Prasada/exaltation(2010) consists of 20 painted and hand-cut kitakata paper panels each measuring 90 x 38 inches.
The complete piece is meant to encircle a space, casting its shadows with a saffron and amber glow.
The act of spontaneous painting combined with the obsessive cutting is akin to the turn of the dervish, an ecstatic dance of surrender and yet with a great centered discipline. The turning is how the dervish becomes an empty place where human and divine can meet, a resonance with universal soul.
Prasada means “mercy or grace” and refers to a mental state marked by spontaneous generosity or anything that has been sanctified through offering to God. The act of painting is the devotional offering and the visual manifestation is given back through grace.

prasada/exaltation
AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation
AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation sumi and acrylic inks on kitakata paper
prasada/exaltation
2009-2010
sumi and acrylic inks on kitakata paper
90 x 38 inches

AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation

AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation


AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation sumi and acrylic inks on kitakata paper
prasada
2009
sumi and acrylic inks on kitakata paper
90 x 38 inches
AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation


AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation

AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation


AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation

AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation


AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation
detail
AUGUSTE  RHONDA  TYMESON prasada/exaltation
detail