Maà t, 2006
Maà t - In Egyptian mythology, Ma'at was the goddess, or rather the concept of truth, justice and order. Maà t was depicted in art as a woman with wings and a curved ostrich feather on her head or sometimes just as a feather. These images are on some sarcophogi as a symbol of protection for the souls of the dead. Egyptians believed that without Maà t there would be only the primal chaos , ending the world. It was seen as the Pharaoh's necessity to apply just law.
Balance & Harmony, 2003
Balance & Harmony - The Yin-Yang Symbol represents the ancient Chinese understanding of how things work. The outer circle represents everything, while the dark and light shapes within the circle represent the interaction of two energies, called yin (dark) and yang (light), which cause everything to happen. They are not completely dark or light, just as things in life are not completely black or white, and they cannot exist without one another. While yin would be dark, passive, downward, cold, contracting, and weak, yang would be bright, active, upward, hot, expanding, and strong. The shape of the yin and yang sections of the symbol actually gives you a sense of the continual movement of these two energies, yin to yang and yang to yin, causing everything to happen: just as things expand and contract, and temperature changes from hot to cold. I believe Balance and Harmony is a state of mind and if you choose to have the equilibrium of both, it is a choice you make in how you want to experience life.
Stuck In A Dream, 2005
Graceful NeoClassical Cupid, 2004
Saturn Sonja, 2001