Therapeutic Mandalas: Turning Visible the Invisible

15 Mar

Therapeutic Mandalas: Turning Visible the Invisible

IACAET

Therapeutic Mandalas: Turning Visible the Invisible

by IACAET
215 215 people viewed this event.

Therapeutic Mandalas: Turning Visible the Invisible
Mandalas in Therapy

Date & Time: April 6 (Sunday), 2025

8:00-9:30 New York/ 12:00-13:30 London/ 13:00-14:30 Switzerland/ 20:00-21:30 Beijing & HongKong

**This event will be recorded. Registrants will receive the recording link via email after the live session.**

 

Introduction

The webinar will discuss how spontaneous mandalas can be used as therapeutic tools for self-knowledge and to decrease anxiety levels.

Mandalas are exquisite works of art that have been used for many centuries as spiritual tools for meditation to help focus and bring a deeper understanding of the self. Mandala means circle in Sanskrit. In the 1960s, Carl Jung, a Swiss Psychotherapist, considered mandalas magic circles connecting the unconscious to the conscious mind. The Brazilian Psychiatrist Nise da Silveira recognized spontaneous mandalas in the drawings and paintings of schizophrenic patients. Sharing pictures of these artworks with Jung was the beginning of a fruitful collaboration. The meeting with Jung occurred in 1956 at the II International Congress of Psychiatry held in Zurich, Switzerland, where the mandalas of her patients were part of the exhibition “Schizophrenia in Images.” For Jung, the circle imposes a severe pattern that compensates for the disorder and confusion of the psychic. Later on, in the 1970s, Joan Kellogg developed the Archetypal Stages of the Great Round of Mandalas, a method of analyzing mandalas from psychiatric patients. By bringing this method beyond hospital walls, Susanne Fincher unveiled a transformative path to insight, healing, and self-expression accessible to all. Spontaneous mandalas are also great tools to decrease anxiety levels.

This trajectory of mandalas from the ritual and religious perspective to therapeutic practice will be presented in the webinar, during which a 20-minute practice of spontaneous mandalas will be done. There is no need for a compass, ruler, or protractor. The attendees will be asked to have a paper with a circle drawn with a pencil in the middle using a plate. The drawing can be done with anything the attendee is comfortable with: colored pencils, oil pastels, dry pastels, or even watercolors. It will be a fun, relaxing time.


Speakers

Lucia Bianconi

Associate Professor at the Institute of Medical Biochemistry at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, post-graduated in Transpersonal Psychology and Gestalt Therapy, psycoanalist and specialist in art therapy with focus in therapeutic mandalas.

María Sol Guerrero Giménez

María Sol Guerrero Giménez, MD, based in Mendoza, Argentina, is a psychiatrist and drama therapist working on the development and integration of art and health in multiple settings at different scales.


Expected Outcomes:

  • How to use mandalas for meditation to help focus and bring a deeper understanding of the self.
  • What is a spontaneous mandala, and how do they help to decrease anxiety levels.
  • The meaning of the 12 stages of the Archetypal Stages of the Great Round of Mandalas.

 

This event is free for IACAET Registered members

Additional Details

Event Mini Content

Mandalas are therapeutic tools for self-knowledge and for decreasing anxiety. We will discuss the use of mandalas in therapy from Jung to Joan Kellogg, giving special attention to the Brazilian Psychiatrist Nise da Silveira. For a 20-minute mandala practice, the attendees will be asked to have a paper with a circle drawn with a pencil in the middle using a plate. There is no need for a compass, ruler, or protractor. The drawing can be done with any media the attendee is comfortable with: colored pencils, oil pastels or watercolors. It will be a fun, relaxing time.

 

Date And Time

Sun, Apr 6, 2025 @ 08:00 AM (CEST) to
Sun, Apr 6, 2025 @ 09:30 AM (CEST)
 

Location

Online event
 

Event Types

 

Event Category

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