The Art, Cultures and Spirituality of Sand Painting
Sand painting is known to have been practiced by three ancient cultures: Tibetan Buddhist Monks, in the form of geometrically shaped Mandalas; Australian Aborigines, to honor ancestral myths; and the Native Americans, for religious healing ceremonies.
Latin Americans in Mexico picked up the tradition and paint in celebration of some Christian holy days, such as "Los Dias de los Muertos", which literally means "The Day of the Dead".
Lets explore the Buddhist Monk and Native American, spiritual art of sand painting...
Source: Wikipedia, NationMaster.com
Image: TwinRocks.com
Native American Sand-Painting
Navajo Medicine Wheels

The Navajo word for sand-paintings means "place where the gods come and go." Sand-painting has been used for centuries in religious rituals and healing ceremonies performed by Navajo medicine men.
A sand-painting for a ceremony is made on the ground in the ceremonial hogan and destroyed at the end of the ritual. In order to preserve this long-standing tradition, in the late 1940's, Navajos began to create permanent sand-paintings, changing the design slightly to protect the religious significance when these paintings were shown publicly. Pictorial sand-paintings which reflect daily Navajo life also became common.
Process
Today sand-paintings are made by trickling sand slowly through the hand onto epoxy-covered particle boards, using sand made from naturally colored crushed rock, stone, and minerals for the different shades and colors.
At least 600 to 1000 unique sand-painting designs are recognized among the Navajos. They are not viewed as static objects, but as living things that should be treated with great respect.
A Guide to Navajo Sandpainting
A Guide to Navajo Sandpaintings
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A Guide to Navajo Sandpaintings provides the best introduction to the religious images created by Navajo medicine men as part of traditional curing ceremonies. These carefully prescribed designs depict ancient Navajo gods and heroes to whom medicine men appeal to help restore their patients to harmony. Every shape and color has to be just right lest irremediable harm come to medicine man and his patient.
Although many ancient sandpaintings designs and their accompanying chants have been lost to time, others remain a vital part of Navajo religious practice and have emerged as a dynamic art form. Navajo artists now incorporate heroes, gods, traditional design icons, and landscape features from their homeland into stunning, contemporary artwork.
The Father Sky and Mother Earth Narrative

Father Sky and Mother Earth appear in many of the sand paintings throughout most of the Navajo healing ceremonies of "Ways." These include the Shooting Way, Mountain Way and Blessing Way. They are invoked not because of a part in a particular story, but because of their strength and all pervading importance.
In the body of Mother Earth are the four sacred plants-corn, bean, squash and tobacco. In the body of Father Sky are the constellations, including the Milky Way, represented by the intertwined zigzag lines of dots, and the sun and the moon, represented by the circles with "horns."
The Rainbow God encircles three sides of the sandpainting, to protect the gods, Father Sky and Mother Earth. To guard the top, you find the medicine bag and a small rug- the real sandpainting uses a medicine bag and a bat. In the real sandpaintings, the open end faces the east. Various guardians of the east are used by the Navajos, including buffaloes, beavers, otters, bats, snakes, suns and moons, arrows, etc., according to the needs of each ceremony.
Source: www.canyonart.com/sandrugs
Help Kids Make Sand Art!
"Treat the earth well,It was not given to you by your parents,
It was loaned to you by your children."
-Indian Proverb
Using sand from the beach and some paint and some spoons, you can make sand art as bright as the moon.
What You Need:
Empty jars or plastic yogurt containers
Powdered tempera paints in a variety of colors
Sand (from the beach or playground)
Paper, pencils, glue and popsicle sticks
Plastic spoons and a plastic or styrofoam tray
What You Do:
Draw out a picture on your paper and remember to keep it simple.
Once the pencil sketch is complete, pour some sand into an empty container. Choose a color of powdered tempera and add just a little to dry sand. You will have to experiment when mixing the sand and the tempera to see how little or how much tempera you need. For more vibrant colors add more tempera.
Once there are a few colors of sand mixed up, the "painting" can begin. Work at one small section at a time. First decide where the color is going, put an even layer of glue on the paper and pour some colored sand onto the glue using a plastic spoon.
Repeat until the entire paper is covered.
Let the sand painting dry and seal it using either artist's fixative, hair spray, or spray it with a mixture of glue and water (80% glue, 20% water).
Art Tips:
One of the most effective images to create in sand is a landscape.
Place a few wavy lines across the paper and fill in with different earth colors for a very compelling sand painting.
After each color has been applied, lift the paper up and shake lightly over a plastic or styrofoam tray to collect the excess sand to use again.
How to Create Your Own Sand Art
Tibetan Sand-Painting
Mandalas

Tibetan Buddhist sand paintings, made by lamas or monks, usually consist of intricate mandala designs.
From a traditional iconography that includes sacred geometric shapes, ancient spiritual symbols, seed syllables, and mantras, the sand-painted mandala is often used as a tool to re-consecrate the earth and bless its inhabitants.
Process
The lamas begin by drawing an outline of the mandala on a wooden platform. The following days they lay the colored sands, by pouring the sand from traditional metal funnels called chak-pur. Each monk holds a chak-pur in one hand, while running a metal rod on its grated surface; the vibration causes the sands to flow like liquid.
Traditionally, like the Navajo Sand-paintings, most sand mandalas are destroyed shortly after their completion. This is done as a metaphor of the impermanence of life.
The sands are swept up and placed in an urn; to fulfill the function of healing, half is distributed to the audience at the closing ceremony, while the remainder is carried to a nearby body of water, where it is deposited. The waters then carry the healing blessing to the ocean, and from there it spreads throughout the world for planetary healing.
The Mandala of Being
The Path to Enlightenment and Awareness
The Mandala of Being: Discovering the Power of Awareness
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Many people obstruct their innate potential through repeated patterns of emotional struggle and suffering. This practical, hands-on guide explains why and how people habitually fall into this trap and provides a program, easily incorporated into everyday life, that frees them from this destructive behavior.
Using a simple mandala, the book illustrates the four places humans go when they feel threatened, uncomfortable, or arent fully centered or grounded in the present moment. Like a trail of pebbles left behind on a hike, it helps trace the path back to the authentic self.
Have You Tried Sandpainting?
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- Janiece Janiece Nov 24, 2009 @ 7:56 pm
- This was a very interesting lens on the Spiritual Art of Sandpainting! The photos are beautiful!
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- Comfortdoc Comfortdoc Oct 4, 2009 @ 3:32 pm
- I included your Sand Painting lens on the lens that I created to highlight the amazing Sand Artist, Kseniya Simonova.
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- RinchenChodron RinchenChodron Apr 26, 2009 @ 7:43 pm
- Beautiful lens - Yes the Navajo and the Tibetans have a great deal in common. I have seen Tibetan monks creating their mandalas - wonderful!
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- Ener-G Ener-G Mar 18, 2009 @ 4:02 pm
- Welcome to the Science of Energy Healing Group. Beautiful lens.
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- Aquavel Aquavel Feb 2, 2009 @ 10:58 pm
- I once had a small booklet on the healing art of Sand Painting, which I carried with me every day for about a year as if it was my personal bible. I was fascinated by it. Later in my art class I taught kids sand painting, but it was far from being part of nature. I saw the Tibetan Buddhists make and disassemble a sand painting & it was a beautiful process. Thanks for this lens and bringing back those memories and inspiring me to learn more. 5*
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