Reflection Patikulamanasikara

Certificate of Authenticity Included

Framed by Artist

A$350

Artwork Details

Medium Pastel, Paper, Framed by Artist
Dimensions 22cm (W) x 27cm (H) x 3.5cm (D)
Review Stars 21,257 Customer Reviews
Original Artwork
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Artwork Description

Patikulamanasikara is a term that is generally translated as "reflections on repulsiveness". It refers to a traditional Buddhist meditation whereby thirty-one parts of the body are contemplated in a variety of ways. In addition to developing sati (mindfulness) and samādhi (concentration), this form of meditation is considered conducive to overcoming desire and lust.
This description relates to the women seen in the picture. She is kneeling and meditating, contemplating her body, desires and lusts whilst looking towards the wall. For a period of time she appears transfixed and lost in her own consciousness. Even though she is still in a room time has flown by and becomes timelessness. It is in this transition that a landscape appears through the wall. Another image appears through a black void and she notices herself blind to her own reality. Through her mind it appears clear that all these desires and wishes she has had all her life have not really helped her form a deeper connection to her self. She may does as the body wills and satiate those desires, but there has been much heartache doing so. It is then she finds it is not really necessary to follow the path she has chosen because she has lived if before and it is time to follow a new path without embellishing or creating new regrets.

This piece suits any room in a house and is made with colour pastel pencils and black ink.

Artist Bio

Marten has been practicing as a self taught artist with Art Theory and practical lessons learnt from private tutoring and mentoring. He gained an interest in art during his teenage years glossing over the works of the known, but deceased artists of Hieronymus Bosch and Goya. To further develop his skills he joined the Access Arts Organization from 2008 learning other theories, approaches and styles of artwork.

His focus shifted towards exploring different boundaries in society adding elements and perspectives such as religion, philosophy, human self-sacrifice, alienation, acceptance and struggle to his work. By doing so he reveals both the positive and negative sides of human nature as the driving force and motivation behind his artwork.
Engaging viewers toward reflecting and interpreting the subject matter in a positive and open-minded manner, helps to reveal the hidden ranges of emotions we carry on a daily basis.

He has displayed artwork at past fundraising events called 'Stages of Life Exhibition' held at Jugglers Artist Space, Fortitude Valley including 2013 MIFQ's (Mental Illness Foundation QLD) 22nd Annual Art Exhibition called 'Kaleidoscope'.
After other displays at smaller private Art Organization galleries, he received an Exhibitionist Finalist Award in the AFTM (Art From The Margins) 'National Biennial Outsider Art Awards 2019' for his work 'Recycling the Problem'. The medium used for this work was a wood lathe, Carving a Jacaranda tree into the wooden bowl with a carving tool and then using pyrography to stencil the outlines of my carving. The Bowl I originally machine lathed from the stump of a Jacaranda tree itself.

The work displayed in these galleries as donations, were primarily focused to raise community awareness of mental health issues and the changing of attitudes in society towards peoples differences.
His work nowadays, predominantly focuses on the 'Cycle of Life' Philosophy. Loosely encompassing Buddhist concepts of birth, life, death, re-birth (re-generation) in our everyday personal lives including of other life forms and the world around us.

Mediums used throughout his career range from a mixture of Acrylic based paints, ink, pastel, pencil and utilizing Multimedia platforms such as Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator.
Only recently has he adopted other elements into his work by creating wood ornamental carvings/sculpting's by repurposing wooden materials.

Through collaboration with my fellow artists in the Access Arts and Art From the Margins (AFTM) organizations, I have gained a unique insight into their world and the possibilities of what has molded them into the people they are today.
Art is more than just a concept and expression. Personally, it is a continual seeking of our own truths within the uncertainty of change.

Commissions

Marten's studio is in Taringa.