inanga > Koha

'Koha' is Te Reo Maori for gift. This photograph was taken on iPhone in Wellington, New Zealand. The shell and surrounding moonstones I found about a month before on Hermosa Beach, Los Angeles. It is one of the most beautiful set of gifts I have ever been given. The shell beautifully illustrates Phi in all its perfection.

inanga
inanga > Prayer & Meditation

acrylic and watercolour on existing carving with prayer beads
2009

Kaitiaki: Pat
inanga > The Polymath

I'll let wonderful wiki do all the talking:

"Walter Russell (1871–1963) was an American polymath, known[1] for his achievements in painting, sculpture, architecture, and for his unified theory in physics and cosmogony.[2][3] He posited that the universe was founded on a unifying principle of rhythmic balanced interchange. This physical theory, laid out primarily in his books The Secret of Light (1947) and The Message of the Divine Iliad (1948–49), has not been accepted by mainstream scientists.[4] Russell asserted that this was mainly due to differences between himself and scientists in their assumptions about the existence of mind or matter.[5] Russell was also proficient in philosophy, music, ice skating, and was a professor at the institution he founded, the University of Science and Philosophy. He believed mediocrity is self-inflicted and genius is self-bestowed.[6]

In 1963, Walter Cronkite in the national television evening news, commenting on Dr. Walter Russell's passing, referred to him as "... the Leonardo DaVinci of our time."[7]"

dedicated to Walter Russell, a man before his time...

Walter Russell's 'Heat to Light' overlaid over phi swirl detail from inanga's 'Moko [Tattoos]'; rest courtesy of Apple iPhone, Picasa 3,SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox 2009.
inanga > Detail from 'Moko [Tattoos]' treated in Picasa 3

Kaitiaki: Rick

inanga
inanga > Decalogue New Mexico
inanga > Spread of the Celts
inanga > The Irish Celts
inanga > In the Battle of the Trees

overlay of my photographs and paintings
courtesy of picasa 3.6, SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox 2009

A footnote from "The Book of the Hopi" by Frank Waters

"Tibetan and Hindu mysticisms, like Hopi mysticism, postulate a similar series of centers of force or psychophysical centers in the human body, in which psychic forces and bodily functions merge into each other. These "cakras", as described, coincide with those of the Hopi. They correspond roughly with the physical centers but they function psychically rather than solely physiologically.

The highest and most important center described by Eastern mysticism lies, like that of the Hopi, at the crown of the head. Known as the "Sahasrara-Padma", the Thousand-Petaled Lotus, it is associated with the pituatary gland of the brain. It is so important as a seat of psychic consciousness that it is regarded as of a higher order than the other centers. As in the Hopi belief, it is the "door to the Creator", through which consciousness enters and leaves.

Below it, centered between the eyebrows, lies the "Ajna Cakra" which corresponds to the "medulla oblongata" of modern physiology, forming the basis of the brain and controlling the sympathetic nervous system. [More modern thought equates this with the pineal gland - Ed.]

The "Visuddha Cakra" is the throat center. It corresponds to the physical "plexus cervicus" of the cerebo-spinal system and is associated with the respiratory system.

Below these higher centers lie two more centers which are also identical with those of Hopi mysticism. The first of these is the heart center, the "Anahata Cakra", corresponding to the heart plexus of the "sympaticus" which controls the heart and blood vessels.

Below this is the "Manipura Cakra", the Navel Lotus and the Hopi "Throne of the Creator", which corresponds to the "solar plexus" of the sympathetic system, controlling the conversion of inorganic into organic substances and the transmutation of organic substances into psychic energies.

Eastern mysticism describes two more centers below these which are not included in the Hopi series, the "Muladhara Cakra", the Root Center at the base of the spinal column, corresponding to the "sacral plexus" and "plexus pelvis", which stands for the whole realm of reproductive forces. The negative functions of rejection and elimination of elements that cannot be assimilated are associated with the "Svadhisthana Cakra", lying just above it and corresponding to the "plexus epigastricus". These two centers are often combined into one.

These seven centers are always enumerated in ascending order to that at the crown of the head, as they become successively less gross in nature and function. The four lower centers, it should be noted, represent successively the four gross elements that comprise man's body: earth, water, fire, and air. According to Hopi belief, the body of the earth and the body of man were both constructed of these same gross elements, in this same order. It may be briefly stated here that both Eastern and Hopi mysticism equate the bodies of man and the earth, and the centers with in man with the seven universes."
inanga > Double Vision

'Cappella di Vitaleta' overlaid on Google Earth Panorama

Original painting by inanga, digital wizardry by Picasa 3, SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox 2009
Koha

'Koha' is Te Reo Maori for gift. This photograph was taken on iPhone in Wellington, New Zealand. The shell and surrounding moonstones I found about a month before on Hermosa Beach, Los Angeles. It is one of the most beautiful set of gifts I have ever been given. The shell beautifully illustrates Phi in all its perfection.

inanga
inanga > Koha

'Koha' is Te Reo Maori for gift. This photograph was taken on iPhone in Wellington, New Zealand. The shell and surrounding moonstones I found about a month before on Hermosa Beach, Los Angeles. It is one of the most beautiful set of gifts I have ever been given. The shell beautifully illustrates Phi in all its perfection.

inanga
Koha

'Koha' is Te Reo Maori for gift. This photograph was taken on iPhone in Wellington, New Zealand. The shell and surrounding moonstones I found about a month before on Hermosa Beach, Los Angeles. It is one of the most beautiful set of gifts I have ever been given. The shell beautifully illustrates Phi in all its perfection.

inanga
See photo in original gallery.

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inanga - hogproductions