Sacred Geometry, Art and Space with Karl Lorenzen

Craquele by Karl Lorenzen

Craquele by Karl Lorenzen

Earlier this year I took some Sacred Geometry classes with John Lloyd and Karl Lorenzen. I find great joy in drawing and learning about the meanings of geometric shapes. Sacred Geometry is found everywhere, in art, nature, human bodies, our architecture and the universe as a whole. This geometry harmonizes us with the universe! 

Karl was kind enough to take some time out for an interview to share his art and knowledge for the Holistic Spaces Blog.

AC: What is Sacred Geometry?

KL: Sacred Geometry, the confluence of art, science, and spirituality, constitutes a common ground between many of the world’s cultures and traditions. Its language of number and symbol (circle, triangle, and square) can be used to express profound ideas about the nature of existence.

How did you get interested in Sacred Geometry?

In 2000 my friend John Lloyd, a painter who lives in Brooklyn, introduced me to the subject. For five years I would visit him regularly to draw with the compass, borrow books on the symbolic aspect of life, and wander through Prospect Park, seeing the numerical blueprint of nature. John has studied with leading Geometers such as Keith Critchlow, Michael Schneider, John Michell, Robert Lawlor, and Scott Olsen

Today, John and I teach at holistic learning centers such as The New York Open Center and the Omega Institute.

How do you include Sacred Geometry in your work and art?

As a visual artist, I look for the beauty that is already there and respond with symbolic images (see images Exoskeleton and Craquelle, above). Like an architect’s blueprint, the bow compass, straight edge, and graphite pencil form the matrix on which my paintings are realized. The images are then painted in watercolor, primarily using a wet-on-wet technique. 

Inspired by the Chicago sculptor Bradford Hansen-Smith, I fold paper plates into polyhedra and space-filling patterns, see Tetra image below. Folding an actual circle (rather than manipulating a drawing of a circle) and working on the floor makes sense to my human nature. 

I bring the products of my symbolic and creative journey to the classroom when I teach: they are also featured in my upcoming book, The Art of Sacred Geometry Workbook .

Tetra by Karl Lorenzen

Tetra by Karl Lorenzen

Are there shapes that we can find in our environment that can create more harmony?

All cultures recognize the sacred circle, which has no sides, only circumference. Like divine love, it extends equally in all directions: reflect on this when you turn a doorknob, or sit in a circle with others.

The upward pointed equilateral triangle represents doing, while the downward pointed equilateral triangle represents being. 

Their union as a six -pointed star (or six petaled flower) is a Tantric symbol of balance. 

The square is nourishment ( three square meals), and shelter (a 90 degree angle resting on the floor provides stability).

A child drawing a house imagines a square with a triangle resting on top, beneath a circle: intuitively, they are harmonizing Earth, Heaven, and awakened human intention.

How do shapes affect our environment from your perspective?

The shape of the arch I walk under shapes me. The circular Roman arch curves up and returns to the Earth: good for entering a kitchen, or an administrative building. The almond-shaped arch of Gothic cathedrals resembles a birth portal: appropriate for the sense of renewal that sacred space provides. The Ogee arch, tapered like a flower petal, seems right for meditators and yogis, who imagine themselves perched on a Lotus. 

I would like the opportunity to gaze through windows shaped like flowers, fruit, and vegetables. 

Exoskeleton by Karl Lorenzen

Exoskeleton by Karl Lorenzen

Are there applications in our environment for these shapes?

Most housing developments take a bite out of nature, and construct with parts: then they fall apart. Volatile climate change calls for lightweight temporary dwellings, like tipis, made from local materials that can be gently collapsed back into nature. In a spherical dwelling (igloos or yurts), tension is distributed evenly along the surface: unlike the pyramid, where everything below is crushed by the weight of gravity. Hexagons (think of honeycombs) pack space more efficiently than cubes, yet cities continue to proliferate along the square grid. 

I like neighborhood houses tilted at angles that allow everyone equal access to air and light. Curvaceous glass and chrome buildings that play with reflection. Cathedral ceilings with soaring vesicas. Walking paths that twist and turn. More labyrinths in municipal parks, and spiraling staircases in public buildings, please! The city can be a human laboratory for joy.

How can readers begin to see Sacred Geometry in their everyday life/environment?

Sacred Geometry can be understood as patterns of beauty, order, and harmony that exist ready-made in nature. Once you recognize and align with these patterns, you will see new things, and familiar things in a new way.

by Anjie Cho


Born and raised in New Jersey, and currently living in New York, KARL LORENZEN began his studies and career in commercial art as a graphic artist and designer for the apparel and print industries. He later studied and taught the arts of Sacred Geometry (a hybrid of art, the sciences, and spirituality) and gives workshops and exhibits at national and international conferences, symposiums, galleries, museums, holistic learning and cultural centers. 


eHow.com Video: How To Keep Picture Frames Hanging Straight

How To Keep Picture Frames Hanging Straight

How To Keep Picture Frames Hanging Straight

Did you know in feng shui, crooked picture frames can represent a home that needs some balancing? 

See more eHow.com videos here

Video Transcript

I'm Anjie Cho, and this is how to keep picture frames hanging straight.

A crooked picture frame can make even the most beautiful piece of art or stylish room look unkempt and in disarray. In feng shui, this can represent a lopsided home or household. It's easy to keep your picture frames hanging straight with a few tools and tips.

You will need a level, as well as appropriate nails or screws for the weight of the frame and for your type of wall. We have drywall here with a fairly light picture frame so I have some small nails and a hammer. You also need some self adhesive felt pads. The self adhesive felt pads can be found at the local hardware store.

Be sure to locate your nail in the correct position using a measuring tape and level to determine the right place. Put the self adhesive felt pads on all four corners of the back of the frame. The pads provide friction between the wall and the picture frame so it won't as easily move. After you have hung up the picture frame, take the level again and make sure it's straight and level.

Keeping your picture frames hanging straight creates an orderly and finished look to any space. Just a few extra steps will keep them hanging straight and looking sharp.

by Anjie Cho


Feature: Aileen Gural and SoulCollage™

i am the one who unfurls from within…

i am the one who unfurls from within…

Aileen Gural introduced me to SoulCollage™ through her Collage Your Soul workshops.  Collage Your Soul offers workshops using the SoulCollage™ method to explore your inner soul.  SoulCollage™ is accessible to whoever has a passion for images and color and is interested in exploring their creative consciousness. 

The images I’ve shared in this article are my cards created in Aileen’s Collage Your Soul workshops.

AC:  What is SoulCollage™ ?

AG: SoulCollage™  is a creative process that’s designed to be a tool to access different aspects of your personality.  It gives life to and integrates different parts of your self through the collage.   Using the “I am the one” process you learn what your unconscious is trying to say and wants to express.  It’s a tool to just be creative. It’s a tool to access what’s going on inside you. It’s a tool that you can use to focus and to gain access to yourself as a focal point through card reading. And it’s also a community-building tool that brings people together, brings women in to circle to share experience and being creative together.

Can you talk about the “I am the one” process?

The “I am the one” process is a way of understanding the card [that you create through the SoulCollage process] and also understanding yourself. You start by speaking from the point of view as yourself, “I am the one who…”  You put yourself into the images on the card. It could be a face or any part of the card or all of the different parts of the card.  It’s a way to start getting in to the card, freely speaking but keeping it close to your self and not just talking literally about images. It’s really getting us to own our own voice and our connections to what we see. It just keeps us focused on what our voice is and what’s going on inside of us.

i am the one who is holding the up the world…

i am the one who is holding the up the world…

So one could talk about a picture and then it becomes a metaphor for what it means for you, right?

Yes. So everyone could see a different thing in the picture.  People have different reactions to images and it’s a way to have our voice and access what’s going on, what we’re feeling inside, what we want to bring out of ourselves.  It’s really a very non-confrontational process. It’s gentle and safe so most people find it non-threatening to just do that.

The first time I attended your Collage Your Soul workshop, I didn’t know that we were going to speak about the images.  It was fascinating and revealing when I looked at my pictures and saw how I could relate to them and how they spoke to me.

I think we constantly want and need a voice to express ourselves.  There’s so much going on outside, that our feelings gets eclipsed by all the stimulation and all the interesting things we have to do in life. So it’s really interesting to take time and see the real wisdom inside of us. In SoulCollage you choose images that somehow relate to you.  You don’t realize it at first but it can be something that’s going on with you that’s trying to express or come through.

i am the one who is drifting alone, over an expansive unknown… 

i am the one who is drifting alone, over an expansive unknown…

 

Can you talk a little bit about the formal process?  Do you need to be artistic to SoulCollage?

Therapist Seena Frost, who was into in Jungian psychology, developed the process.  No, you don’t need to be artistic. The great thing is anyone can do SoulCollage because it requires cutting or tearing images and pasting them down on a board (which forms the structure).  In SoulCollage the structure is a specific size, which helps to contain everything as well as creating a uniform and equal size. There are no words.  Words come from your own dialogue. 

So, how were you introduced to SoulCollage™?

A friend of mine invited me to a class.  I didn’t know what it was, but for some reason I went and SoulCollage™ really clicked for me.  It was an amalgamation of all my studies.  I’ve studied a lot of different kinds of spiritual paths and mysticism.  I’ve read tarot cards for years and I’m an artist.  Everything came together in this amazing process that was really easy, too. In an hour or two, you could do something creative and it feels really good to make something.  So it was a serendipitous moment.  I really liked it and I wanted to do more of it so I attended workshops in Guatemala and received trainings to teach it.

i am the one who grows the energy of nature… 

i am the one who grows the energy of nature…

 

And how has SoulCollage™ helped you in your life?

It has brought me closer to myself.  I used to use other tools or read tarot cards, and when I started being able to read my own SoulCollage™ cards, it was a lot more powerful because they were part of me as opposed to broader archetypal things that someone else has created. It feels really personal because I’m reading what has come out of me.  It’s really personal and expressive.

by Anjie Cho


Contact Aileen for upcoming Collage Your Soul workshops:

Leave the busy world behind and shift into a world of images, symbols and intuition. SoulCollage™ is an easy non-threatening process for creating your own personal deck of cards that depict different facets of your personality. During this class you will learn the elements of SoulCollage™ and the process of making cards intuitively by collecting magazine images and collaging them onto 5x8 mat boards. Drawing from the archetypal work of Joseph Campbell and Jungian dream analysis we begin to learn the soul’s language through dialoguing and journaling with what we create. The class will be structured to include meditation, circle sharing, collaging, partner work, and card readings to answer solution centered questions. You will leave with the beginnings or additions to a magnificent deck of uniquely personal cards and an inspiring practice that you can continue on your own. SoulCollage™ is a accessible to whoever has a passion for images and color and is interested in exploring their creative consciousness. A great way to slow down and deepen your relationship with yourself and other women. 

No artistic experience necessary. Images and supplies will be provided.  First session free to newcomers!

40 Worth Street suite 819, New York City  -  Fee Includes all materials SPACE IS LIMITED to 8 participants Register in advance with:  aileengural@gmail.com


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Aileen Gural is an artist and mother of two teenaged children, living in New York City.  After exploring many artistic mediums, she completed the Jewelry Design Program from FIT in 2004 and have been working with metal and stones ever since.  Along the way some of the other studies that have inspired and guided Aileen has been meditation, Qabalah, Feng-Shui,  Shamanic work, Core Energetics, Yantra painting, Martial Arts, and Diamond Heart work.  Its is now with great pleasure and passion that she is able to incorporate and share her experiences -through the process of SoulCollage.