Mandalas of the soul

Paintings by young women at the margins of Iranian society

by Jahanshah Javid
06-Sep-2008
 

Gizella Varga Sinai has used ‘mandala’ painting workshops as an effective therapeutical and spiritual teaching tool over many years. In addition to various workshops in Iran, Gizella has conducted workshops in Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Finland, France, and Hungary during the last five years. Participants have varied from place to place and have included refugee kids, women from Africa, cancer patients, marginalized high school girls, etc. The works presented in this exhibition are the results of two ‘mandala’ painting workshops conducted in 2007 and 2008 at the Omid-e-Mehr Foundation.

The Omid-e-Mehr Foundation (established 2004 in Iran) and the Omid Foundation (established 2006 in the UK) were founded by Marjaneh Halati, a London-based social psychologist and psychotherapist. Omid is her brainchild, and it is her vision that has created its distinctive holistic approach to helping its vulnerable young Iranian and Afghani women (‘clients’) achieve self-awareness, self-determination and self-sufficiency in modern Iranian society.

These works of art are the outcome of a beautiful journey to a sacred space. The word ‘mandala’ is of Hindu origin, and comes to us from the Sanskrit language, where it has two meanings: ‘essence’ and ‘containing’; or ‘completion’ and ‘circle-circumference’, both derived from the Tibetan term ‘dkyil khor’. But a ‘mandala’ is far more than a simple circular shape. It represents wholeness, and can be seen as a model for the organizational structure of life itself -- a cosmic diagram that reminds us of our relation to the infinite, the world that extends both beyond and within our bodies and minds. The integrated view of the world represented by the ‘mandala’, while long embraced by some Eastern religions, has now begun to emerge in Western religious and secular cultures. Awareness of the ‘mandala’ may change how we see ourselves, our planet, and perhaps even our own life purpose.

The symbolic nature of the ‘mandala’ can help one to access progressively deeper levels of the unconscious, ultimately assisting the meditator to experience a mystical sense of oneness with the ultimate unity from which the cosmos in all its manifold forms arises. The psychoanalyst Carl Jung saw the ‘mandala’ as a representation of the unconscious self, and believed his paintings of ‘mandalas’ enabled him to identify emotional disorders and work towards wholeness in personality. The wide-spread interest in the ‘mandala’ within the Western world today is very much linked to Jung’s work and interest in the subject matter.

The artists: Maryam Abdollahi, Afsaneh Akhtarmohammadi, Leila Gholami, Nazanin Gholami, Shirin Golrezai, Zohreh Hamrang, Somayeh Himekesh, Marjan Hosseini, Soghrah Jazih, Marjan Judi, Neda Khani, Niloufar Heidari, Leila Mafi, Arezou Mehr, Maria Mehr, Susan Najafi, Marjan Nasseri, Forouzan Parvani, Nadya Parvani, Safieh Rassouli, Shamin Rassouli, Shakiba Rezai, Latifeh Safarzadeh, Soheila Salehi, Mitra Salimi, Mahboubeh Samadi, Maryam Shakeri, Shokou Sheiki, Noushin Tayebi, Mona Teimouri, Zahrah Touluhsadeghi, Fariba Zahebdad, Zeinab Zarei, Zohreh Zarifi.

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by The Glass House (not verified) on

See the documentary about the girls of Omid.

For more information go to:
//fictionvillestudio.com/the-glass-house.html

The fringes of Iranian society can be a lonely place, especially if you are a teenage girl with few resources to fall back on. The Glass House follows four girls striving to pull themselves out of the margins by attending a one-of-kind rehabilitation center in uptown Tehran. Forget about the Iran that you’ve seen before. With a virtually invisible camera, the girls of The Glass House take us on a never-before-seen tour of the underclass of Iran with their brave and defiant stories: Samira struggles to overcome forced drug addiction; Mitra harnesses abandonment into her creative writing; Sussan teeters on a dangerous ledge after years of sexual abuse; and Nazila burgeons out of her hatred with her blazing rap music. This groundbreaking documentary reflects a side of Iran few have access to or paid attention to: a society lost to its traditions with nothing meaningful to replace them and a group of courageous women working to instill a sense of empowerment and hope into the minds and lives of otherwise discarded teenage girls.


Nazy Kaviani

Heaven released!

by Nazy Kaviani on

These are truly amazing works of art. Gizella Varga Sinai has helped release heaven inside these young Iranian women. Good for them and lucky for us to be able to see them. I don't know much about mandala or how she got these women to tell their souls like this but the effect is absolutely amazing visually. Thank you for sharing. Really thank you!


KayvanAli

Just beautiful

by KayvanAli on

I hope Ms. Halati tries to bring this across the world as an exhibit along with the painters for all to see...

Made our day :->

Cheers,

K1


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sacredspace

by the jung and the restless (not verified) on

"There are things known and things unknown and in between there are the doors." --William Blake

break on through....

www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4FFF1NBiTs

(that is what they meant, you know, the doors of perception...)