♀ Venus bQ Biquintile ♅ Uranus
144° · minor aspect · neutral · default orb ±1.5°
In the biquintile of Venus and Uranus, taste and concord stand 144 degrees from the modern planet of rupture and invention, first catalogued in 1781. Contemporary practitioners, the only lineage Uranus admits, read the fifth-harmonic contact as avant-garde facility: style that breaks convention cleanly rather than clumsily, unusual aesthetics made wearable, affection organized on original terms without upheaval. The documented domains run to design and fashion at their experimental edge, electronic and other novel media in the arts, and a kind of social invention, the crafting of new forms of association that nonetheless manage to hold together.
Traditional reading
Venus applies throughout, Uranus advancing barely four degrees in a year. The pairing has no classical layer at all on the Uranian side, and the aspect is itself post-classical, so commentary rests on twentieth-century harmonic practice and its case literature, where fifth-harmonic Venus-Uranus contacts appear among designers and performers noted for signature strangeness. Some modern writers extend the octave metaphor to this pair only loosely; more common is the plain formula of Venus supplying the form and Uranus the break that renews it.
Classical reading
Twice a quintile (144°). Kepler's fifth-harmonic family. Associated with deeper creative integration than the quintile.
Modern reading
Modern reading: integrated creative expression. The two principles work together to produce a distinctive output.
The two bodies
Other Venus–Uranus aspects
More on the Biquintile aspect in general.
Reference, not advice
This is cultural and astronomical reference, not personal prediction or advice.
Last reviewed .