here's the info from the cultural center website on the mandala:
Tibetan Monks Will Create Sand Mandala
Artist/poet Dr. Catherine Yi-yu Cho Woo to talk about Buddhist philosophy, June 22
As part of their 2005 Sacred Art Tour, a group of Tibetan Buddhist monks from the Drepung Gomang Monastery in India will create a sand drawing called a mandala as a form of prayer for Chicago in the 1st Floor Garland Room of the Chicago Cultural Center, 78 E. Washington St., June 22 - 27. The public is invited to observe the monks as they meticulously place the fine, colored sand to form the mandala (schedule below). The monks also will display and sell Tibetan religious art, including scroll paintings called thangkas, and perform ritual chants. Artist/poet Dr. Catherine Yi-yu Cho Woo will use the symbols in the mandala to illustrate her talk about Buddhist philosophy on Wednesday, June 22 at 5:30pm in the 1st Floor Garland Room. Admission to the mandala and the discussion is free. For information, call 312-744-6630 or visit
www.culturalcenter.org.
The schedule is:
Wednesday, June 22, Thursday, June 23 and Friday June 24
11am - 4pm Construction of the mandala
1pm Ritual tonal throat chanting
4 - 7pm Mandala on view
Saturday, June 25
11:30am - 2 pm Construction of the mandala
2 - 5pm Mandala on view
Sunday, June 26
11am - 5pm Mandala on view
Monday, June 27
11am - 5:30pm Finishing mandala
5:30pm Dismantling of the mandala
The creation of a mandala begins with blessing the site. The monks summon the forces of goodness by chanting mantras accompanied by flutes, drums and symbols. Then an outline of the mandala is drawn on the wooden platform. The monks use a narrow metal funnel called a chakpur to place the millions of grains of colored sand into the pattern. There are many different mandala patterns, each with its own meaning that is represented by particular shapes, symbols and colors. The mandala chosen for this site is the Chenrezig pattern, which represents compassion. For Tibetan Buddhists, compassion is sensitivity to the sufferings of others and the realization that humans, animals and the earth itself are all interconnected.
Once a mandala is completed, it is dismantled to symbolize the impermanence of all that exists. The dismantling is the most sacred aspect of the mandala. The dismantling ceremony begins with chanting, then the monks sweep the sand up with brushes, put it into a container, and pour it into a nearby river or stream so the waters can carry positive energies throughout the world. In this instance, the sand will be poured into the Chicago River.
The thangka is a traditional Tibetan form of religious art originating in India, whose subjects may include deities, great teachers, or mandalas. Most thangkas are scroll paintings usually framed in a rich colorful silk brocade with a thin silk veil covering the front surface. They are distinctively Tibetan, highly religious, and possess a unique art style of their own. Tibetans have always considered the thangka a treasure of tremendous value.
For more information about thangkas, mandalas, the 2005 Sacred Art Tour or the Drepung Gomang Monastery, visit
www.gomang.org.
Dr. Catherine Yi-yu Cho Woo will give a talk on the nature of heaven and earth according to Buddhist philosophy and Chinese Feng Shui principles, using the mandala as an illustration, on Wednesday, June 22 at 5:30pm. Dr. Woo has studied Tibetan Tantric Buddhism with His Holiness Grand Master Thomas Lin Yun Rinpoche for the past three decades. Her own artworks reflect a sense of the harmony and blessings of nature. Dr. Woo is Director of the Chinese Language Program at the National Language Resource Center at San Diego State University, and formerly directed the China Studies Institute and the Center for Asian Studies there. She was the first Chinese American member of the National Council on the Arts, appointed by the first President Bush.
Public programs at the Chicago Cultural Center are presented by the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and are partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency. In kind support was provided by Arica Hilton Fine Arts.