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Shambhala Art can be seen as a process, a product, and an arts education program.  As a process, it brings wakefulness and awareness to the creative and viewing processes through the integration of contemplation and meditation.  As a product, it is art that wakes people up. Shambhala Art is also an international non-profit arts education program based on the Dharma Art teachings of the late Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche, the founder of Shambhala Buddhism, Shambhala International, and Naropa Institute.  Shambhala Art is a division of Shambhala and is presided over by his son and heir, Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche. This program is taught by trained and authorized Shambhala Art teachers.

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What is Shambhala Art?

Learning to appreciate things as they are.

Our message is simply one of appreciating the nature of things as they are and expressing it without any struggle of thoughts and fears. We give up aggression, both toward ourselves, that we have to make a special effort to impress people, and toward others, that we can put something over on them.
— Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche

Shambhala Art’s purpose is to explore the creative process and the product we call art from the viewpoint of a meditative discipline. It is a viewpoint that encourages us to see things as they are, rather than just how we think or imagine they are. Shambhala Art does not teach a particular skill or technique such as painting, sculpture, or dance. It is about the source of inspiration, its manifestation, and how it speaks to us beyond the limits of its container. Once a view and a path are established it can be put into practice within any artistic discipline. Although the Shambhala Art teachings are inspired by Shambhala Buddhism, they are not in any way religious or about adopting a religion. They are about discovery and play, and the universal nature of creativity and communication.

Shambhala Art is a process, a product, and an arts education program. In this 18 minute talk, International Director Steve Saitzyk lays the ground for answering the question "What is Shambhala Art?"

This video is part of our mini-course “An Introduction to Shambhala Art,” which provides a practical exercise and discussion in addition to this talk.


Brief History of Shambhala Art

by Steve Saitzyk

How does one begin to tell a story that no one person can tell? Even finding a starting point for this tale is a challenge. I could start when I first met the Druk Sakyong, Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche in 1974, or a little later when he gave talks on iconography at Naropa, many of which became the foundation of our teachings on art making. Or, maybe still later, when he called those teachings Visual Dharma, or after that when he named them Dharma Art because the teachings where bigger than just one sensory perception or art form. After that he formed a group of students who connected with Dharma Art and called them the “Explorers of the Richness of the Phenomenal World.” We helped during the late 70’s and early 80’s with his installations in Boulder, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. However, if I start at any one of those points in time, this is going to be a book instead of an article.

I am going to choose a very sad time to start because it became the driving force to create a means to pass on these teachings. It is the time after Trungpa Rinpoche’s death when the Dharma Art teachings seemed to all but disappear except for an occasional event. Years of stagnation followed with particular regard to developing an organized system of passing on the full breadth of these teachings. There were even students who felt that because the Druk Sakyong did not establish a systematic way of transmitting these teachings in his lifetime as he had done with the Buddhist path and Shambhala Training that none should be created. One longtime student when asked why he did not teach Dharma Art was quoted as saying, “only one person can teach Dharma Art, and he’s dead.”

For myself I felt this could not be true. My experience was that these particular teachings were especially close to his heart and he certainly would not have wanted them to die with him. Besides, he and I had actually worked out a basic outline for a Dharma Art program that would convey these teachings in the late 70’s. We came up with the bones of what later became Parts 2-4 of the current Shambhala Art Program. It was not until the mid-1990’s, that the dark ages of Dharma Art began to lighten up. Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche called for some Dharma Art Conferences to be attended by what came to be known as “old Dharma Art dogs,” longtime students of Dharma Art. At one point I recalled him saying, “I am tired of the United Nations of Dharma Art. Make something happen!” He may have used a bit more colorful language than that. Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche later explained that his father charged him with completing the manifestation of Dharma Art. Out of these conferences and with Rinpoche’s guidance, the Dharma Art Program was developed in order to pass on these unique teachings in an experiential way to a new generation. Some “Dharma Art dogs” got on board to begin with and many others did later on. 

Teacher trainings were offered and programs began to pop up in various cities in North America and Europe. As Dharma Art grew within the Shambhala mandala, we became aware of a problem with the name, Dharma Art: we could not trademark it. It had been in the public domain too long with too many people using it in many different ways. As we expanded internationally, we also found that “Dharma Art”, in most cultures means specifically Buddhist religious art. So, we had to change the name to clarify who we are and more importantly, to protect the Dharma Art teachings. In our crazy legalistic world we had to change our name from Dharma Art to something else to protect the Dharma Art teachings. At that time we had a Dharma Art Council and we managed to come up with more than three times the number of titles than there were Council members. No two members would agree to any one of them. Some suggestions were: “AhaArt,” “Sun Art for the Darkest of Times,” and “Sane Art Training.” After several rounds of submissions, Rinpoche came back with Shambhala Art. 

Today, we have programs, classes, and festivals scattered around the world with about a hundred authorized Shambhala Art teachers. We have a very small administration with a very large vision, and significant need for financial support. Within the Shambhala mandala, Shambhala Art is entirely self-supporting. As for those interested in donating, we are a 501c3, with our own charter as a part of Shambhala. We are still growing and the interest in receiving these teachings has never been higher. Shambhala Art’s mission is to pass on the Dharma Art teachings through perceptual exercises, meditation, study, contemplation, non-objective calligraphy, object arranging exercises, and more, all of which build toward creating an installation, a feast, and celebration at the end of the program. This is all in the service of awakening our senses, clarifying our creative and viewing processes, and building a more enlightened society. Shambhala Art does not teach a specific art making discipline. We share the fundamental basis for all creative disciplines. (At the same time there is a loosely defined group of art making disciplines that people refer to as the Shambhala “Arts.” The Shambhala Arts are disciplines that embody the Dharma / Shambhala Art teachings.) Shambhala Art hopes someday to have its own retreat center, and a Shambhala School of Art and Design that would teach specific artistic disciplines in light of these teachings. We also plan to not only offer these teachings at all Shambhala Centers around the world, but to take them into Colleges and Universities, as some of us have already begun to do.

Because Shambhala Art is not focused on any specific discipline it draws people from all walks of life. In addition to visual artists, we have had performers, writers, therapists, attorneys, surgeons, actors, teachers, and students; and everyone interested in not only waking up their creativity, but also their viewing process to better appreciate and celebrate the art and life all around us. Join us.