Showing posts with label symbols. Show all posts
Showing posts with label symbols. Show all posts

Thursday, February 21, 2019

Knightsbridge and magic squares

I began this page in my Book with the grid of colored squares, a collage of leftover bits from other work.
I thought it might become another "space junk" page, but once that grid was in place it seemed to want a square grid all over. I obliged.
I decided to include a magic square of nine with the numbers are represented by images. That's at the bottom center. Some years ago I did an acrylic painting with this theme (see it next in this post). On this page in my Book I also included a square with the digits.

I'm not happy with streakiness of the grays in the lower right but I wanted to try a gradation where the same gray is the dark gray in the light portion, and the light gray in the dark portion.

MAGIC SQUARE OF NINE PAINTING
During my long mandala phase, I did this acrylic painting of a magic square of nine, except instead of simply writing a number in each square I devised an image to represent the number. The centers of the half-circles at the perimeter are filigree metal pieces.
"Magic Square of Nine" - Sold
24" (60 cms.) square; acrylic mixed media
WHAT IS A MAGIC SQUARE?
A magic square is a grid of numbers such that each horizontal, vertical, and diagonal row results in the same sum. A magic square of nine is one of the simplest, comprising only nine squares. The sum of each row is 15.
There are more complicated magic squares, larger, with more squares. Here's a magic square of four and the rows add to 34. You can learn more about magic squares on wikipedia here.

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Mayan inspired

Recently we returned from two weeks in the Yucatan peninsula in Mexico. What a great place to go for a break from Canada in February! We didn't really realize how much we needed to get away from it all until we were actually away from it all. (*gratitude*!).

The Yucatan is where the amazing Mayan civilization rose and fell. The Mayans developed the most accurate time-keeping system in human history, combining both the solar and lunar cycles into a calendar with a 52 year cycle. I've always liked the Mayan carved stone, squared glyphs with lots of interesting details.

Here's a photo of some real Mayan stone carvings - although not glyphs - taken at Chichén Itzá (pronounced chi-CHAYN eet-TSA).

I didn't take a sketchbook but I had lots of Zentangle tiles with me. (I took way too many art supplies, but you never know what you're going to need, right?) So I used the front and back of a tile and drew some of the glyph designs I saw.

Then I used another tile and 'picked and choosed' some of these to draw a little Mayan inspired piece. No tangles here, but a similar drawing method.

I tried another (tea-stained) tile using sepia ink and brown pencil. There are larger sections and I filled some with actual tangles.
Tangles included: Ambler, Hibred, Paisley Boa, Wud
This could develop into something interesting!

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Circle Symbolism

Black Elk,
a medicine man and visionary
of the Oglala Sioux, said, “Everything the
Power of the World does, is done in a circle.  The sky 
is round and I have heard that the earth is round like a ball,
and so are all the stars.  The wind, in its greatest power, whirls.
Birds make their nests in circles, for theirs is the same religion as
ours.   The sun comes forth and goes down again in a circle.   The
moon does the same, and both are round.  Even the seasons form
a great circle in their changing, and always come back again to
where they were.  The life of a man is a circle from childhood to
childhood, and so it is in everything where power moves
Our tipis were round like the nests of birds, and these
were always set in a circle; the nation’s hoop, a
nest of many nests where the Great Spirit
meant for us to hatch our
children.” 

*   *   *   *   *

Having neither beginning nor end, the circle has long been a symbol - across time and cultures - of eternity, wholeness, protection, and unity. It calls to mind things such as the full moon, the sun, the entrance or exit of a tunnel, the pupil of the eye, a hug. 

In striving towards the spiritual, humankind has, over the centuries, constructed circle-forms. In ancient times closed circles were considered protective, particularly for workers of magic.  A sorcerer's title dating from the first century B.C. was "circle-drawer". Defensive emplacements surrounding ancient towns were set in a circle. A circle is present on most talismans as it was believed to concentrate the magical power needed to summon the desired spirits or forces.

Rose window, Notre Dame. Photo: Mattis, WikiCommons

Many Gothic churches are renowned for their beautiful stained glass rose windows.




Dharma Wheel atop DaZhao temple in Hohhot. Photo: M.Bremner
Ancient, circular stone henges are found in Great Britain and elsewhere. 




Mosques are frequently domed as are some churches and other religious buildings.

 




TaiJi drain cover in a garden in China. Photo: M.Bremner

The Noble Eightfold Path of Buddhism is symbolized by a wheel with eight spokes: the Dharma Wheel or "Wheel of the Law".










The TaiJi (or ying yang) icon is symbolic of the interconnection between opposites such as male and female, youth and age, celestial and earthly, here and there.  

In Jungian psychology, the image of a circle inside a square represents the connection between our spiritual (circle) and physical (square) natures.





The circle is often associated with the idea of a protected or consecrated space. An expected ritual of visits to some holy sites is to circumambulate - or "walk around" - the area before entering the sanctuary. Wiccan practitioners initially cast (draw) a circle on the ground. These actions separate the sacred inner area from the worldly outer area.

A circle implies a center. As babies and young children we think the universe revolves around us.  Some of this feeling lingers, no matter how old we become!  Cuzco - the capital city of the ancient Incan empire - means “navel”. The Chinese call their land the Middle Kingdom.

Stretch out your arm and point at the horizon; slowly turn all the way around, tracing the horizon back to your starting point.  The horizon makes a circle around you. I like to turn the old expression "in the middle of nowhere" on it's ear - wherever we are, we are in the middle of everywhere.

Imagine yourself at the center of a sphere and the seven sacred directions of many north American aboriginals can be imagined: east, south, west, and north, (or: front, right, back and left), then Up toward the heavens and the Creator, Down toward the Earth, and Inward toward self-knowledge.

Now, go have a nice cup of coffee.

Fancy cappuccino. Photo: M.Bremner

(This post is, at least in part, for Denyse, who tends to use a lot of circles and couldn't remember why she found them so peaceful.)