Lumina Spark uses the mandala as a right brain symbol for our personality portrait. I have copied this article from the source site which I have listed at the bottom of the page. I find this an intriguing use of the mandala symbol for bringing quiet and peace to our daily lives. Sitting and drawing one of these takes time and concentration. I know since I tried my first one. It is pretty poor compared to these examples but with practice maybe I too can reach my
"center".
"center".
Artwork by: Peter Barreda
Mandala Art: Drawing Your Way
To Wholeness
By:
Traci Pedersen
Tags:
“The mandala is an archetypal image whose occurrence is attested
throughout the ages. It signifies the wholeness of the Self.” —Carl G.
Jung, Memories, Dreams and Reflections
Have you ever gazed into a mandala? For many people, simply
looking at the circular symphony of shapes and patterns evokes a feeling of
calm and contentment. In many spiritual traditions, the mandala is considered a
symbol for wholeness and connection and is used as a focal point for
meditation, introspection, and healing.
The mystical pattern of a mandala manifests in abundance in
nature: in a flower, a snowflake, a spider web. Some believe the mandala is
imprinted into the deepest part of the human psyche, as it makes a common
appearance in people’s dreams and in the visions of those with
schizophrenia.
The famous psychiatrist Carl G. Jung would ask his patients to
draw mandalas as a form of therapy. Jung believed that this practice would
allow his patients to symbolically work their way through the outer chaos
of their lives and get in touch with their center. Jung noticed
that his patients became more focused and relaxed after drawing mandalas.
David
J. Bookbinder is a present-day psychotherapist and a flower mandala artist.
After a near-death experience over two decades ago, he was drawn to the healing
power of mandalas, and soon found himself taking photographs of flowers.
“My motivation in creating these images was to heal. I began
this project shortly after I bought my first digital camera and found myself
shooting patterns of color and light, rather than the people and buildings I
had shot in my black-and-white days,” says Bookbinder.
The fact that both he and Jung pursued the same interests is not
lost on him. “In a small way, as both mandala artist and psychotherapist,
I carry on Jung's tradition,” says Bookbinder.
Peter Barreda is another mandala artist who prefers creating
black and white images. He began drawing mandalas as a young child. “The
center was always the starting point,” he recalls of his early days, “and
symmetry always the guide.”
“I would draw tiny details around and around the center, outward
and up and beyond. The creation of a mandala felt inherently good, like an urge
satisfied, a compulsion appeased. Of course I did not know them as mandalas
then, only as scribbles that I couldn't help making.”
Barreda believes that, when a person is drawing a mandala, his
or her impression of the outside world shows up in the structure of the
mandala, while the inner workings of the psyche are revealed in the content.
“It is like drawing a picture of the inside of your mind without
knowing what it looks like,” says Barreda.
Barreda’s advice to budding mandala artists is that “rules are
not that important.” He believes that as we begin to draw, all the little
bits and pieces that make up our chaotic minds emerge. By arranging these
bits into a structured mandala, we can bring order to our thoughts and peace
into our hearts.
Find a quiet place to draw, he advises, so that your
subconscious mind can work without distractions from the outside world. Begin
with a center point and simply work your way outward.
“The truth of the mandala comes from a place deep within us, a
repository of subconscious memories and unacknowledged wisdom,” he says. “It is
a sacred space in that it represents both our desire for outer wholeness and
our longing for inner peace.”
See
David J. Bookbinder’s work at flowermandalas.org. Visit Peter Barreda
at mandalazone.com.
- See more at:
http://spiritualityhealth.com/articles/mandala-art-drawing-your-way-wholeness#sthash.CmgVst59.dpuf
- See more at:
http://spiritualityhealth.com/articles/mandala-art-drawing-your-way-wholeness#sthash.CmgVst59.dpuf
Oh I am intrigued by this! Must try this!!
ReplyDeleteI too am giving it a try.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous - I love them. I love the Tibetan art of making those intricate mandalas with colored powder and then they wash it away! It is a fascinating thing to watch. Thanks for the reminder about them though!
ReplyDeleteNeat. like the idea of quelling the chaos of the inner mind. Have you seen this: On Becoming Fearless [support@mentorschannel.com] ? Arianna Huffington. Day One was all about quieting the center.
ReplyDeleteNo I will take a look.
ReplyDelete