The meaning of life is to see.
Rather than artist, sculptor, writer, or philosopher, Frederick Franck liked to call himself an image-maker. He was a true Renaissance Man, writing books and creating images until his death at 94. His first book – The Zen of Seeing – was my introduction to drawing-as-meditation, as something much much more profound than the end product called an artwork. He went on to write over 30 books, including The Awakened Eye
, to which the title of this website and blog pays homage.
Many years after that first introduction, I was blessed to attend a 4-day Easter Zen of Seeing retreat with Frederick Franck in Cornwall. Perhaps I’ll write about that in another post. But here I wish to bow deeply in gratitude to a man who knew what it means to be fully human, and who was able to awaken me to authentic seeing and drawing.
It wasn’t just any old seeing that he referred to in his quote above; he knew what it meant to encounter non-dual awareness. For him it was a direct impulse from heart-seeing to hand-scribbling with no loop through the labelling and categorizing part of the brain. It was seeing without the shadows of conditioning, and marveling at what turned up on the paper.
Unkillable Human
Pacem in Terris – the official website for Frederick Franck.
Frederick Franck loved to quote Hui Neng: The meaning of life is to see. The raison d’être of this website and blog is to open up the view onto what it means to really see – to see without separation between the perceiver and the perceived. It’s a view described by artisans and sages, scientists and philosophers, all in their unique ways.
Homage and gratitude to them all, and especially to Frederick Franck.
he had amazing ideas about art and meditation, I would like to know him!
Nice to see a blog homaging him 🙂
wonder full, to see others and their own processes beyond…
Thank you Marga – it’s lovely to know you’ve stopped by and had a wee read…