The Wheel of Life by Losang Samten

I've had the great pleasure of meeting the venerable Losang Samten a few times through a friend of mine and I learned that he was in town creating a sand mandala at the Philadelphia Cathedral (38/Chestnut). I shot Andi an email and she was in so off we went. The mandala is part of this cathedral's pilgrimage for peace which culminates on February 3rd (my birthday!).

Losang is a Tibetan Buddhist mandala master, one of a handful of people in the world who knows how to painstakingly create one of these beautiful mandalas. He introduced the art to the U.S. in 1988. Above is a detail of the hollow, ridged steel rods used to create the designs. One rod is rubbed along the ridges of the other producing vibrations which slowly pour out the colorful grains of sand within.

Losang has been making The Wheel of Life mandala for awhile now and has more information here. Every mandala is different, but with the same in concept. Losang decided to make this one especially unique by including the cathedral and references to Christianity within this mandala since it was being created within a cathedral. At bottom you can see Jesus crucified next to Buddha.

In the top most portion of the mandala, is the cathedral with a line of parishioners.

While most may be familiar with the traditional steel rods, this tool was new to me. He may have picked it up and found it useful in separating individual grains of sand or it may just be a not so well known mandala creating tool.

A closeup of Losang working on the mandala. He started working on this mandala on January 13th and it will take him a fortnight to complete. It will remain in place until February 3rd when it will be swept away in a ceremony to "be returned to nature in an acknowledgment of transience and impermanence" (via visitor's guide handed out at the door).

Anyone can walk in and see him work Monday through Friday from 10a – 4p. He takes a lunch break (a man's gotta eat!) from Noon to 1p.

Here Losang is emptying out one of the hollow rods to ready a new color. You can see a few of the many bright colors of sand he's using for this mandala.

This event is not in the least solely for Buddhist scholars. I know a teensy bit, but learned a lot about the mandala there while listening to Losang speak and also several of his students who were on hand to answer questions as new groups of people arrived. Behind Losang in the above shot is one of his students explaining to some college-aged kids the different sections of the mandala.

One of the most amazing things about watching this mandala being created was that it was inside this gigantic cathedral (seat of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania at that)! Above, you can see the gigantic organ pipes, stained glass windows and the gilded frescoes in the apse of the cathedral.

And one last shot of Losang working away on his raised platform. If you have a chance, it's very much worth the trip.

And here's a shot Andi took of me and Losang in front of the mandala. If you look closely, you can see that he's added in a cross to each section of the mandala. I'll be heading back to take a look at the finished piece. A flickr set with more shots. And don't miss the mandala cam!
The Tibetan Buddhist Center of Philadelphia, which Longsam founded in 1989, has moved to the cathedral. The group meets Sundays at 10a and is open to all.
The Inky was there over the weekend. Their writeup here.
Explore posts in the same categories: Art, Events, Photography, Religion
January 23rd, 2008 @ 5:31 am
What did he say about the center section (pig, snake, rooster??), something about it representing our worst qualities?
January 23rd, 2008 @ 9:56 am
These are all great shots, but I really love that shot of the entire front of the Cathedral. Very nice!
January 23rd, 2008 @ 11:23 am
I am your biggest fan. Your photos are so deliciously rich in color and clarity.
January 23rd, 2008 @ 12:20 pm
I'm sorry I won't get to see it! Thanks for the beautiful shots.
January 23rd, 2008 @ 12:48 pm
from his website:
The center of the Wheel of Life holds the 3 poisons – the snake representing anger, the rooster, greed and the boar, ignorance – on a background of blue, which symbolizes the nature of the human mind. From this stems the yin and yang, dark and light areas surrounding the center. On the light side are representations of those seeking to lessen the effects of the poisons and on the dark side are those figures suffering due to the presence and intensity of the three.
January 23rd, 2008 @ 5:06 pm
Very cool pics! Ruby and watched some Tibetan monks visiting Carrboro, NC creating a mandala. Wonderful stuff to be in the presence of.
Dude you hair is getting long! :D
January 24th, 2008 @ 1:17 pm
Great shots, Albert!
January 28th, 2008 @ 10:18 am
This is great. I'm going to do a little more research but I was wondering how the sand was kept in place once it was put down? Or, do they create a case for it?
November 11th, 2009 @ 8:54 am
[...] Venerable Losang Samten is back in Philly (my previous run ins with Losang here and here – he's a friend of a friend), this time at UARts creating another Buddhist [...]