Sunday, May 12, 2019

Seed of Imagination








Sunday, April 14, 2019

Fountainhead Press Release



April 13, 2019
Seattle WA

Celebrating Our Maiden Migrations |An Ancestral Creative Journey: Inaugural Exhibition Exploring Human Migration from East Africa to be Installed at Fountainhead in Seattle


Celebrating Our Maiden Migrations |An Ancestral Creative Journey presents Homo sapiens’ origins in Africa and subsequent migrations into the Arabian Peninsula, Southwest Asia, Ancient Near East, Southeast Asia and Oceania. This museum destined exhibition coincides with the release of Wagner’s latest book Seed of Imagination: An Ancestral Creative Journey. Copies of the book will be available at Fountainhead.

Exhibit Title: Celebrating Our Maiden Migrations |An Ancestral Creative Journey 
Artist: LiDoña Wagner
Display Dates: June 6 – 29, 2019
Artist Lecture and Book Signing: Saturday, June 8, 5-7pm (ticketed event)
Artist Reception: Sunday, June 9, 5-7pm

Additional Background:

Our Maiden Migrations |An Ancestral Creative Journey is Part I of Eve’s Imprint, a two and three-dimensional mixed media installation by LiDoña Wagner that traces human migration from East Africa to all parts of the world. The installation encompasses over thirty original pieces of art including mixed media pieces and kinetic sculptures. It is accompanied by narrative panels and guided narration. Viewers are invited to explore their own ancestry, migration as a timeless reality and human impact leading to extinctions and climate change. 

LiDoña Wagner is an active artist and author. Her creative work expresses her passion and commitment to all people and the environment. Wagner’s paintings hang in private and public collections in Australia, Canada, Egypt, Mexico and the United States. Articles on her artwork have appeared in American Artist and Palette magazines. Wagner holds a master’s degree in Literary Nonfiction from University of Oregon. Her first book, Pilgrimage: Wonder, Encounter, Witness was published in 2011.

Fountainhead Gallery welcomes inquiries from groups who wish to engage further with the exhibit.

Thanks to our amazing artists, community and loyal patrons, Fountainhead Gallery has grown over the past 23 years to become a vibrant cultural center in the heart of the Queen Anne community.  Fountainhead Art + Culture presents fine art, artist talks, a speaker series and intimate concerts.


Contact information:

Andrea Lewicki
(206) 285 - 4467



Sunday, January 27, 2019

Awesome Books


Elephant Company
The Amazing Story of an Unlikely Hero and the Animals Who Helped Him Save Lives in World War II
by Vicki Croke

Except for loving birds, I don't think of myself as an animal person. But this story is totally gripping. It takes you through Burma (Myanmar) from the end of World War I into World War II. The hero bonds with, understands, and cherishes the elephants used to drag and push teak logs into the water. The bond he forges provides a means of saving many lives.

A Hope More Powerful than the Sea
One Refugee's Incredible Story of Love, Loss, and Survival
by Melissa Fleming

I couldn't put this book down once I began reading. It was so helpful to read about her youth in Syria and how the ongoing war began.  My heart was in my mouth when this young woman who does not swim finds herself stranded in the Mediterranean Sea clutching two infants. Her strength and courage is mind boggling.

The Girl with Seven Names
Escape from North Korea
by Hyeonseo Lee and David John

A young woman wanting to experience life outside of North Korea leaves on what she thinks is a lark only to discover that she has left her previous life, endangering the family she left behind. After a decade hiding in plain sight in China, she seeks asylum in South Korea. Finally experiencing the freedom she sought, she risks everything to get her family out of North Korea

The Truths We Hold
An American Journey
by Kamala Harris

Not widely known outside of California where she was Attorney General before becoming one of her state's senators in 2016, Kamala Harris is a very strong woman. With parents from Jamaica and India who were active in the Civil rights movement, she and her sister were raised by her mother to be successful Black girls. Her successful campaigns for public office and the innovative efforts she spearheaded as a public defender will open your eyes to the amazing things that can be done through commitment and hard work.


Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Your Meaningful Life

Arabian Crossroads LiDoña Wagner 2018
THREE WAYS TO RECOVER MEANING – Viktor Frankl
Man's Search for Meaning 1946

Creative  
Write a book, make a movie, or create a business.
Experiential  
Go somewhere to change your life.
Attitudinal  
What am I living for? If you don’t have meaning, go on a search to find one.

Buddha's Mother Dreaming LiDoña Wagner 2018
FOUR PILLARS OF MEANING - Emily Esfahani Smith
The Power Of Meaning: Crafting A Life That Matters 2017

purpose - finding something worthwhile to do with your time. Your vocation lies where your deep gladness and the world’s hunger meet.
Exercise:Write for ten minutes on your hopes for the future and your legacy – the part of your time that will go on living.   

storytelling - creating narratives that help you understand yourself and the world. Stories help us make sense of the world and our place in it. They claim our identity. 
Exercise: Divide your life into chapters. Recount key scenes (high/low points, turning point, memories). Think about your personal beliefs, values and philosophy of life. Reflect on your story’s central theme.

belonging - connecting and bonding with other people in positive ways.  
Exercise: Present a legacy project to a group: represent how you want to be remembered. Telling stories to an audience is connecting with people and letting them know they are not alone.

transcendence (central to spiritual systems) - mystical experiences of self-loss.
Exercise: Jumpstart a process of ‘deliberate rumination’: for 3-4 days in a row - take 15 minutes to write about the most upsetting experience in your life. Explore emotions and thoughts about the experience. People can learn and change after a trauma. It is how you interpret what happened, what you believe about yourself and life that forces growth. 

India's Cultural Heritage LiDoña Wagner 2018
WHO I AM - Dali Lama 
The Book of Joy - Lasting Happiness in a Changing World 2016
  • I am one of 7 billion human beings with global responsibility
  • I am a Buddhist monk
  • I am Tibetan - 1 of 6 million Tibetans
  • I am here to revive ancient Indian knowledge
  • I am secular - respect all religions and atheists
  • I have to take care of myself
  • I trust that change happens through education
  • I live compassion. It brings self-confidence and involves telling the truth, being transparent, living with trust, and being warm hearted.
Middle Eastern Records LiDoña Wagner 2018

Saturday, November 24, 2018

How To Be Happy



GREATEST INFLUENCE ON HAPPINESS 
  • Ability to reframe our situation more positively
  • Ability to experience gratitude
  • Our choice to be kind and generous

HOW TO BE HAPPY
  • Something wonderful is going to happen today
  • What one thing can I do today that will move me closer to my highest purpose?
  • Deflect partisan conversations
  • Assume people have good intentions
  • Eat high quality food slowly
  • Let go of your results. Focus on the job at hand vs worry
  • Do something you love
  • End each day with gratitude
  • Do something in nature or with plants 

FOUR INDEPENDENT BRAIN CIRCUITS THAT INFLUENCE OUR LASTING WELLBEING
  • Our ability to maintain positive states – starts with love and compassion.
  • Our ability to recover from negative states
  • Our ability to focus and avoid mind-wandering – meditation 
  • Our ability to be generous – cooperation, compassion, generosity 

SELF COMPASSION
  • Accept there are personality traits that are not satisfying, but do not berate the self as you try to address them.
  • When we go through a difficult time be kind and caring to the self. 
  • When we feel inadequate, remind self all people go through these feelings/limitations.
  • Things are hard. Recognize that all people go through similar challenges.
  • When feeling down, try to be curious and accepting rather than rejecting or self-judgmental.
  • Be of benefit to others.
  • Sing, Dance, Hear/Tell Stories
  • Be Comforted by Silence

BLESSING WAY
  • Show Up: choose to be Present 
  • Follow what has heart and meaning
  • Tell the truth without blame or judgment
  • Be open to outcome - not attached to outcome 

INTENTION REFLECTION INQUIRY
  • What made me happy today?
  • Where did I experience Peace, Comfort, Solace, Sanctuary?
  • Who or what inspired me today?

HOW TO STAY CENTERED
  • Gratitude 
  • Meditation 
  • Physical Activity
  • Social Connectedness 

HOW TO STAY HEALTHY
  • Know your value
  • Maintain a moderate weight
  • Eating: avoid trans-fats, eat 5 fresh fruits and veggies a day, watch daily dairy totals
  • Exercise 3 times a week
  • Relaxation/Spirituality
  • No alcohol, smoking, drugs 

HOW TO BE CALM
  • Breathe
  • Listen
  • Be Least in Need 
  • Go Where Light Is
  • Go Where Love Is 

BE A RESERVOIR OF JOY, 
AN OASIS OF PEACE,
A POOL OF SERENITY



Thursday, October 25, 2018

Why I Vote





When I was a child only my father was allowed to speak at family events. 


But when I went to school, I learned that I had my own voice and could express my own ideas. 


As a young adult I worked in community development and that is when I discovered that when I vote I amplify my voice on issues that are of concern to me. 



Think about the issues that concern you. VOTE!

Friday, September 28, 2018

Completing Our 2017-18 Mandala Journey

Melody Carr


Melody brought her skills as a poet, gardener, and photographer to her mandala journey. From these she developed a distinctive ‘Folk Art’ style that reflects her strength of character and grounding in reality. As she began the mandala she was at a major life turning point. Thoughout our journey together she reassessed where she had come from and dreamed of where she wanted to go. 

Melody’s Story

I am a woman who

is walking onward, though there are no paths
who is swimming to the island of my soul
who is watching the mountain’s stillness
who is opening her heart and pulling all the bandages off
who is dancing in the fires of the people
who sings walking the hills in the autumn of time
who comes through the cataclysm
who is the spirit held in glass and the reflections of sacred forms
who is outlasting tragedy and violence all around
who is companioned by the spirit of the cyclone
who floats in dark waters 
and exhales her troubles.

Janet Asman


Janet was a clothing designer before becoming a realtor. She brought her highly developed sense of color and design to painting her mandala. Taking pride in all that she does, she worked with commitment toward giving her mandala a sense of completeness. Her mandala reflects a sense of fulfillment and accomplishment.

Janet’s Colors

The four main colors I see when looking at my mandala are blues, greens, whites, and golds. To me the blues and greens represent peace and calm, growth and earth. The whites and creams feel like spirit and the light, purity. The golds feel like wealth of spirit and the imprinted potential for wholeness. Gold balances out the colors. All the colors represent richness of spirit and the presence of grace. In my life I have always had a clear connection with spirit. I knew I wanted my mandala to reflect that connection. I have to feel peace in my existence along with inspiration and grace. This is the level I strive to operate on and to learn from.

Janet’s Journey

Janet chose to tell her story through creating a slide show of her step by step process. Click below to enjoy viewing her journey.


Hope Lewis




This was Hope's fourth mandala. She is a poet, quilter, gardener, and family matriarch with years of experience in doing dream work. Each mandala reflects her experiences expanding awareness and unique pointillist style. 

Worm and Snakes in Hope’s Mandala

Worm. Life reborn from corruption. Human race derived from the worm. Worm marks the stage preceding dissolution and decomposition. Points the way leading up from the primordial energy to life. Transformation and transition to a higher state. Passage of earth to light/death to life. Larval state to spiritual release. Snake. Mankind and snakes opposites. Serpent in all humans. Have no control. Lower psyche. What is unusual, incomprehensible and mysterious. Snake shocks the spirit. Snake a line that goes into infinity. Sacred made manifest. Old God. Dual symbol of soul and libido. Cosmic serpent bites its tail.


Hope’s Story


This is the story of a woman who remembers her inner child and loves her and has watched her grow into an older soul. Having gone through many life experiences, she realizes the mystery of lie is a journey to the center of all things, a journey to oneness with all things. Sitting in nothingness is sitting in all things. A paradox indeed. A mystery indeed. 

Opening to the dream world, to the symbolic world, has brought me to this oneness. This ever expanding view will continue I hope until she disappears exactly how she appeared 73 years ago. This journey is an alleluia experience if one can move forward knowing one is never alone while moving closer and closer to the unknown that somehow we sense to be present. This is the story of a woman who finds peace in knowing all is as it should be even in the worst of times, even when the mystery refuses to show itself. 

LiDoña Wagner


I was introduced to mandalas by Carl Jung over thirty years ago and have been drawing and painting mandalas ever since. After studying with Madeleine Shields in Victoria, British Columbia, I took what I knew about dream work, journal writing, meditation, creativity, and personal growth and designed a Dream Mandala Journey process using a Tibetan Buddhist structure. I have been taking women on Dream Mandala Journeys for nearly twenty years and every time I learn something new.  

LiDoña’s Story

This is the story of a woman whose natural joie de vie led to a denial that she had become old even as she experienced increasing physical difficulties. The colors in her fire ring expressed her yearning for deeper spirituality.

A year into her mandala journey her health was declining; she finally acknowledged that she was old. Her dream reflections and dialogues told her that the individuation journey was complete and it was time to begin a new journey of learning to express love and compassion. They also reflected her struggle to write the book that would accompany her completed Maiden Migrations installation. 

The color green kept appearing and reappearing, revealing her closeness to nature and her ability to nurture, parent, and protect. Another color, a warm yellowish orange called Gamboge, asserted itself as a powerful metaphor for change and reflected her energetic striving, sense of identity, and healthy assertiveness. This Gamboge color called out to her to recognize a developing sense of a more genuine and personal spirituality. 

As her mandala journey took her to the four portals into the Inner Garden, her diminished health was too blatant to ignore. Her naturopath put her on a diet that revealed her health issue was not arthritis. Her portals announced inner strengths: Root chakra/I am safe. Power chakra/I am whole and perfect. Heart chakra/I love and am loved. Throat chakra/I am light.

Working on the Inner Garden provided peace while she was negotiating a reassessment of her illness. Red is the dominant inner garden color. This color used in ritual celebrations marks an arousal of healing, life-giving potentials deep within the psyche. It also is a sign of progress toward achieving one’s great work. It represents the energy we need to survive, be healthy, and transform ourselves to greater inner wisdom.  

Completing the Inner Garden precipitated creation of a lace-like pattern in the Sea of Life to connect the Inner Garden to the transition ring and dream cycle. Her mandala work provided strength to go to Seattle and arrange for the first exhibition of Maiden Migrations in June of 2019. 

Then the bottom dropped out of her plans for the future as X-rays revealed that something was eating away her right hip bone. A total body scan revealed she had a metastatic bone disease in several bones of her body. More tests. Learning there were no tumors in any major organs was a relief. A bone biopsy gave a definitive diagnosis: metastasis from breast cancer 21 years ago. She learned that this is considered to be a chronic illness for which she will need to have treatment for the rest of her life.

This woman’s Inner Garden takes the shape of a cross, suggesting that she is waging a hero’s battle and may be called upon to endure a period of testing. She is balancing the contradictions that are part of human nature. The garden is filled with flowers  that suggest a growth process unfolding in her relationship to the self. It reveals her soul’s work.