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Manadala
Art by Aurélien
Isis
| Manipura | Vishudhi
| Yantra | Prana
| Sangha | Tao | Information
Prana Mandala

Prana means vital energy in Sanskrit. This is the
Breath of inspiration. It also corresponds to the center of the
heart. It is the breath of absorption and of the internal inspiration,
it controls the heart and the feelings of the personality.
Prâna is at the origin of the aspiration to
the beauty and of the aesthetic emotion, with the mental reality
of the thoughts and the dreams. Prana is the food of the Soul.
| Deep 40mm box wrap canvas giclee
print |
30" x 30" |
£258.00 |
£20.00 |
| Rolled canvas ready to stretch |
30" x 30" |
£218.00 |
£10.00 |
Deep 40mm box wrap canvas giclee
print |
24" x 24" |
£239.00 |
£15.00 |
Rolled canvas ready to stretch |
24" x 24" |
£204.00 |
£10.00 |
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Fine Art paper 310 gsm
ready mounted |
18" x 18" |
£98.40 |
£15.00 |
Fine Art paper 310 gsm
unmounted |
18" x 18" |
£85.00 |
£10.00 |
Fine Art paper 310 gsm
ready mounted |
12" x 12" |
£60.80 |
£10.00 |
Fine Art paper 310 gsm
unmounted |
12" x 12" |
£52.80 |
£10.00 |
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What is a Mandala?
'Mandala' is of Hindu origin, the
term being used for the books of the Rig Veda, but is
also used in other religions such as Buddhism. In the
Tibetan branch of Vajrayana Buddhism, mandalas have
been developed into sandpainting. They are also a key
part of anuttarayoga tantra meditation practices.
In various spiritual traditions,
mandalas may be employed for focusing attention as a
spiritual teaching tool; for establishing a sacred space;
and as an aid to meditation and trance induction. According
to David Fontana, its symbolic nature 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."
Detail from full
size image:
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