RELATED TIBETAN SCRIPTS
Showing posts with label Bodhicitta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bodhicitta. Show all posts

Monday, 6 August 2012

Great lengths.....


The great Mahasiddha Śāntideva.


In June this year 2012, Tashi was contacted by a Tibetan man called Yeshi who lives in the Eastern Tibetan/Chinese Provence of Yunnan. So eager was Yeshi to commission Tashi to create a calligraphy, he made a long distance phone-call from the capital Kunming to discuss the phrases Yeshi wanted in the Khyug (quick style) Tibetan calligraphy.

The chosen phrases was a four line stanza to generate a mind of Enlightenment (as below), originally composed by the great Indian scholar Shantideva, who was the author of some of the greatest Buddhist works, such as the Bodhicharyavatara.  


"For as long as space exists and living beings endure.
May i too remain to dispel the misery of the world"


The phone-call and request was somewhat of a surprise to Tashi, who asked Yeshi why he needed to ask an Englishman half way around the world to create a Tibetan calligraphy to send back to Tibet and surely their must be somebody more local to him, such as a Lama who could elegantly scribe the stanza. Yeshi replied that it was very difficult to find a person who is able because the Tibetan written language was little practiced and much forgotten. 




Above is Yeshi, proudly wearing his new tattoo, that is important to him representing the Tibetan heritage he belongs, as well as the wisdom in it's meaning of Bodhicitta; poetically expressed in the calligraphy that is topped with a crescent moon and Bindu like sun, inspired by another of Tashi's iconic artworks called "Precious Human Existence"

The conservation of the Tibetan written language and its many script styles is at the heart of Tashi's work as a contemporary Tibetan calligraphy artist.


"Ancient traditions take many generations to develop and mature. However with neglect, such traditions can easily be lost in just one generation.
Documentation and reproduction is essential for their survival in keeping the ancient traditions alive"


Sunday, 22 January 2012

The practice of the Bodhi

ⓒ Tashi Mannox 2012


སྡུག་བསྔལ་མ་ལུས་བདག་བདེ་འདོད་ལས་བྱུང་༎ 
རྫོགས་པའི་སངས་རྒྱས་གཞན་ཕན་སེམས་ལས་འཁྲུངས༎ 
དེ་ཕྱིར་བདག་བདེ་གཞན་གི་སྡུག་བསྔལ་དག། 
ཡང་དག་བརྗེ་བ་རྒྱལ་སྲས་ལག་ལེན་ཡིན༎ 

All suffering, without exception, comes from the desire for happiness for oneself
While perfect Buddha-hood is born from the desire to make others happy. This is why completely exchanging one's happiness for that of others is a practice of the bodhisattva.


This calligraphy is based on the above prayer to develop bodhicitta, written in full of the smaller བྲུ་ཚ་ཞབས་སྒོང་མ 'round tailed Drutsa' script, a style popular in Tibet from the 1200s. The Circle of larger Uchen script is a repeat of the first line of the decree, while in the very center is the Sanskrit word 'bodhi' in uchen phonetics.

Friday, 2 December 2011

Bodhicitta

A detail of the "Beautiful Bodhicitta"

A person who has Bodhicitta (awakened mind) aspires to become enlightened for the benefit all beings, for their ultimate happiness and liberation. When a person reaches that level of unconditional love, compassion and understanding, he or she can then be called a Bodhisattva.


"Beautiful Bodhicitta"  2009.
 © Tashi Mannox 

Calligraphy in Chinese ink, Japanese mineral paint, on a wash of pure saffron depicting a landscape of the sun and clouds over mountains and foot-hills, river and the sea.
The Tibetan Drutsa script translates.....


“As a river to the sea, 
as the sea to the clouds,
as clouds to the land,
So does Bodhicitta beautify this world.”


A praise of Bodhicitta from “This Jewel Lamp” composed by Lama Tenzin Gyaltsen in Varanasi, India.

"Bodhicitta" in the ancient Wartu Sanskrit.
 © Tashi Mannox 2011






Thursday, 11 August 2011

Bodhicitta prayer.


Bodhicitta prayer in drutsa script. Tashi Mannox 2011.

"For as long as space exists and living beings endure. May i too remain to dispel the misery of the world"