Drawing as Devotion: The Art of Seeing with John Muir Laws
“It’s not about being good at drawing,” he says. “It’s about relationship.”
He often anchors his approach in a simple trinity: I notice. I wonder. It reminds me of.
Read MorePosted by George Cassidy Payne | Nov 21, 2025 | Creativity, Featured, Visual Art |
“It’s not about being good at drawing,” he says. “It’s about relationship.”
He often anchors his approach in a simple trinity: I notice. I wonder. It reminds me of.
Read MorePosted by Nicole Nehrig | Sep 26, 2025 | Featured, Visual Art |
An unseen collaborator exists in the meeting of two minds in creative collaboration.
Read MorePosted by Guinotte Wise | Sep 3, 2024 | Editor's Picks, Featured, Mysticism, Visual Art |
Mysticism has interested me since childhood. I don’t pretend to be a mystic, but I don’t dismiss those who wear the label.
Read MorePosted by Ata Zargarof | Sep 11, 2023 | Editor's Picks, Featured, Paths and Traditions, Visual Art |
I wonder if that separation is what first aroused his thirst. I wonder whether from the window he longed for the teeming, reckless, beautiful, extravagant world below—crawling with insects, bursting with flowers, everything flashing in the sun and rustling in the breeze. Maybe his architecture was a way of abolishing that early distance.
Read MorePosted by Mónica Esgueva | Jan 2, 2023 | Featured, Visual Art |
The consciousness in you and the consciousness in me, apparently two, really one, seek unity...
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The Braided Way is a framework to see every faith tradition as a strand, braided into a larger whole of spiritual awareness. In the Braided Way, combining spiritual practice from various faiths allow us to explore sacred experience and wonder in forms that resonate with our personal spiritual needs and sacred intuitions. In today’s culture, many people shun religious dogma, but yearn for spiritual connection. The Braided Way allows the ceremonies and practices of multiple faiths to be available without the confinements of cultural dogma.