ORTA ASYA ŞAMAN RİTÜELLERİ SEMBOL VE OBJELERİNİN SERAMİK FORMLARDA YORUMU
Özet
Shamans and artists can be said to have similar characteristics in various aspects. Many
artists, who do not qualify themselves as shamans, have been examined to determine
that they may contain shamanic characteristics. Shamanism has been investigated by
using archeology as well as multiple systems such as psychology, anthropology and
philosophy. This study explores that in Central Asian shamanic culture, objects that are
symbolized by loading meanings in rituals can be thought of as artistic objects and also
based on them, original forms can be reached with the help of interpretations.. With the
neo-shamanism, it is observed that the traditions called superstition are still being
implemented. By using the induction method, rituals, totem beliefs, objects, spiritual
communication and shamanic concepts in Central Asian shamanic culture have been
examined and the relationship between these concepts with the art and the artist has
been tried to be reached. In this way, the shaman and the artist were compared with the
help of the different sciences and resources utilized, and the ways in which they were
connected and the connections between them were investigated. In shaman culture, the
importance of rituals, types, purpose and reasons of rituals were examined; The
relationship between the artist, the art object production process and the rituals in the
shaman culture was examined. It can be said that artists appear to be the ones who took
the role of the shaman in our time. Because both art and shamanism use the metaphor
area where emotions are expressed and where healing takes place. Empathy flows with
a metaphoric vision, cuts across all boundaries. One of the common features between
shamanism and the artist is to investigate, reconstruct and reinterpret the objects. In
today's world where the essence of the past is forgotten through the search for money,
technology and power, interpreting the objects used by the shaman in rituals as artistic
objects can be a way of thinking for the life that has been forgotten. Ceramic
applications in this study are the interpretation of shaman culture in terms of totem,
ritual and object connections.