I have just come back from Australia where I had my first solo art exhibition.
Here is a link to my art website:- http://kristinahanson.weebly.com/The pieces in the exhibition are all inspired by movement - of the sea, the body and birds. Beyond this I am looking at whether there is a still point within all this movement and flux, something that remains the same, and if so how to access it. I think in the actual act of drawing, often the still point is glimpsed for me. The point where I seem to step outside of the normal constrictions of time and hours can flash past, as it is for many things that anyone is wholly involved in - dancing, music or yoga. The single pointedness of mind that seems to come from really engaging in something - is this the still point?
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I have long been inspired by birds wings in my art work. When I first came to Edinburgh I worked on a piece called 'A Wing and a Prayer', an abstract drawing of a birds wing reflecting my feelings of coming to a new city and trying to find a place in it after finishing university. It is the fragile intricate patterns of feathers in a wing which give birds wings their strength and lightness. Birds ride on wind currents going with their changes and pressures to play and live. It was these qualities which I was trying to find here and explore through drawing, and still am!
Recently I have found a quote by Rumi which has been inspiring my yoga practice also in the shape of a birds wings. " Your hand opens and closes and opens and closes. If it were always a fist or always stretched open, you would be paralyzed. Your deepest presence is in every small contracting and expanding, the two as beautifully balanced and coordinated as bird wings." Here is a five minute breathing practice to go with it:- Sit in kneeling and close your eyes. Place your hands on your knees, palms facing upward and tune in to your breathing. Open and close your hands in time with your effortless breath, keeping time and observing all the changes and movements in the breath. On the out breath close your hands and on the in breath allow them to open again, making a continuous cycle which matches your breathing. When you are ready gently open your eyes again on the in breath. Please have a try if you liked it and let me know what you think! |
AuthorKristina is a Massage, Myofascial Release and Yoga Therapist who lives in Peebles in the Scottish Borders with her husband, two children and two cats. Kristina teaches One on one yoga, Pregnancy yoga and Sacred Cycles Yoga and offers massage and MFR bodywork in venues in Edinburgh and Peebles. Archives
August 2024
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