Mandala Tales

Thangka on Silk Brocade - different Styles

Painting on Silk Brocade

Thangka on Silk Brocade - different Styles

Painting on Silk Brocade

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130,00
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These canvases are sewn onto decorated silk brocade, and this is how they are framed in the Tibetan tradition. The yellow curtain, which covers the painting, is pulled up and stopped with a cord in the upper part of the brocade, to give free expression to the painting.

The silk brocade measures approximately 58 x 48 cm, and the mandalas inside approximately 23 cm.

The material is cotton canvas, and the colors are water-soluble pigments, both minerals and organic materials, tempered with a solution of grass and glue.

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[Thangka on Silk Brocade - Version 1]

MANDALA MANTRA/YANTRA with OM Symbol

In these Mandala, the inscriptions inside are a mantra in Tibetan, or a repeated prayer, in order to support the symbol in the center, which gives meaning to the Mandala. The written prayer is pronounced: "Om-mani-padme-hum" and the meaning attributed to it is universal love and compassion, which represent the foundations of Buddhism.
This mantra is probably the most famous and used in Tibetan Buddhism, and if pronounced repeatedly it has a beneficial effect in the psyche and mind.

The YANTRA is a base that symbolizes the existing material reality, and supports the internal symbol, from which the Mandala takes the main meaning.

The OM symbol gives meaning to the Mandala. It recalls harmony and harmonizes the place where it is placed.
The symbol of the AUM, or even written OM, in fact represents the primordial union with creation.
It then exhorts an intimate connection at pace with the whole thing, thus producing harmony.
 

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[Thangka on Silk Brocade - Version 2]

Mandala Mantra OM and Eight Auspicious Symbols

In this Mandala, the inscriptions inside are a mantra in Tibetan, or a repeated prayer, in order to support the symbol in the center, which gives meaning to the Mandala. The written prayer is pronounced: "Om-mani-padme-hum" and the meaning attributed to it is universal love and compassion, which represent the foundations of Buddhism.
This mantra is probably the most famous and used in Tibetan Buddhism, and if pronounced repeatedly it has a beneficial effect in the psyche and mind.

The OM symbol gives meaning to the Mandala. It recalls harmony and harmonizes the ambient where it is placed.
The symbol of the AUM, or even written OM, in fact represents the primordial union with creation. So it exhorts an intimate connection at pace with the whole thing.

Eight Auspicious Symbols

Shell : is the representation of deep knowledge. It feeds spiritual passions and aspirations, awakening from the abyss of ignorance and suffering.
The Parasol : it is a symbol of wealth, power and royal dignity. It also means protection, from disease, from every obstacle and adverse force, from ignorance, from the suffering of this life.
The Golden Pisces : they represent the overcoming of all obstacles and achievement of the liberation. They therefore represent the skill and ability, innate or acquired, to be free and pure.
Vase of Wealth : symbolizes the idea of obtaining and satisfying material desires, longevity and prosperity. Encourage the enjoyment of all the benefits that can be achieved in this world.
Lotus flower : the symbol indicates and recalls purity, beauty, fertility, transformation and self-healing ability. It is not a coincidence that in the iconography of the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, they are depicted sitting on a lotus flower-shaped throne.
Infinite Node : symbol of protection and friendship, it exhorts knowledge and clarity of the dynamics of cause and effect, of the universe, this is represented by the geometric lines that intersect. It means realization that all things are interdependent with each other.
Banner of Victory : Represents the glory, that comes from the attainment of knowledge over ignorance and fear; overcoming all obstacles and the consequent achievement of happiness.
Wheel of Dharma : it represents and strengthens the moral discipline that allows us to have a harmonious mind and a stable thought in the continuous change of things. Symbol of mastery and understanding of the emptiness of all phenomena.
 

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[Thangka on Silk Brocade - Version 3]

MANDALA KALACHAKRA

This Mandala is the graphic (most detailed) and drawn representation of Mandala created with colored powders, by Tibetan Buddhist monks, during the Kalachakra initiation rite. Achieving the rite provides access to higher knowledge.
These Mandalas consist of a square base, a system with four zones/islands, and externally eight smaller islands (the wheels of the Dharma), which support the center, the seat of knowledge.
The four islands represent the four elements, through which it is possible to reach the center, where is knowledge.
The Earth element is black (it goes down), the Air is orange, the Fire is red and the Water is the blue.
The symbolic meaning of this design is the representation of the systems that make up the universe. The resulting geometry gives the depth to the Mandala, representing precisely the multiplicity of systems, one inside the other. Therefore represents the highest and deepest knowledge of the Universe system, and self-knwoledge.
It is considered the "representation of the Universe".
There is a legend about this sacred geometry : Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, saw this design projected on the ceiling in a meditative phase. In that moment he had the intuition and the realization that all things are part of systems within each other, individually but at the same time, part of a larger system; he saw in a fractalic way, that everything has its function in the small, to allow something greater to exist, and so on. So this is the realization of the interdependence of things. This design is able to activate the intuition of universal dynamics, finding them in every context. The importance of this design is really high for the tradition, in fact Tibetan monasteries are conceived and built with this geometry, so seeing the Kalachackra mandala is like observing a monastery from above.
The Mandala Kalachakra is also called the house of the Buddha or the house of knowledge.
 

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[Thangka on Silk Brocade - Version 4]

MANDALA MANTRA with OM Symbol


In this Mandala, the inscriptions inside are a mantra in Tibetan, or a repeated prayer, in order to support the symbol in the center, which gives meaning to the Mandala. The written prayer is pronounced: "Om-mani-padme-hum" and the meaning attributed to it is universal love and compassion, which represent the foundations of Buddhism.
This mantra is probably the most famous and used in Tibetan Buddhism, and if pronounced repeatedly it has a beneficial effect in the psyche and mind.

The OM symbol gives meaning to the Mandala. It recalls harmony and harmonizes the ambient where it is placed.
The symbol of the AUM, or even written OM, in fact represents the primordial union with creation. So it exhorts an intimate connection at pace with the whole thing.
 

---

[Thangka on Silk Brocade - Version 5]

MANDALA MANTRA/YANTRA with OM Symbol

In these Mandala, the inscriptions inside are a mantra in Tibetan, or a repeated prayer, in order to support the symbol in the center, which gives meaning to the Mandala. The written prayer is pronounced: "Om-mani-padme-hum" and the meaning attributed to it is universal love and compassion, which represent the foundations of Buddhism.
This mantra is probably the most famous and used in Tibetan Buddhism, and if pronounced repeatedly it has a beneficial effect in the psyche and mind.

The YANTRA is a base that symbolizes the existing material reality, and supports the internal symbol, from which the Mandala takes the main meaning.

The OM symbol gives meaning to the Mandala. It recalls harmony and harmonizes the place where it is placed.
The symbol of the AUM, or even written OM, in fact represents the primordial union with creation.
It then exhorts an intimate connection at pace with the whole thing.
 

---

[Thangka on Silk Brocade - Version 6]

MANDALA MANTRA with OM Symbol

In this Mandala, the inscriptions inside are a mantra in Tibetan, or a repeated prayer, in order to support the symbol in the center, which gives meaning to the Mandala. The written prayer is pronounced: "Om-mani-padme-hum" and the meaning attributed to it is universal love and compassion, which represent the foundations of Buddhism.
This mantra is probably the most famous and used in Tibetan Buddhism, and if pronounced repeatedly it has a beneficial effect in the psyche and mind.
 

The OM symbol gives meaning to the Mandala. It recalls harmony and harmonizes the ambient where it is placed.
The symbol of the AUM, or even written OM, in fact represents the primordial union with creation. So it exhorts an intimate connection at pace with the whole thing.
 

---

[Thangka on Silk Brocade - Version 7]

Mandala Yantra with OM symbol

This Mandala consists of a geometric base, derived from the depiction of kalachakra drawings, a system having four zones/islands around symbols located in the center. This base, as a base, symbolizes the existing material reality, and therefore supports the internal symbol, from which the Mandala takes the main meaning.

The OM symbol gives meaning to the Mandala. It recalls harmony and harmonizes the place where it is placed.
The symbol of the AUM, or even written OM, in fact represents the primordial union with creation.
It then exhorts an intimate connection at pace with the whole thing, thus producing harmony.
 

---

[Thangka on Silk Brocade - Version 8]

MANDALA MANTRA/YANTRA with OM Symbol

In these Mandala, the inscriptions inside are a mantra in Tibetan, or a repeated prayer, in order to support the symbol in the center, which gives meaning to the Mandala. The written prayer is pronounced: "Om-mani-padme-hum" and the meaning attributed to it is universal love and compassion, which represent the foundations of Buddhism.
This mantra is probably the most famous and used in Tibetan Buddhism, and if pronounced repeatedly it has a beneficial effect in the psyche and mind.

The YANTRA is a base that symbolizes the existing material reality, and supports the internal symbol, from which the Mandala takes the main meaning.

The OM symbol gives meaning to the Mandala. It recalls harmony and harmonizes the place where it is placed.
The symbol of the AUM, or even written OM, in fact represents the primordial union with creation.
It then exhorts an intimate connection at pace with the whole thing.
 

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