The clockwise rotation of the wheels—set in motion by the power of a hand or the elements—is believed to release the positive energy of the prayers into the world.

Taking the Tibetan prayer wheel as a metaphor for the power to create positive change, the exhibition highlights key ideas related to prayer wheels and their processes of creation, activation, and meaning. International artists Monika Bravo, Alexandra Dementieva, Youdhisthir Maharjan, Charwei Tsai, and Scenocosme’s Grégory Lasserre and Anaïs met den Ancxt take the Tibetan prayer wheel on a conceptual spin. Their works manifest in visible and tangible forms the power of intention, commitment, repetition, accumulation, and belief.

As part of her work in the exhibition, Charwei Tsai wrote the mantras of Padmasambhava (Guru Rinpoche) on spiral incense custom-made in Taiwan. In accordance with the artist’s wishes for respectful dispersal of the incense, pieces of the incense will be provided to Museum visitors who signed up to receive them following the closure of the exhibition.

The Wheel of Intentions
Empower your own intentions by turning The Wheel of Intentions, an interactive installation in the Museum lobby created by Potion and Ben Rubin, based on a concept by the Rubin Museum. Activate your intentions and reinforce the intentions of others with each turn of the wheel as they are released into the world and see how they travel up the spiral staircase and take visual form within the Power of Intention exhibition.

CuratorCurator

Elena Pakhoutova is senior curator, Himalayan art, at the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art and holds a PhD in Asian art history from the University of Virginia. She has curated several exhibitions at the Rubin, including Death Is Not the End (2023), The Power of Intention: Reinventing the (Prayer) Wheel (2019), and The Second Buddha: Master of Time (2018). More →

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The Power of Intention: Reinventing the (Prayer) Wheel is supported by Lois and Bob Baylis, Barbara Bowman, the Ellen Bayard Weedon Foundation, the Ministry of Culture (Taiwan) and Taipei Cultural Center in New York, and the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs.

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