Loading AI tools
Israeli graphologist (born 1953) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Igal Vardi (Hebrew: יגאל ורדי; born 5 May 1953) is an Israeli graphologist, psychologist, artist, writer and entrepreneur. His painting style is topological painting.
Igal Vardi | |
---|---|
יגאל ורדי | |
Born | Bnei Shimon, Israel | May 5, 1953
Nationality | Israeli |
Alma mater | Tel Aviv University |
Occupation | Graphologist |
Spouse | Ziva |
Children | 4 |
Born in 1953 in Kibbutz Mishmar Hanegev, he began to draw as a child. At the age of six he went with his family to Argentina, where he studied from the age of 7 at the Art Academy with artist-sculptor Cecilia Markowitz and her student Hector Romero. Five years later he returned to Israel with his family and settled in Beersheba, where he studied with Moshe Agmon. At the age of 13 he had his first solo exhibition.[1] After his military service he graduated from Tel Aviv University with a bachelor's degree in Philosophy and an MA in Clinical Psychology. He specialized in the field of clinical psychology, but primarily focused his work on graphology. He completed his PhD in Philosophy at Tel Aviv University.[2]
He introduced dozens of shows over the years and wrote seven books on graphology, psychology, art, management and philosophy.
He is married to his wife, Ziva, and has four children.
In his book "The Handwriting Mirror of the Soul" he presented a diagnostic theory to show the way a person exhibits a synergistic among various personality types. The book further contained a novel theory for diagnosing the human mind as reflected in his handwriting and presented the applications of graphology in areas such as vocational guidance, leadership, thinking and creativity, mental illness and psychopathology, social deviance and criminology, education, and interpretation of the signature.[3]
In his book "The Wisdom of the Mind to Heal Itself" he presented a theory about the way a person carries out internal regulation at equilibrium when balancing mental pathology to create harmony and unique equilibrium for any lifestyle.
Vardi explored modern painting in his book "Mimesis" which detailed that:
Vardi developed a teaching method of painting, which was published in his book "Sketch". The method is based on pictorial literacy and making a spiral from the scribble, for screens and the construction of a geometric shape to the resolution of the drawing realistic.[5]
He also developed a method of Philosophical Counseling based on human understanding of typological perspective. According to him, the ability to be exposed to the cognitive subconscious image of this world allows a person to expand the degrees of freedom in choosing life, the process of creation and self-fulfillment. This theory was presented in his book "The Philosophy of Madness". Excerpts of a summary include:
Vardi was the Chairman of the Israeli Association for Scientific Graphology in 1996. He has been an expert in handwriting analysis for 30 years (since 1979). He has specialized in a variety of services to industrial companies in various sectors (hi-tech, food, jewelry, hotels, heavy industry, lawyers, accountants and psychological institutes).[7]
He owns 4,000 books, all of which he bought and read. He additionally deciphered the handwriting of the kidnapped Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit for the IDF. He has been quoted as saying, "As a clinical psychologist by training, I declare graphology the queen of personality tests. Graphology cannot be faked. It is one of the few tests you cannot prepare for."[8]
In 2014, he utilized his theory entitled "Personality Collage Theory" to create a personality test for candidate assessment use in Human Resources called Ethoos. His Personality Collage Theory states that each individual has a collage-like, multifaceted personality with 9 distinct types of identities. Diverse identities within each person will express themselves differently depending on the situations in which a person finds themselves.[9]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.