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Posts from the ‘mandalas’ Category

6 Degrees of Progress

For the past several days, I’ve been working on a plan for my upcoming workshop: Still Point in a Changing World.

My original idea for the workshop was to offer participants an opportunity to spend time in their studios, (whatever their definition of studio might be) on a daily basis for the period of 21 days.

A common notion states that a habit requires 21 days to set. (In actuality, some habits can take longer, but I thought that this time period would be  workable range in people’s lives.)

I wanted the studio practice to be akin to a meditation practice; something that they could return to day after day from whatever flurry they found themselves in and locate a point of stillness.

It was inspired too, by my own practice of  watercolor, which I’d conceived in a time of hospital fatigue.

I’d wanted to do something simple, daily and beautiful, with which I could find refreshment, nourishment and tranquility. I found it in the watercolors..

However, I realized that I couldn’t just say to workshop participants : “Ok, get yourself a box of watercolors, find something to paint and just keep it up for the next 21 days.” Instead, I decided to read about mindfulness and creativity and found myself covered in reference books.

At the same time, the Jewish practice of the Counting the Omer began. (This ancient practice takes place between the holiday of Passover and the later harvest festival of Shavuot).

An artist friend of mine, Laura Hegfield, introduced me to a Facebook page entitled, “A Way In,” where Counting the Omer has been re-imagined as an invitation to mindfulness practice: paying attention not only to each day as it passes but also to the individual spiritual qualities which were assigned to it by the 16th century Jewish mystics.

I became fascinated with the simple words and phrases which were offered up each day like a carefully crafted ceramic bowl.

Dreaming Home, ©2012, H. Hunter, 9″ x 12,” Collage: watercolor, paper, tissue, precut image

I decided to weave some of the meditations (along with others from a variety of sources) together with prompts for each of the 21 days. Each day of the 21 day workshop will offer a meditation and studio practice for artists to explore.

I couldn’t wait, so I decided to start experimenting myself.  I’m working on Day 10 and you can see the results above. If you’re intrigued, you can register here for my workshop and discover what the rest of the days, and the other five workshops, have to offer.

Inscribing a Circle

I’ve been drawing circles since I was four, but my fascination with them as an art form dates back to to the 80′s in front of an ashram in Oakland, CA, where, just outside the door, I saw a most astonishing drawing done in a rich array of vibrant colors all contained in a circle.

Ritual rangoli done in powdered pigments

These circles, called rangolis, were done for religious or healing ceremonies. As an artist, I ached to be able to do something like this and after some investigation, came upon the mandala (the Sanskrit word for circle), an art form with a long history across many cultures. Like the rangoli, it is art created created for ritual purposes in a circular form and these days, also employed in art therapy.

New Years Mandala, ©2008, Hannah Hunter, Collage

So, while I’ve been painting, collaging, and inscribing these geometric discs for years, nothing could have prepared me for the excitement about the circle that recently burst upon the art scene in the form of Damian Hirst’s spots.

I started poking around and pretty soon I discovered that I could make a distinction between a circle and a spot. It’s strictly my interpretation, but the way I see it is that the spot is just that: a rounded mark or splotch made by foreign matter. It seems to have arrived in a rather casual manner.

Spots tossed on a watercolor in the studio, photo by Amelia McSweeny

The circle on the other hand is a closed line, something inscribed in which all the points on the line lie at the same distance from the center. It seems intentional, elegant, something that shows up in nature, but also something that 3 and 4-year olds begin drawing as they enter into the world of representation. The circle is one of the early building blocks.

Rose Colored Egg, ©1998, Hannah Hunter, Colored pencil

I looked up on my studio wall, where all three current pieces are iterations of the circle, so I tried to dig a bit deeper to see what was so fascinating– and, what keeps me returning to them as a form decade after decade.

Rice Bowl, ©2012, Hannah Hunter, Collage

I’m reminded of something that another blogger, Gwyneth Leech, said in a recent post, “Spots Before My Eyes…:”"…there is the infinite variety of things, then there is an infinite variation of one thing.” A circle suggests eternity (think of a ring), something bigger than myself, time layered upon itself, the pleasure in creating a multitude of variations on a theme.

Zodiac Season, ©2010, Hannah Hunter, Collage

The idea that each circle can both be the same yet different; it’s own infinite, elegant universe is  powerful. A 3-year taps into these infinite possibilities without fear or the preconceived notions of adults. When I began this post I thought that I’d be arguing for the integrity of the circle, but now that I’ve experienced spots and dots á la Hirst (and, for a great post on spots, see Joanne Mattera’s  “Connecting the Dots), I’m looking to get rid of some of my trepidation and preconceived notions, and hopefully, adopt some of the spot philosophy too.

I know that many of you have had fun in the studio with circles, spots and dots–if you have any stories or images you’d like to share I’d love to hear from you.

Where Inspiration Grows

I was reading one of my favorite blogs by Donna Watson, a post called The Search For Meaning: Self Awareness. The title alone called out to the mystic, the artist and the art therapist in me. As I read, I came to this question:

I eventually realized that there is more to a work of art. I wanted to find meaning in my work… I started making lists as I went deeper and identified my likes, my interests, and my strengths…Have you figured out your list?

As I read and looked at her images, it struck me that images themselves are a form of sanctuary for many of us–not only the creating of images, but the consequent viewing of our own and those of other artists.

Donna’s words spoke to me. I’ve made plenty of To Do lists, mapping out my day, but never an accounting of where I find visual meaning.  I wanted my list to include things that have inspired me through the years, things that fuel my work and which, I’ve discovered, help form my own inner strengths.

To that end, I’m making my list. I invite you to make your own and share it with us.
1. Quilts:

Dancing Rings, ©2007, Hannah Hunter

How I start to make a quilt, all I do is start sewing and it just comes to me. My daughter asked me the other day what I was making, and I said, “I don’t know yet; I’m just sewing pieces together,” and the quilt looked pretty good. No pattern. I usually don’t use a pattern, only my mind.  Lorraine Pettway, quilter
2. Sheer, unbridaled color:


All colors are the friends of their neighbors and the lovers of their opposites. Mark Chagall
3. Mandalas:

Mandala of Vajradhatu

When I began drawing the mandalas, however, I saw that everything, all the paths I had been following, all the steps I had taken, were leading back to a single point-namely, to the midpoint…It is the path to the center, to individuation.  C. G. Jung from Memories, Dreams and Reflections
4. Tree of Life:

Tree of Life

Oh, I who long to grow
I look outside myself, and the tree
inside me grows.  Ranier Marie Rilke
5. Indian gouache paintings:

Rajasthan, c. 17th century, Gouache on paper

Ancient Manuscripts:

Hebrew manuscript from the Bodleian Library, Oxford University

Without traditional wisdom, the language would be but a skeleton without flesh, a body without a soul.   Zulu proverb from South Africa