G1 Invocations 1 – 5

1. Your Voice Before The Onset of Doubt.

– Exploring the world before doubt, through wonder, trust, and unfiltered joy.

This visual captures the essence of reclaiming the inner voice. This is the voice that existed before doubt, conditioning, and external expectations.This visual captures the essence of reclaiming the inner voice. This is the voice that existed before doubt, conditioning, and external expectations.

Artist – Christine Almeida

The artwork shows a figure embracing a swirling form of light. This symbolizes the inner truth that has always lived within.

The light is not external — it emerges from within and surrounds the figure in a powerful, protective spiral. This radiant form represents the primal, instinctive knowing we all have at birth. It is the same truth spoken of in the text: “You didn’t discover your truth — you remembered it.”

“Before the world demanded volume, you moved mountains in silence.”

The black background dotted with stars reflects the contrast between silence and noise. It also reflects stillness and chaos. Yet the figure doesn’t seek escape. Instead, they hold their light with reverence, reconnecting with the voice that had always whispered beneath the noise.

This is not an act of remembering through memory. It is an act of remembering through feeling. It is the act of hugging the most sacred part of the self. The visual embodies the return to unfiltered truth, to the gentle but powerful flame that doesn’t clamor but endures. A quiet kind of strength — the kind the world often forgets, but never truly extinguishes.

2. Feeling Before You Explain.

In this visual, a lone figure stands at the edge of a cliff. This is a threshold between grounded certainty and the unknown sky. With one step, they begin to walk not into logic, not into reason — but into clouds. 

Artist – Christine Almeida

The clouds here symbolize pure emotion, intuition, and unspoken truth — the realm we often feel before we can articulate. The clouds don’t crumble. They hold him.

This scene illustrates the vulnerable yet courageous act of moving forward. This action is led by feeling. It happens before needing to justify, rationalize, or explain it to the world or even to oneself. It’s about trusting the quiet pull inside you, the instinct that says “yes” long before your words can catch up.

The text suggests something important. This is a moment before the mind constructs meaning. It is a time when the heart understands something. The voice hasn’t yet found language for it. It’s the power of knowing without defending. Belonging without proving. Feeling… without explaining.

The swirling lines, the soft clouds, and the figure’s balance convey a quiet confidence. It is not loud or performative. Instead, it is deeply connected. The visual reminds us that not everything must be explained to be real. Some truths only ask to be felt.

3. Truth Has Weight — Even When Spoken With Innocence.

A tiny weaver bird—fragile but persistent—weaves its nest, thread by thread. Each loop, each tie, holds meaning. The bird doesn’t roar, but it builds.

Artist – Vaishnavi Mainkar

Likewise, innocent voices may speak softly, but the truth they carry can anchor worlds.
Their quiet courage weaves something lasting.

4. Awaken to the World, But Do Not Abandon Wonder.

This piece visually balances two emotional landscapes: the world outside, and the wonder within.

Artist – Akanksha Bongane

On the left, a dark silhouette gently cradles a vivid, geometric flower. This flower is a symbol of inner imagination. It represents untouched curiosity.

On the right, cool tones reflect logic, structure, and the intellectual awakening that often replaces childhood wonder.

Between the two, an abstract flying creature, constructed from linear patterns, emerges from the flower — bridging imagination and rationality. It reminds us that even as we grow, we can adapt to a structured world. We can still keep our sense of magic alive. We need not sacrifice it.

“Wonder isn’t the opposite of awakening — it’s what makes awakening bearable.”

The red and blue divide subtly portrays the contrast between emotion and logic. The art’s flow reminds us they need not compete. They can coexist.

5. The Inner Child Still Lives in Me.

This artwork radiates warmth, playfulness, and memory — a vibrant invitation back to the child within.

Artist – Akanksha Bongane

The bright yellow grass and the dreamy blue sky set a joyful, nostalgic mood. The clouds are like teddy bears, balloons, flowers, ice-cream, and a fish

They symbolize imagination, innocence, and playfulness. They remind us of childhood joy. Their soft shapes and smiling faces show how those memories still live on inside. These feelings persist even as we grow up. The use of acrylic colours and soft brush strokes adds to the dreamy, childlike atmosphere of the scene.


Comments

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.