What could this place be, both marvelous and distorted, I wondered.
It looked like an incompletely assembled jigsaw puzzle, like bright fragments mixed with rough casings through which the inward brilliance flamed, brighter in some cases, dimmer in others.
''What is happening?'', I asked my guide.
Her voice low, as if subdued by the wonder of the place, she answered, ''You have entered Shevirat ha-Kelim, the Place of Shells and come under the Spell of the Mountain and the Valley.''
''Having reached here, you can have no peace until you climb towards the mountain and even as you climb you will be torn between the fascination you experience in this valley between the beautiful and the ugly and the restlessness inspired by the pull of the mountain.''
What is Happening Here?
The journey of the lost traveller continues as he enters into a valley reminiscent of the view of the world developed by Isaac Luria, the Jewish Kabbalist, further developed by Nachman of Bratslav in his tale ''The Heart and the Mountain'', complexified by visions suggestive of Dutch/French artist Vincent van Gogh's The Starry Night and his last, most iconic self portrait.
The Way of the Calabash is an ongoing series of complementary narratives and essays tracing an inner symbolic journey at the crossroads of art, spirituality and philosophy, a progression inspired by Chiagoziem Nnaemeka Orji’s self-portrait ‘’Onye Kwe, Chi Ya Ekwe’’.
This third part of the journey continues the visionary journey of a lost traveller who enters a landscape of radical contradiction—a valley of shattered beauty and a compelling mountain wreathed in cloud.
Guided by the structure of Lurianic Kabbalah’s Shevirat ha-Kelim (the Breaking of the Vessels), the narrative explores the dynamic tension between fragmentation and wholeness, dramatizing the condition of existence as simultaneously broken and luminous.
Visions of Vincent van Gogh’s The Starry Night and his final self-portrait emerge as images of this very struggle, mirroring the Igbo concept of Agwu—the creative force that embodies both insight and destabilization.
The work weaves together Jewish mysticism, Igbo cosmology, and Van Gogh’s artistic vision to suggest that the human quest for meaning unfolds precisely at the intersection of order and chaos, where the pull of the sublime meets the fractured beauty of the world.
The “calabash” becomes a metaphor for the personal cosmos—containing within it both rupture and possibility—while the journey itself represents the ongoing effort to reconcile these opposites.
The work asks what it means to seek the fullness of one's chi — one's personal cosmos — within a universe that is itself incomplete, its fragments still flaming toward wholeness. The mountain calls; the valley holds. The quest deepens.
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