The Meditative Art of Integration

February 28th, 2012

By Caterina De Re

“It is not that there is a particular line or tradition of art that comprises ‘dharma art’,” says Dugu Choegyal Rinpoche. “It can be abstract painting, Western painting, Eastern painting, it can be music, dance, football, skiing or anything; so long as the motivation is not polluted by negative emotions, it is dharma art.”

A surprisingly large number of interdisciplinary artists engage Buddhism. Many are dharma practitioners while others are not. I believe it very important to acknowledge artists who are not spiritually inclined and yet create stunning works reflecting altruism, generosity, mindfulness, compassion and wisdom. Over the last 25 years I have been training in meditation and the process to bring art and spiritual practice together is ongoing work. Mentorship with Pauline Oliveros paved a path for me to get into the skin of being an artist and validated the importance of meditation in the creative process.

Neuroplasticity and Art Performance

Sparshe was one body of work focused on the meditating body and mind. Initially it was presented as an installation performance piece with multiple video projections including one on my meditating body. Red satin fabric and meditation cushions covered the floor for viewers. I composed a soundscape from processed field recordings of pilgrimage and my own voice.

I was a subject for brain studies and meditation at Rutgers University and so was able to incorporate into my work fMRI scans of my brain. Performing meditation while bathed in imagery that included the landscape of my meditating mind was an exciting context given my interest in neuroplasticity.

The Art of Improvisation and Spontaneity

Trungpa Rinpoche said to Allen Ginsberg, “Why don’t you do like the great poets do, like Milarepa? … Why don’t you make poems up on the stage? … Don’t you trust your own mind?”

Vocal improvisation is my forte. For a time I was focused on transforming compelling industrial spaces into eclectic collaborative events that honored place, American history, spiritual power places and my own personal Buddhist pilgrimage. One memorable multi-media performance I created was The Gasholder Stupa. It was a structured improvisation with pre-worked pieces (like videos) but a lot of the performative action was created “on the spot”.

Upstate New York has no lack of impressive Victorian buildings but the Troy Gasholder Building stands unique for its huge resonant acoustic space. There was never a full rehearsal and the entire crew came together for the first time about an hour before the show opened. The Gasholder Stupa’s success I attribute to the heartfelt support of my extremely proficient and gifted collaborators. It was a most attentive in-the-moment practice. I still marvel at the all the connections that occurred at the right time with the right folk. The Gasholder Stupa was a crazy confluence of diverse elements like music, dance, video projections, and just as diverse themes like Victorian history, Tiffany glass, spoofing, a Tibetan horn and jazz cornet duel – even a space station mission.

Another example of trusting spontaneity was a video piece, Seven Minutes. It features Linda Montano whose art practice utilizes endurance, focus and spirituality. In Montano’s work, art and life boundaries evaporate. Her seven-year performance where each year focused on a chakra is iconic in performing art history. We had engaged in many discussions about meditation, leading me to create this video. The parameter was seven minutes and filmed in a single take. Montano’s art/life patterning the chakras I find masterfully eloquent and my editing process incorporated the colors.

Conclusion

Working as an artist is for me a practice that constantly challenges one’s habitual states. Improvisation stretches boundaries and by its nature a process that refines awareness and openness in the spacial environment. It is refreshingly “healing” and like most avant-garde shakes up your preconceived ideas, assists opening the mind and heart, and embraces all possibilities.

Sparshe by Caterina De Re Photo Kyra Garrigue

Biography

Caterina De Re is an interdisciplinary artist using experimental vocals, improvisation, performance, video and collaboration. Performing internationally as a vocalist, she has collaborated with renown improvisers & sound-makers including Pauline Oliveros, Peter Kowald, Dennis Rea, Michael Pestel and Strafe FR. She is the first Australian to gain certification in Deep Listening – the practice of Oliveros.

Given her extraordinary vocal range, she has a particular affinity with birdsong and performed at the National Aviary in Pittsburgh and at Central Park Tropical Aviary in Manhattan. With Butoh master, Taketeru Kudo, she participated in a performance series devised by Michael Pestel called “Stray Birds”.

Caterina’s interest in Tibetan Buddhist epistemology is evident in her work with performance, electronic art and scholarship. While in Tibet, India and Nepal, she sonically and visually mapped spaces of spiritual activity that was later used in performances and compositions. She is particularly interested in the synthesis of Tibetan buddhist practice with contemporary art, especially with new media technologies in performance. For two graduate degrees this has been her field of specialization.

 

Sparshe  vimeo.com/32241107
The Gasholder Stupa vimeo.com/32225427
Seven minutes vimeo.com/32237368

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Creating a Space of Love

February 28th, 2012

 While Drawing Portraits By Claudia Bueler 2011

Part 1

Art is a wonderful way to learn how to relate to people suffering from dementia. In observing elderly people during their creative process and later watching the results (aesthetics and perspective), we learn about their behaviour, their manner of perception, and the ways they handle their mental gaps. Being unable to cure the illness, we would ideally wish to be able to improve their attitude and the sensitivity of their interaction between generations: social caretakers, relatives and children and amongst the patients themselves.

As known in eastern art schools, meditation takes part of the creative process: before we even start with the art we are about to do, we sit. We generate a special moment of awareness, we feel the creative flow and we experience an empty space out of which art can be born.

Line drawing By Claudia Bueler

According to Chögyam Trungpa, having a specific intention and following a goal in art is already a form of aggression. But our minds are constantly chasing after goals, and so normally does the artist ; his result proves his skills and shows both his expression and what he wants to insinuate. In the spiritual approach to art you learn to empty yourself from the goal, from hope and fear.

Having worked with elderly people with dementia many times I noticed, that the persons seem to be able to feel whether I am chasing after a goal in working with them. I also noticed, that when I meditate before starting the creative dialogue it makes a huge difference for the encounter to happen.

People with dementia are usually not able to connect any information. The past and the future can´t be reasonably thought of any more. Consequently they are unable to follow a goal, but live very much in the present moment and can be in a state without thoughts for many minutes. There they forget about goals or conditions. A person who is willing to enjoy the present moment together with them helps them to feel safe. In this very moment we generate an open space for the aimless state of the artist before he takes up the brush.

When I am working with elderly people I draw their portraits. It takes me about an hour to finish a drawing. In this time I practice Tonglen as much as possible. Practising while I’m drawing seems the best preparation for my everyday work with elderly people with dementia. I noticed that it is easier to hold the concentration of the practice, when I meditate in the morning. The demented people seem to feel the difference as well; a feeling of mildness or loving kindness fills the space between the model and myself.

 

Part 2

In the second phase of the art project the drawings provide a template, which is consequently colored individually in the group. I call this setting “open atelier”, because it is open for everybody and, for dementia sufferers, there is no time limit.

The interest in looking at the portraits is strikingly high. Even people with very advanced dementia lean forward or stretch out their hands towards the portraits, and look at them for a long time. In general, we know little about the visual functions of old people with dementia.  The question, “What do you see when you look at this drawing?” is usually answered with “I don’t know.” It is better to wait patiently until activity can be seen in the old person’s eye movements. It is a matter of not asking questions that are loaded with expectation. Again it´s about letting go off goals.

 

Line drawing by Claudia Bueler coloured by dementia patient

In creative work, it sometimes happens that you don’t think about what you are doing and simply relinquish yourself to an internally determined direction. If you find this moment together with a dementia sufferer, there is a good chance that he or she will let themselves be carried into the process. These creative moments bring us on. The careful, intensive and extended (over a few days) work on a portrait mobilises the functions of the working memory. The senses are active and they interconnect. Associations are made. Conversations that arise now can contain clues to, or directly express, the things that move the people involved. “The Creative Flow” is as if the artist were being borne by a stream, spontaneously, effortlessly. If these conditions are simultaneously met, they forget all their concerns and even forget themselves as something separate from what was happening, and they become a part of something greater. This description comes very close to the feeling into which we in the creative group and the dementia sufferers can release ourselves together. If we switch our gaze from the so-called “deficits” of dementia across to what is possible, this atmosphere can emerge and be enjoyed. With dementia sufferers, we get to know the unpredictability and abundance of the moment. Together we experience what a transformative power the moment can have.

 

The spiritual seeker may wonder, why to enter into this process for demented people could be good. As we are looking for the gap, we might find it ironical to seek moments of reconnection for demented. I find that the very process of coming and going, of disconnection and reconnection is a mutual learning process. We still looking for ways to understand a dementia sufferer so that we gain abilities to create a better environment for them and learn to handle their states of being stuck in tears and negativity. It is our deep wish to be able to at least guide the suffering persons out of their momentary state, so that they have a chance to stay peaceful in this weird illness state of no thoughts. It might be an openness to love too, who knows?

 

Line drawing by Claudia Bueler coloured by dementia patient

In the moment in which I see that the person reading a portrait has re-awakened the motive force , I offer them paint and a brush, and assistance to help them pursue the desire to paint. The first questions before they reach for paint, “Would you like to paint, too?” or “Which colour fits with this?” can also be distractions, and that is why it is important to focus the attention on the line drawing, allowing painting to take place as if it were secondary. The reach for paint usually happens on impulse rather than after consideration. It is only in exceptional cases that people colour their own portraits; it is more usual that a portrait becomes their own only through the use of paint. The emphasis here is on the manner of painting, the brushstrokes, the selection of the picture and the duration of their focus and action, not on the choice of colour or the recognisability of the image.

After the end of the “open atelier”, there is an exhibition opening. The participants are present. In formulating the presentation, I take care to engage with the pictures in a lively way. The result is not the artistic development of an individual, but the representation of the group of dementia sufferers. I call it “A Mirror to the Encounter”. In this mirror, each encounter with the members of the group appears in its individual light and every project has its own dynamic, its own characteristic features. Originally, the presentation was conceived as an exhibition solely for the participants in order to strengthen the bonds within the group and to honour the individual participants. It is now organized as a public event.

The “Artecura Project with Portraits”, especially, delivers a contribution to the understanding of dementia and promotes dialogue with the relatives. The “art” that has been produced in this creative process deepens the general understanding for the demented person. All the faces, all the portraits, are very present to the observer. They say, “Look at me. I am here. I have a face.”

www.artecura.com

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As it comes

February 28th, 2012

* “ Man is only truly alive when he realises he is a creative, artistic being…..Even the act of peeling a potato can be a work of art if it is a conscious act.”

Joseph Beuys

Inspired by the confident artists who have contributed to this issue and with an intention to overcome my lack of same I include some examples of rustic and rusty displays that have come forth from my domestic days.
These art works will leave you with no doubt as to the dilettante nature of this “artist”. However if you too have resisted creating works because of immature ego obstacles I urge you to open yourself to your own creativity. The possibilities are endless and can require nothing more than a playful mind. For too many years I thought that the joy was just in the thinking however I have discovered that there is merit in following through and manifesting installations with whatever comes my way.

Pamela Croci

 

  * interview with Willoughby Sharp, 1969; as quoted in Energy Plan for the Western man – Joseph Beuys in America compiled by Carin Kuoni, Four Walls Eight Windows, New York, 1993, p. 87

 

Remembering Sarnath

May all sentient beings

Ikebana

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Dharma Gar: Two articles to encourage you

September 17th, 2011

Taking Control of our Existence

By Jakob Leschly

What is the vision behind doing a Dharma Gar?
In general, Buddhism asserts causality – our suffering and happiness depend on our actions; and the value of our actions are contingent on the attitudes behind them. In Buddhism these actions and attitudes are seen as conditions that we can work with and change – this is very the purpose of the Buddhist path. Throughout his teaching the Buddha empowered individuals to take control of their existence and ultimately to free themselves. Dharma Gar provides the context for applying these teachings and taking control..

What does one do in a Dharma Gar?
One commits two hours every day to the practice of meditation. One meditates based on trusting the basic goodness and workability of our existence. It is a pro-active measure based on the realisation that vision without practical integration is merely a passing thought. To penetrate the inertia of our dullness we need the presence and wakefulness of meditation. Actually sitting down and meditating establishes a mental space of calm where sanity can emerge, a gap where our habitual patterns can give way to insight.

What is the purpose of a Dharma Gar?
Everyone recognises and cherishes wisdom, peace and compassion. Yet sometimes it seems that no one actually believes these can be translated into reality. Buddhist meditation challenges such a sense of poverty. Basic goodness is inherent to all sentient life and the objective of the Buddhist path is to actually manifest it. The Buddha taught so that we can claim this natural inheritance, and by doing so, consequently help to dispel the gloom and suffering of the world.

With the emergence and subsequent spread of Tibetan Buddhism far beyond its original Himalayan homelands, teachers such as Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse have worked tirelessly to promote the Buddha’s vision of basic goodness, guiding students to find peace and happiness. Over the last thirty years Rinpoche has engaged with modern audiences, sometimes teaching philosophy, sometimes being a traditional Buddhist master, sometimes being a contemporary film-maker, and sometime teaching meditation.

Dharma Gar provides the opportunity for creating a gap, a crack in the brittle shell of delusion that keeps us in the sad and painful half-life of delusion, samsara. It is a space in which individuals can become familiar with the Buddha’s vision and its application. The goal of the Dharma Gar is ultimately to be of service to the greater community. Discarding the cocoon of their comfort zone, practitioners might ultimately become inspiration for others. In the past, Buddhist practitioners and masters have brought inspiration and trust in basic goodness to the larger communities, and given meaning and value to human existence. This could also happen in the modern world.

Dharma Gar, Europe Sept 2011 Photo Anja Quathamer

Dharma Gar – do yourself and others a favour and practice more

According to Arne Schelling – Somewhere over Europe 2011

What to do, if you have the longing to deepen your practice, when you wish to go off the radar of the worldly life?
The Tibetans came up with the model of a three years retreat: leave job and loved ones behind, retreat within the boundaries of the retreat compound, have little to no contact to the outside world, and do many hours of practise each day. An extraordinary method to break through our habits, hang ups and inhibitions and ideally come out a little wiser. However according to Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche there are two problems with this method. Firstly, when going into a long retreat, you cut off the worldly life, and secondly when leaving the retreat you cut back on your intensive practice. There may be that no real integration of practise and worldly life has happened. Wow you might not even know how to use the new iphones.

So, what to do? Rinpoche has tailored a perfect way, of unifying these two lives, the introduction to the West of Dharma Gar. Dharma Gar or Dharma Camp, refers to the nomadic lifestyle of the wandering yogis, who gather for a while for a great Dharma event, and then disperse in all different directions. The curriculum of Dharma Gar is based on the traditional three years retreat, but the contents of these three years of practice is stretched to ten years of two hours meditation per day. By this we can still function in our worldly life, keeping up our responsibilities, and at the same time have a daily two hour practise on our cushion oasis. Easier said than done, since, if you are like me, you have way too many worldly commitments and distractions. But worth trying. A solid amount of cushion-on-time to have a little bit more Dharma than drama during our cushion-off-time. It is amazing how these two hours of practice make the events of the remaining 22 hours fall into place. Even from an economical point of view, these two hours of meditation make the 22 hours of post-meditation are much better, and even more efficient.. Another benefit of practicing more I have found is that you are of less annoyance to others.

Even though I am not at all a fan of advertisement, I just want to say that if you have the feeling that your life is precious and impermanent, if you have seen the uselessness and endlessness of our worldly pursuits and if you have trust in the Dharma and the Guru, do yourself and others a favour and consider joining a Dharma Gar.

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