Retro causality and the Advanced and Retarded Wave Junction: TS Eliot, Jim Morrison and Joni Mitchell

Tantra on the Edge: Curated by Dr. Madhu Khanna with DAG

Tantra on the Edge: Inspirations and Experiments in 20th Century Indian Art curated by Dr. Madhu Khanna with DAG (Delhi Art Gallery). This is a very brief presentation by Tantra Foundation of the concept exhibition Tantra on the Edge curated by Dr. Madhu Khanna with DAG, it showcases the key concepts of Tantra and how it was integrated slowly into modern Indian contemporary art in the works of great artists like G.R. Santosh, V. Viswanadhan, Shobha Broota, Ettore Sottsass, Ranjit Makkuni, J. Swaminathan, Dr. Sohan Qadri, Satish Gujral, P.T. Reddy, K C.S Paniker,Biren De, S.H. Hazra. Manu Parekh, Jyoti Bhatt, Gogi Saoj Pal and others. ****Kindly note the poster art section here is not included in the Tantra on the Edge curated by Dr. Madhu Khanna supported by DAG This is just an educational understanding of the East-West knowledge transfer and communication that was taking place in the 60s and 70s I referred to here, which had obviously the tantric view of seeing the cosmos as a holistic embedded pattern which has the creative will-force as one of the three cardinal points of the triangle.

The Swinging 60s and The Reception of Tantra with Dr. Madhu Khanna, Tantric Scholar, Curator and Founder, The Tantra Foundation, and, Dr Emma Ramos, Curator, South Asia Collections, The British Museum, London and Shri Kishore Singh, Senior VP, Delhi Art Gallery – this wonderful event virtually was organised by DAG
Pink Floyd Poster Art. The band that thrived on creating an alternative world or a dreamscape with new sound textures and sometimes pure childlike verse and other times reality entangled with space-time architecture warped….that warped curvature gave a non-euclidean geometry to their verses and sound….the rise and fall of a 🌊
Shiva Linga, Benaras Stone 20th Century, Collection: National Museum, New Delhi Acc. No: 82.367
The Beatles poster: Post-India tour with the inclusion of Sitar Maestro Sri Ravi Shankar, the music became more creative with new explorations in verse and sound. 1967 was the crucial year in world music
Grateful Dead poster: The Skull is a deep rooted tantric symbol, in the Tibetan book the dead there is specific mention of 6 bardos or doors the soul (subtle body/linga sarira/karana sarira/causal body) goes through after death….Grateful Dead’s music is magical , it can be so, if one can overcome death in some alternative states of consciousness and that one can do by practicing meditation in daily life. We are all on threshold of Enlightenment, and, the only free particle of time is music….it flows like Jerry’s guitar licks…

This presentation by Tantra Foundation also draws upon tantra in art as a fluid tradition dating back to many centuries and enjoyed permeability and instrumentality across diverse regions, religious faiths – Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, tribal traditions across many cultures in the world from aborigines in Australia to the Red Indians and Shamans in Central America, and, among indigenous people in Mongolia, Tibet etc.

The tantric tradition co-developed parallel to the Vedas, regarded as one of the oldest surviving religious texts in the world (2500-1900 BC) According to Dr. Madhu Khanna ” the tantras re-invented a minimalism that was reductive in nature, abstracting the lissom figure of gods and goddesses, and dematerialising the anthropomorphic figures into pure geometrical symbolic form.

These abstract symbols were playfully or unconsciously appropriated or embodied in the works of various artists in Indian Contemporary Art Scene”. A new addition to this presentation done by Tantra Foundation is based on the influence of Tantra in visual arts in the West, in the UK and the US, that were reflected not only in art but in the music scene that explored the texture of various new sounds and theme based lyrics as concept albums, a wide range of experiments in music itself in live concerts – alluding to the macrocosmic and microcosmic harmony existing in nature, and, trying to present a fresh aesthetic understanding of what man is and his relation with the other/with the cosmic consciousness.

Going to California (you could read Kalifornia has specific creative hotspots which supports music, poetry, art and a thriving pure spirituality . Not a messiah on every street certainly…
Joni Mitchell sang “Oh, I wish I had a river/I could skate away on….(River song), one of original female storytellers who travelled with a bag of songs as if she picked berries from the sky…referred by Led Zeppelin in their song Going to California, a classic folk ballad alluding to Joni and at a deeper level the Self Unborn non-dual….a woman never never never born….
Kali(Maha-Vidya or The Great Knowledge), Bengal Art Scene: Tantra, The Bengal Chapter
Ian Anderson silhouette as Dancing Krishna, Jethro Tull poster art, one of the bands that took music to a new level with influences of folk, nature, and elemental earthly rusticity. We are inventing organic farming in a new way …we are Inventor of the original seed drill instrument, we are the Jethro Tull
The Famous Rolling Stones Poster Art

That was prevalent in the London underground scene (UFO club and others) post-Beatles India tour and with the epic release of two great albums in a gap of few months that would define a new outline for music, from the Abbey Road Studios, Beatles’ Sggt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band and Pink Floyd’s debut album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, 1967, featuring a great talent that withered away, called Syd Barrett. It is evident that art and music lost their strict boundaries and were overlapped freely under the influence of an Eastern and Western understanding that strived for harmony and progress – relevant is Barrett’s Change Returns Success, Chapter 24 song by Pink Floyd from their 1st album, The Piper. This has the influence of IChing and Ying Yang built into its structure with dreamy lyrics based on Western arrangement of octaves and an original theme which alluded to man’s relation with the cosmos and the metaphysics associated in such ecology. Rolling Stones, The Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Traffic, Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull – all these bands and many more brought into the musical scene not
only rock b roll but pure untouched reality that breathes into the songs of Bob Dylan, CSNY and Joni Mitchell. The list is endless…..

Chinnamasta Puja Yantra (Above) & Tantric Chequerboard Diagram

– JRC, Head of Communications, Tantra Foundation

#consciousness #spirituality #art #poetry #divinemother #pinkfloyd #jethrotull #therollingstones #thebeatles #gratefuldead #tantra #tantrafoundation

Tantra Foundation brings “Time As A Landscape” wide open to the masses

Neela-Kali by M. Morrison
Joy Roy Choudhury with Dr. Madhu Khanna, Tantra Foundation

Post-pandemic has been a difficult time everywhere, with new mutations emerging every now and then, with an almost reboot of the economy with AI and industrial automation and more surprisingly communities across the world coming to terms with the harsh reality of the loss of lives, effects of climate change and the recession.

The Tantra Foundation Library

When a background like this is set, the urge to come up with fresh new ideas is the real challenge of the times, and a pioneer NGO, in the area of Tantric/Agamic Studies in India, Tantra Foundation, “A Centre for Traditional Learning, Creative Arts and Self Evolution” seems to redefine a new terrain and a pathway for the future. The Centre is the brainchild of Prof. (Dr.) Madhu Khanna, Chairperson and Founding Trustee. She is an acclaimed scholar of Hindu Shakta Tantra, author, curator, and truth-seeker. Described by the Sunday Times Magazine, London, (13th July 1997: p.40) as the ‘respectable public face of modern Tantra in India’, her early two books on art (published by Thames and Hudson, London) have run into twenty editions with translations in five languages.

Dr. Madhu Khanna is all set but ready to take this head-on with an array of cultural programs that not only talks about tantra and its ancient roots, but its modern adaptations to also how it can historically redefine this present moment of crisis, both collective and personal, with emerging ideas that put together a network of intermingling points inclusive of tantric philosophy, its art, music, poetry and dance together with modern scientific discoveries in neuroscience, consciousness studies, quantum science and cosmology. She says, sitting in her library curated for scholars of Indic studies which is open for research students: “This is a time teeming with opportunities to connect with a new breed of emerging scholars of Tantra whom she has mentored, musicians, artists, poets, scientists and those who are serious aspirants in spirituality. It’s been almost three decades 36 years since I received my did my PhD from Oxford University in the Shri Vidya tradition of Kashmir, one of the most
sophisticated streams of Shakta Tantra, which is a living tradition in India at a time it was almost unknown to the western world and to many here in the subcontinent. I pursued my studies under the close supervision of my Oxford mentor, PROF. Alexis Sanderson. I have worked on multiple projects under IGNCA, Palo Alto Research Center, and taught Indic studies at the Centre for Comparative Religion, Jamia Milia Islamia, started pioneer courses on Religion and Ecology, Arts and Gender studies and other universities in the west but, now this time I propose want to change the narrative and reclaim the wisdom of our long lost civilisation for tomorrows generation.

Tribal Art, Bengal Patachitra, Photograph by JRC
Chapter 24….A movement is accomplished in 6 stages and the 7 brings return….sunrise…Pink Floyd 1967 circa, photograph by JRC – By the Ganges in Varanasi
Flowers and Grasses, JRC

By throwing away the objective study of religion, civilisation and their arts in the dust heap of history India is poorer today by several centuries. The young generation of Indians is severely cut-off from their cultural roots because these subjects have remained outside the academic curricula in Indian universities. do something completely different. We have a new fresh young team of scholars, artists, and spiritual aspirants practitioners, who are well versed in the new technologies, and carry with them a depth of knowledge on philosophical visual arts, music, and poetry that can be disseminated to raise our awareness. They work with their heart and with an intelligence that is so symptomatic of the present time”. She has also launched CIASA – The Centre for Indic and Agamic Studies in Asia which is an academic initiative of Tantra Foundation, a non-profit educational Trust devoted to the preservation of the creative genius of Indic and Agamic heritage in India. The Tantra Foundation Library in New Delhi is a collection of 7000 books and rare archival documents primarily, but not exclusively, devoted to the literature of Tantras.

About the forthcoming programme series which will start this year with events in Kolkata, West Bengal in focus, Joy Roy Choudhury, Head of Communications of Tantra Foundation said: ” it is wonderful to work with Dr Khanna, I always feel at ease as she is more like a mentor, and, we are working very closely with a team of young scholars and our new associates M. Morrison and Apratim to map out the future events. My connection with Ma’am happened very surprisingly almost like Jung’s synchronicities and we share the same spiritual parampara or lineage. I think we are looking at a month-long event in Kolkata centred on the theme Time as A Changing Landscape and the Invocations to the Tantric Heritage for a Global Eco-synthesis. The event will showcase works of contemporary artists, Tantra aspirants, music performances, and poetry readings, along with innovative academic sessions on the literature and the arts of Tantra. It will also present the fast-losing history of topping up with an east-west knowledge transfer that happened in the 60s and 70s through the route of visual arts, music, and one that still mesmerized us or rather pampered us with the music of the Beatles, Jethro Tull, Pink Floyd, Grateful Dead, Bob Dylan – his connection with the Bauls of Bengal etc. We will probably use an acoustic set up which will be overlapped between talks and discourses. The series as planned is a way of inviting new hope of cultural and economic synthesis as India gears up for a promising 6.0 to 6.8 per cent GDP growth slated for 2023-24. This event will be later hosted in Barbican in London and in Italy. More cities will be added as we move along. I am personally working on Sri Aurobindo’s concept of the emergence of Future Poetry together with strumming some of these songs from the 60s/70s.
Dr. Madhu Khanna pointed out that Tantra Foundation in December 2022 has launched a new the first of its kind Rural Children Library Programme, mainly for adivasi and rural children in Bamunara, Bardhman District in West Bengal, initiated by Shri Kunja, A Rural Centre for Eco-heritage and Green Consciousness, Tata Blue Scope, Pune and LK Jha Foundation, Pune. All these to her are “interlinked as we try to create new awareness based on cosmic unity and harmony revisioning new human-earth relationship of our fast-degrading environment on our planet. The multi-disciplinary and multi-cultural engagements are necessary to restore our inner and outer balance which has been disturbed by the pandemic. ” It is to be noted that M. Morrison who spends her non-office hours delving into Sri Vidya studies and practice, is also a Sri Vidya initiate from the same lineage as Dr. Khanna, so there is a common understanding and intelligence that is underlining these future projects in India and in
Europe and the US. She says that it will be revisiting the 60s and 70s minus the drug overload and now with a new awareness of global unity which makes people-to-people contact possible and challenges us to re-think/re-organize in a sustainable way.Neela-Kali by M Morrison, 2012

A recent interaction with Ustad Zakir Hussain and the famous Jazz guitarist John McLaughlin on music and spirituality has given me extra motivation and inspiration to take this project forward says, Joy Roy Choudhury. To Apratim, who is working in the E-learning space, it is an opportunity to put together something creatively that has never been done before – a tapestry of children’s paintings, poetry, photography, and words of wisdom to help us evolve and become better human beings.
Tantra foundation is talking with various media partners, galleries, and corporate houses to team up with them in creating a series of programs. It will be a wonderful futuristic project where Kali Kirtan can be simultaneous with Dylan’s Mr Tambourine Man or Joni Mitchell’s Woodstock interfused with discourses on Tantra on the Edge: Inspirations and Experiments on Twentieth Century Art, curated by her that includes works of G.R. Santosh, Sohan Quadri, Biren De, Manu Parekh, Sunil Das and others, published by DAG (Delhi Art Gallery).

With Shakti L-R Ustad Zakir Hussain, John McLaughlin, Shankar Mahadevan and the rest in conversation with @artcritique JRC, Tantra Foundation