Thursday, June 14, 2012

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Gemini: Face To Face With History


Gandhi's morning walk, photographed by Margaret Bourke White (b. June 14, 1904)
In the tangled of intricacy of the natal chart, the Sun sign is so often dismissed as too vague or too broad an indicator. But when it comes to career, it should never be overlooked.
Migrant Mother
by Dorothea Lange (b. May 26, 1895)








The Sun is our core self, our identity, the light we shine on the world. In earlier times, for women, this would have been so hard to express, but today all of us could, within obvious limitations and if we so chose, express this through our career choice.

Is it a coincidence that three of the most successful pioneers of photography were all born under inquisitive, clever, cool Gemini?



Gemini, an air sign, is represented by the twins. It's the first air sign, the first iteration of our connection with other people. With Aries, the first sign of the Zodiac, we become aware of our self. With Taurus, we become aware of our senses, and with Gemini, we become aware of the other. We look out into the world. Of course, on a sophisticated level, that other is inside us, but more simply, Gemini is a social sign, "involved in mankind". 
Mrs. Duckworth by Julia Margaret
Cameron (b. June 11, 1815)

Gemini is characterised as the reporter of the Zodiac; the sign that finds out the facts. But Gemini is also a teller of stories, a weaver of tales. Gemini does not just get the facts and spill them out in a disordered heap. Instead the facts are shaped, trimmed, remoulded to create a narrative.

A well-crafted news story is a Gemini product. Speedily delivered, perhaps cunningly acquired, swiftly crafted, gripping in its detail, a result of curiosity - and then gone in an instant. But the best, or most important stories, stay with us, shape our view of the world forever.

And the best photographs? Taken in an instant, understood at a glance, remembered forever.

Survivors of Buchenwald, photographed by Margaret Bourke-White.