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Home > News > India News > Article > Between Tantrik lines

Between Tantrik lines

Updated on: 26 January,2014 07:06 AM IST  | 
Devdutt Pattanaik |

Tired of the daily barrage of political and Bollywood gossip, I turn my attention to sacred art and realise that they communicate profound, timeless ideas.

Between Tantrik lines

Columnists, Devdutt Pattanaik, Tantrik lines, dot, bindu, tilak

Devdutt PattanaikTired of the daily barrage of political and Bollywood gossip, I turn my attention to sacred art and realise that they communicate profound, timeless ideas. Ideas have no form. They are nirguna. They can be given form, turned saguna, using sound. Thus words or mantras come into being. They can also be given form using gestures or mudras. They can also be given form using diagrams or geometrical patterns known as yantras, often associated with Tantra. If one pays attention to ritual motif especially in rural India, one finds a whole range of visual vocabulary used to communicate a whole set of ideas. Following are a few of them.

The dot or bindu is a popular symbol indicating potential and possibility. It represents the beginning of something. Multiple dots are used to depict a set of deities. For example, three dots can represent Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva or Lakshmi, Saraswati and Durga. Seven dots represent the seven mother goddesses. Ten dots can represent the ten avatars of Vishnu.

A line represents life. Drawn vertically upwards it becomes the tilak representing positivity. Drawn horizontally or vertically downwards, it becomes the symbol of death.

In Tantrik art, the horizontal line represents water, the vertical line drawn upwards represents fire that rises while the vertical line drawn downwards represents earth that binds. Diagonals represent the wind.


Devdutt Pattanaik
Illustration/ Devdutt Pattanaik

A set of four lines intersecting at the centre represents the cardinal and ordinal directions, and so space. A circle represents the horizon, hence space once again. A circle also represents time that is cyclical.

If a circle represents natural world then a square represents manmade artificial world. A square within a circle represents culture that is created out of nature.

If a dot represents seed then the circle is a fruit of that seed, and the square is a fruit of the circle. If the circle represents the world then the centre represents the one who creates the world — God? Mind?

The spiral indicates how the mind reacts to a cyclical world. The world is cyclical — boom follows bust, summer follows winter, high tide follows low tide. But how does the mind deal with successive repetitions? With more wisdom or with more despair. The spiral that moves outwards indicates an expansive mind. The spiral that moves inwards indicates an involuting mind.

The image of the four-armed Vishnu is associated with various geometrical symbols. The conch-shell is the spiral. The wheel is the circle. The mace is the line. The lotus is created by squares — two squares intersecting each other create the perfect eight-petalled lotus.

The geometry itself has no meaning. Meaning is given to the art by the artist and by the observer of the art. One can dismiss geometry as secular meaningless creations or react to them by recognising their sacred nature. For generations, village women have used sacred geometry to decorate their mud houses during festivals. Through this they have communicated ideas that we otherwise only find as words in lofty books written by men, restricted to men. Both communicate the same formless idea, but we choose to dismiss the geometry of illiterate rural folk as superstitious talismans and the words of literate priests as embodied wisdom.

The author is Chief Belief Officer of the Future Group, and can be reached at devdutt@devdutt.com

The views expressed in this column are the individual’s and don’t represent those of the paper.



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