Dedicated to Louise Michel & her Cosmographic Comparator
I had learned to dream in stone and steel" Louise Michel, 1895 (Every Society Invents the Failed Utopia it Deserves)
We dedicate these prototypes of Tarot cards performing various present circuits, materials and technologies to Louise Michel, a 19th century anarchist and member of the Paris commune, who was also one of the first speculative designers and futurists. She imagined and through her alter-egos, Marie Violette Tranchot and Octave Obdurant, described prototypes, which combine creative ways of thinking about the past and future with political activism. Her âCosmographic Comparatorâ together with the âspeculative crownâ and the âutopian umbrellaâ are tools, which help us understand how to integrate the possible with the actual, science and poetry, which both change our ways of experiencing and envisioning the world. These magical tools have many properties similar to what researchers nowadays describe as scenario methods and future techniques with one important difference. The anarchist scientist and geeky heroine of Michelâs novel, Marie Violette, uses them to start revolutions around the world or how she describes this with a feminist metaphor - âsnipping the umbilical of the globeâ.  The sociopolitical astrolabe (Conducteur Ă Comparaisons Cosmographiques) is a utopian calculator, a machine for future scenarios, which contaminates our future with history, but also traces in the history hopes for the future, because âhistory without utopia is dead in spirit and fact, but that the future cannot live on dreams alone; that any science worthy of the name has no other purpose than the visionary improvement of life on earth.â We hope that also our cards can serve as such machine for future making creatively connecting our past with the future, science and technology with poetic imagery, recollection and anticipation, âthe unveiling of heaven while in hell. The dream inseparable from the suffering which gave it lifeâ.  We also want to wonder with Marie Viollete about the â burlesques of abundance or simplicityâ in history and the  âhidden variables⌠the law connecting real conditions and the wild scenarios to which they gave birth.â










