whore-of-babylon/
[13] Stephany, Timothy j.The Descent of Ishtar: both the Sumerian and Akkadian versions. Paperback. 12 Nov. 2015 https://www.amazon.co.uk/Descent-Ishtar-Sumerian-Akkadian-versions/dp/1517611369#
[14] Stifler, Bill. Babylonian Creation Myth: Tiamat and Marduk (Merodach)
https://www.billstifler.org/myth/files/2D-001-03-babylonian_creation.htm
(To be continued)
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As a (former) Jungian Analyst I am familiar with the Red Book – definitely a work of art – I was struck by your words – creation is destruction – this is what we are living now – recall that Jung, gifted as he was was a man who lived within his limited patriarchal time – so his use of the dragon carries a personal as well as a collective charge – in many cultures the dragon carries chaos and destruction in it’s wake – equating this symbol with women’s power disturbs me just for this reason – are we sure we want to identify with such a symbol?