Was Renaissance artist-inventor Leonardo
da Vinci a yogi-in-disguise who masked his divinity because of the
age he lived in? A close look at his Man in Square and Circle seems
to indicate just that
The leitmotif of the New Age is a desire to seek and
comprehend ancient knowledge. This craving for knowledge dates back to
that golden era when Europe opened its mind to nature and Godthe
Renaissance.
Although the Renaissance
initiated the process of calling up knowledge hidden during the Dark Ages,
there was always the formidable barrier of organized religion. It was,
therefore, not uncommon for true seekers, or yogis, to camouflage themselves
and their works with banal devices and ruses, leaving sufficient clues
for others of their kind. Perhaps the best example of such a Renaissance
yogi in disguise is Leonardo da Vincipainter, scientist,
mathematician, inventor and Renaissance figure par excellence.
According to Patrizia Norelli-Bachelet,
an Italian-American based in Tamil Nadu, south India, who has been working
on the Vedas for over 25 years and has written various well-researched
books on gnosis, da Vinci was actually an avatar who concealed
his true identity because of the limitations of the age he lived in. In
her book Symbols and the Question of Unity, Patrizia argues
that da Vinci instinctively understood the necessity of masking
his full knowledge in order that humanity could one day benefit from his
incarnation.
Da Vinci was, however,
a bit of a tease. He seemed, writes Patrizia, "to be always touching the periphery
of true knowledge, giving bits and dribbles, but never revealing the core". Thus,
no sooner does he cast light upon one field than he leaves it to illuminate another.
Pointing to his habit of writing notes backwards, the author declares that despite
all such tactics, the yogi's mystical-spiritual essence shines unmistakably.
Nowhere is this essence better reflected than in da Vinci's drawing
Man in Circle and Square. Patrizia finds two aspects in
this sketch. One is obviously related to proportions of the human
body. This is believed to be so because in his notes, the painter
mentions only the fact of proportions and the two different mid-points
of the forms. He fails to elucidate any further.
However, the other aspect is subtler and it is here that da Vinci
the yogi supersedes da Vinci the artist. In the sketch,
da Vinci harmonizes the square and circle in the
human body, depicting it as a Christian cross in the square,
and as a St Andrew's cross in the circle. It is difficult
to perceive it, Patrizia argues, without being struck by its cosmic
quality and intuitive knowledge of Unity. She finds in it a
prophetic design that describes the transformation of Man to Superman.
According to Patrizia, the symbol of the square in the circle represents
the mortal and the manifest divine. Its beauty lies in the essential unity
of the two geometric symbols where, by refocusing and re-shifting the
central point, the two movements can now meet and express themselves.
The basic simplicity makes this drawing, as well as its innate
knowledge, all the more potent. Man is first placed in a square,
which represents his descent into matter. Here, all is fragmented, divisible.
But, as the square is also the symbol of the cross, the
Divine accepts this 'crucifixion'. The cross represents
matter and the square its form that unites the four elements in a single
flow of energy. In the zodiac cycle, the master mandala
of the universe, the cardinal pointsAries, Cancer, Libra and Capricornsignify
creation and make up the square on which the wheel finds its equilibrium.
These points also represent four aspects of the Divine Mother:
Mahakali,Maheshwari,Mahalakshmi
and Mahasaraswati. The symbol's completeness lies in the fact
that it contains in itself that from which it sprangthe circle.
During the descent into matter, the body of man has its midpoint in the
sexual center. From here man's physical aspect takes shape and
receives its life force. From here man draws and expends energy throughout
his life. The sexual center is the human being's pivot, and human
beings live on the cross, ignorant of the divine essence that inhabits
the whole of their being.
Divine man is represented by da Vinci within the circle.
Liberated from the confines of matter, he is different from mortal man,
as can be seen by the shift of his center from the genital area to the
navel. Da Vinci has graphically illustrated the harmony that springs
from this refocusing The distance of any point on the circle from
the center will be equal. In contrast, the square finds equal proportions
only on the cross.
In simple terms, this means that if man wants to realize divinity,
he must agree to relinquish his lower nature and turn to a higher
manifestation. The higher vital center then becomes the channel
through which he receives the life force. By continuing to live in the
lower nature, man accepts his limited existence. He can only know
the 'extremities' at the four points.
But the man in the circle has the whole cosmos at his disposal.
The circle represents a perfect harmony, a unity. It is the mother
of all symbols. By dexterously combining the square and the circle,
da Vinci reveals that in man mortal is man divine, that the microcosm
is really one with the macrocosm. And what makes his design especially
sublime is the fact that he has used man as his symbol.