Sacred Mandalas and Spiritual Art in Sacred Geometry: Where Art Meets Spirituality


Awakening in the Mountains of Tibet

"My Encounter with Sacred Art"

My journey with sacred mandalas began during a trip to Tibet that profoundly transformed my life. At the Museum of Tibetan Medicine Culture and Sacred Art in Xining, I experienced an intense connection with Tibetan sacred art and the symbols of sacred geometry.

It was not merely an aesthetic experience. It was an inner recognition that marked the beginning of a deeper spiritual and artistic path.

From that moment on, geometric structures, mandalas, and ancestral symbols began appearing in my dreams — forms that were not part of my conscious knowledge. That experience awakened in me the need to study, understand, and create through this symbolic language.

Thus began my dedication to sacred geometry mandalas and the "ArteSanae" collection.


From Art Director at Cinecittà to Spiritual Art

My professional career began as an Art Director in international film and television productions at the Cinecittà studios in Rome and in Spain. There, I developed discipline, technical precision, and a deep understanding of visual composition.

Over time, I felt the need to integrate that artistic foundation with a more inward exploration. Today, my work unites technique, symbolism, and consciousness.

Each piece combines structure, proportion, and symbolic study with a clear intention: to create spiritual art that carries presence and meaning.


How My Sacred Geometry Mandalas Are Created

My creative process is deeply connected to meditation. Many of the images I work with first appear in dreams or in states of deep concentration.

When these forms arise, I feel the need to bring them into physical form. Creating becomes a process of integration.

I follow the traditional method of Tibetan sacred painting, where each stroke is made with mindful attention. While working, I maintain a meditative state focused on the energy and meaning of the symbol.

Each Sri Yantra, each sacred mandala, and each sacred geometry composition I create is born from that combination of study, experience, and awareness.


When I Realized That Mandalas Were Not Just for Me

When the first mandalas began to appear in my life, I did not know what to do with them. I created them because I felt the need to bring them into form, but I did not have space to keep them all. I understood that they were not meant to remain only with me.

I decided to begin exhibiting them.

The response deeply surprised me. People would stop in front of the pieces and become emotional, some would cry, others would thank me for creating them because they felt something moving inside.

Later, I left part of my collection at a holistic retreat and yoga center where meditation and personal development practices take place. There, messages began to arrive from people speaking of connection, inner discoveries, and transformative experiences while contemplating the mandalas.

That was when I understood that this work was not only a personal process.

Thus, ArteSanae was born — a collection of sacred mandalas created for meditation, contemplation, and to accompany processes of inner transformation.


Sacred Mandalas for Meditation and Space Harmonization

Sacred geometry symbols have been used for centuries as tools for meditation and as representations of universal order.

The Sri Yantra, the Flower of Life and other traditional mandalas possess not only aesthetic beauty, but also a profound symbolic structure.

My intention is to create mandalas that can accompany personal processes, bring harmony into spaces, and serve as a point of inner connection.


When You Choose One of My Mandalas

When you choose one of my sacred mandalas, you are not merely acquiring a decorative piece. You are incorporating into your space a work created with awareness, the study of symbolism, and a life experience that gave origin to my path in spiritual art.

Each piece is born from a profound process and is intended to accompany your own inner development.


ArteSanae Collection – Sacred Geometry Mandalas

The ArteSanae collection brings together works created through geometric precision and the study of symbolism.

Each mandala is produced in museum-quality standards, respecting original proportions, symmetry, and chromatic balance.

These pieces can be integrated into:

  • ✨ Meditation and yoga spaces
  • ✨ Therapeutic offices and wellness centers
  • ✨ Homes seeking harmony and balance
  • ✨ Offices wishing to cultivate a more serene atmosphere
  • ✨ Hotels aiming to create unique and memorable environments
  • ✨ Special events with personalized decorative interventions

"EACH MANDALA FINDS ITS SOUL, EACH SOUL FINDS ITS MANDALA"

Elevate your energy, transform your space

Eliana Ciardi

Tibetan Cosmology Astrology

Frequently Asked Questions About Mandalas and Sacred Geometry

What is sacred geometry?

Sacred geometry is the study of forms and proportions that repeat throughout nature and have been used for centuries as a representation of universal order. Symbols such as the Sri Yantra or the Flower of Life are part of this tradition and are used in spiritual art as a visual language of balance and consciousness.


What is a mandala used for?

A mandala is a symbolic representation of the universe and of the inner structure of the human being. Traditionally, it is used as a tool for meditation and concentration. In contemporary environments, sacred mandalas are also integrated into spaces as elements of harmonization and visual presence.


What does the Sri Yantra mean?

The Sri Yantra is one of the most complex symbols of sacred geometry. It is composed of interlocking triangles that represent the union of complementary energies and the balance between the material and spiritual realms. In Hindu tradition, it is considered a diagram of expanded consciousness and a powerful meditation tool.


How do I choose a mandala for my home?

Choosing a mandala involves combining aesthetic sensitivity and personal intuition. You may consider the symbol that resonates most with you, the appropriate size for the space, and the intention you wish to reinforce: calm, focus, expansion, or balance. The most important aspect is the connection you feel when contemplating it.


Eliana Ciardi pintando una Thangka
detalle Prajnaparamita con lupa
Eliana Ciardi sentada en postua de loto en meditacion
Eliana Ciardi con la base del mandala toroide