The Oracle of the Goddess - goddesses from different cultures as mirrors
Not every oracle deck works with one tradition. This deck draws from worldwide sources: goddesses from Greek, Egyptian, Celtic and Asian mythology stand side by side.
Each card shows a goddess as archetype. Not as a distant figure, but as energy you can recognize in your own life. One card shows nurturing strength, another conflict or transformation. These are 33 variations on feminine power.
What you see on the cards
The illustrations are by Jo Dosé. Her style is expressive, with bold colors and clear symbolism. No subtle watercolors, but images that stand out immediately.
The cards are large: 95 x 140 mm. That format does justice to the detailed imagery. You see clearly what is there.
The 136-page guidebook is written by Gayan Sylvie Winter. For each card you get explanation about the archetype, the background of the goddess and what the energy means in personal context.
How you work with it
The cards work for daily draws and for more extensive spreads. The images are strong enough to work without text, but the guidebook offers a solid foundation if you want to go deeper.
Many people place the card somewhere visible and leave it there for a day or longer. The energy stays present.
Choose a card and place it on your desk or nightstand. Look at it a few times during the day and notice what shifts in your feeling.
About Jo Dosé and Gayan Sylvie Winter
Jo Dosé is an artist. Her work for this deck is characterized by clear composition and symbolism that does not look away. Each goddess receives her own visual strength.
Gayan Sylvie Winter writes about consciousness and archetypes. Her texts connect mythology with what you encounter in your own life.
Specifications
- Number of cards: 33
- Guidebook: 136 pages
- Language: English
- Card size: 95 x 140 mm
- Publisher: AGM-Urania
- Artist: Jo Dosé
- Author: Gayan Sylvie Winter
Questions we often get
Do all the goddesses come from the same tradition?
No. The deck mixes mythologies from different cultures. You find Greek, Egyptian, Celtic and Asian goddesses next to each other.
Why are the cards so large?
The format of 95 x 140 mm is chosen to make the detailed illustrations fully visible. Smaller cards would lose too much detail.