Participatory Spirituality for the 21st Century
On a personal website I have, I keep an Art & Creativity page. Each month or so I feature an additional artist and a piece of work by them, or a demonstration of creativity by someone. I just placed the following - I think you will find the photo to be quite inspiring, as well as the linked sites and pieces:
Bennett Barthelemy who I have spent some time with surfing, sipping tea and coffee, and hanging out with at his parents toy store in Ojai, is another special artist. His media are mainly photography, photojournalism, and writing. However, I’d say that his life and lifestyle are also his media and his art. Bennett feels certain callings strongly and intensely – artistic, humanitarian, and adventurous. How he moves about the planet for work and how he moves about his daily life, reflects his ethics, his thinking and feelings about what is important, and his artistic sensibilities.
I paste here a bio blurb that he has written, as well his statement about the subject/object of the striking photo that I also insert below. His blog and his otherwise dispersed articles are worth reading. It was difficult to choose just one photo from his varied gallery. This image that I settled on expresses so much about nature, light and shadow, human attention, and about man/woman, woman in this instance, finding meaning and deep physical engagement within the home world.
“A simple act – pushing a button – I capture, confine details to a limiting space. A collector of lost seconds. I have a strange relationship with the concept of time – yearning to be wholly present and aware to exist within, to capture, the eternally unfolding moment. Yet much of my life is casting backwards, reawakening lost dreams, reinventing new ones. Caught between worlds and continents, cliff and sky. I exist within the space of a muscle twitch, a furtive glance and a passing thought – forever chasing the fading light.
Molly is just 22 but has been training and climbing with some of the most accomplished and strongest climbers in the world like Lynn Hill and Justin Sjong. This is the third ascent and first female ascent of a difficult 5.13 climb in Colorado. facebook.com/mollymitchellclimber.
instagram @bennettb website bennettbarthelemy.blogspot.com stock represented at www.tandemstock.com“
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So, I am momentarily on the trail of fleshing out an image and story and interior ambiance about author Nick Harkaway for myself. There is apparently some numinosity that seems to draw me further.
Of course I discover early-on that he is a son of writer John Le Carre. That is not nothing.
Part of what I have sensed about his higher-tier ethical, cognitive, and self development becomes confirmed and more explicit in the below interview. Harkaway in rather nuanced ways talks about good and evil and how they show up in people and in his characters.
Technology is another topic spoken about in sophisticated ways, partly as it relates to ethics and even ontological assumptions.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKrQx79-Sjw
Ambo Suno said:
The following is a blog post I just made - some comments on a book and author that really grabbed me:
Tigerman – book review
Hey t - here's another of my website blurbs - you may be familiar with the artist:
Here below is some rich personal creativity of a different sort. There are a number of things I like about this musical expression that I’ve chosen to highlight, now, and that Bruce Alderman has been gracious enough to share here. [I must say as an aside that I feel appreciation for the generosity of all artist/crafts-people that share their work, and particularly those who have been willing to share here on this strange hybrid psychospiritual-plus website.] I want to make a few introductory comments about the academic side of Bruce before I present his music and slide show.
Bruce and I share some overlapping histories, from philosopher Krishnamurti, to travel in India and Asia, to fascination with the topic and the word “Integral” for conveying something particularly coherent and important about life. He has distinguished himself by taking each of these points of commonality quite far, as a past teacher at a Krishnamurti school in India, as a current teacher at John F Kennedy University, and as a host to various integral cyber-communities, including one that I cite on the Resources page, Integral Post-metaphysical Spirituality. He moderates a lively facebook version of this same forum. He will be a presenter again at this year’s Integral Theory Conference at Sonoma State University, California. I admire how deeply conversant Bruce is about very contemporary philosophical, spiritual, and consciousness issues.
Indigenous flute music can be haunting and as you may have noticed can induce subtle shifts in states within us listeners. Lay this sound into the background or foreground of striking and perhaps haunting images, and your breathing may shift, muscular holdings may release, and mood may ease. This is of course true of some other music, art and creativity, but it seems to me that the indigenous flutes, even among their substantial variations, seem to insert themselves uniquely into the listening brain. I have enjoyed several of Bruce’s slideshows over the years.
Bruce declares clearly, "I'm very much an amateur and do not understand music theory", and, "I mention this to say that I do not consider myself in any way a 'musician' -- just a person who enjoys playing and making music as a way to relax, express emotional and imaginal ideas, etc." - could have fooled me. He started playing with an ocarina while living in Sedona, Arizona, and has since taken on a wide variety of Indonesian, Asian, and Native American flutes - he has even engaged with an Irish tin whistle [I smile]. Bruce has also had occasion to play a number of different Asian Drums.
Music probably didn't spring from his life as an adult, like spontaneous combustion. He played trombone in a band as a child and later held a bass guitar spot in a rock band. All of this childhood musical play is something I feel a wee bit envious of - probably such a rich experience to be a musical part in a larger musical whole.
In the musical selection embedded below, he is playing an Indonesian flute - "the suling slendro, most often heard in Javanese gamelan music."
I'll end with a quote that reflects a big part of what I like about Bruce's avocation. Music seems to be a rather organic process for him, and my guess is that it is a line of personal development that helps to balance him out in a busy life as parent, husband, professional teacher, truth-seeker, activist of sorts, and all the rest. Music creation probably speaks to inner yearnings. It may be another facet of an Integral Life Practice.
"I'm realizing I haven't said much directly about my process for these songs. I have run, recently, into a bit of a dry spell, musically, but usually I know that a song is coming before I know what it is. I used to feel the same way with poetry: a sense of some burgeoning inside, some still-unclear but insistent stirring and pushing. I often will take a walk to clear my mind and allow whatever it is to come through. For music, a song will either start when a thread of flute melody comes to mind, or when I have an idea for a tonal atmosphere. I then build the background music around the flute melody, or I create the background and then spontaneously play along with it until I find some phrases and melodies I like. When I lived on Bali, I used to hear, during certain festivals, a chorus of flute players as they marched down the street, and the sound of all those flutes playing somewhat wildly or chaotically together haunted me. So, when I create music now, I often will make layers of multiple, slightly staggered flute parts to capture some of that sound. One of my musical heroes is Stephan Micus, who makes a similar kind of music, but usually without the help of the synthesizers that I use. I did not set out to imitate him; rather, I discovered him after I had started doing this and found that he was doing it already, and doing it much better.
To share my music with people, I usually put together slide shows of found photos, as you've seen. I often don't know what a song will be called until it is finished; I listen to it and see what images come to mind, and then I find a title and some photos to flesh out that image."
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Thank you for featuring Balder in your blog. It gives me another opportunity to express my gratitude and appreciation for him in all of his multifarious avenues of expression.
Hear Here!
theurj said:
Thank you for featuring Balder in your blog. It gives me another opportunity to express my gratitude and appreciation for him in all of his multifarious avenues of expression.
Ambo, I saw this video and thought of you. Not sure if you've seen it yet.
Ambo, I saw this video and thought of you. Not sure if you've seen it yet.
Hi t and others - here is a blurb I just put together for the website:
Tibetan Fabric Thangkas by Leslie Rinchen-Wongmo
If you can remember back to your young days when you were captured, in a sense, by the cultural stories and formats of your country, neighborhood, and family, you may recall the surprise and something like awe as you discovered that other people and cultures are so different from how you thought things must be everywhere. Maybe when we saw people wearing extraordinary-to-us clothing, saw our first foreign film that engaged us deeply, or realized from National Geographic photos that those stacked neck-stretching rings around an indigenous tribe-member's collar, in a society far away, were not a trick or a punishment, that may be when we started to become more world- centric.
Standards of beauty and refinement for people’s faces, bodies, homes, food, music, courtships, values, and much more, vary, are relative, are contextual, depend on the situation. That insight can be a mighty growth-inviting blow to the mind, heart, and future behavior of anyone on this journey of life.
It is partly for this reason that I so enjoy my engagement with this artist and artwork by Leslie Rinchen-Wongmo.
Leslie and I both do volunteering for the same non-profit hospice organization and that is how we met. She has been readily willing to share with me and others glimpses of her work and the unexpectedly dynamic path that her life has taken.
Leslie lived in Tibetan community for almost nine years. Tibetan society, tradition, religion, and spiritual philosophy is deep and textured, with features unique to that geo- cultural address. Certainly there are commonalities with all other human life around the globe and of course some variations over time and place of what has been called Tibet, but what comes foreground for me is how the art of Tibetan thangka painting is correspondingly deep and textured.
Rinchen-Wongmo invited me into her lovely studio at Channel Islands Harbor, California and showed me some sense of her process, a gallery of masterpieces, and small windows into how she moves through her life. I will insert here below a photo from her digital gallery of one of her classical renderings.
The subject is Guru Rimpoche of 8th century Tibet, or Padmasambhava as he was known in India before carrying the Buddhist teachings with him to the high Northland. Leslie tells me that there are very interesting stories told about him of dispelling and taming demons and spirits so that indigenous natives could begin to learn of the higher perspectives made available through him.
After an intense four-year old-world internship with a master in Dharamsala India, which is where the Dalai Lama and other Buddhist refugees fled following the Chinese invasion of Tibet, she stayed on and continued with her never-anticipated passion for the ancient craft and its strange alluring locale. “I fell in love with it.”
It was regarded as highly out of the ordinary that a western non-native would be taken into the school-circle. I am imagining that the teacher surely felt something worthy in this passing traveler who became suddenly enchanted by the beauty and the generation- upon-generation spiritual tradition given visual voice through silk and horsehair and native material.
From her website, “Leslie Rinchen-Wongmo is a contemporary American textile artist, teacher, and caretaker of a sacred Tibetan tradition.
In her fabric thangkas, the sacred Buddhist images of Tibetan thangka paintings are rendered in vivid mosaics of silk. Intricately layered and hand-stitched, these brilliantly colored works of Tibetan appliqué art inspire the heart and fascinate the eye.
We invite you to discover the beauty of this little-known Buddhist art form by exploring these pages.”
I will leave it to the reader to click on the link to her Threads Of Awakening website, to peruse the digital gallery, to check out the short video clips, and to read of this unusual and demanding textile art. It would be too much to explain the elegant particulars of pieces stitched together to form elaborate wholes, all while inviting opportunity for meditation in action.
I do want to mention something that I would never have expected. The silk threads and fabrics used throughout her Buddhist thangkas are produced by Muslim weavers in the sacred Hindu city of Varanasi who have been supplying the Tibetan monasteries for generations. Leslie wrapped, in illustration for me, silk thread over three strands of horsehair, using a foot-treadle sewing machine. The resultant cord had a dimension, a flexibility, and suggestively a very strong feel about it. Leslie stitches many such cords or piping to pieces of silk fabric in order to create the outlines and contours of her figures.
Rinchen-Wongmo has been honored by art and Buddhist communities in showings and awards. She was a person explored in the “Focus On The Masters” series about which a documentary is now in progress. Another documentary about her is available on her website. Leslie is a fine teacher and that immediately comes across in several locations on her Threads Of Awakening site. Those moved by the fineness of art and craft or those touched by the Buddhist values and meaning can commission or buy her work. Others can also learn more of this very non-ordinary art through classes with her.
I’ll end by saying that the Dalai Lama suggested to her that she take her skills beyond traditional Tibetan iconography and use it to convey spirit throughout and in the language of other cultures and spiritual traditions.
Ambo, this is excellent -- such a warm and inviting introduction to her beautiful artwork. Your sympathetic framing of her work, and your offering of it on your website, are gifts to all of us.
Ambo, this is excellent -- such a warm and inviting introduction to her beautiful artwork. Your sympathetic framing of her work, and your offering of it on your website, are gifts to all of us.
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