Rupert Spira
{{Short description|English author, philosopher, and potter}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox writer
| name = Rupert Spira
| image = Rupert Spira.jpg
| caption =
| birth_date = {{b-da|13 March 1960}}
| birth_place = London, England
| nationality = British
| occupation = Author, philosopher, potter
| spouse =
| website = {{URL|rupertspira.com}}
| subject = Spirituality, nonduality, philosophy, metaphysics, mysticism
}}
Rupert Spira ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|s|p|aɪ|r|ə}};{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKZRInhfe4g&t=3291s |title=Rupert Spira – 'The Art Of Peace And Happiness' – Interview by Iain McNay |date=2011-07-05 |publisher=Conscious TV |time=54:51 |access-date=2022-05-29 |quote=Hello. My name is Rupert Spira.}} born 1960) is an English philosopher, author and potter, based in Oxford, UK. He is a proponent of nonduality and what he terms 'the Direct Path'.{{Cite web |title=Rupert Spira: The Direct Path to Freedom {{!}} Psychology Today |url=https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-seekers-forum/202011/rupert-spira-the-direct-path-freedom |access-date=2022-06-02 |website=www.psychologytoday.com |language=en}}
Artistic education and apprenticeship
Just prior to beginning his formal spiritual exploration, Spira attended a retrospective exhibition by the studio potter Michael Cardew at Camberwell Arts Centre in London.{{Cite web |title=Rupert Spira - Overview |url=https://www.oxfordceramics.com/artists/62-rupert-spira/overview/ |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Oxford Ceramics Gallery |language=en}} His encounter with Cardew's work inspired him to abandon the scientific path he was on and begin studying with the brushwork potter Henry Hammond at West Surrey College of Art and Design in 1977{{Cite web |title=About author and speaker |url=https://rupertspira.com/about |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Rupert Spira |language=en}} and, aged eighteen, to take an apprenticeship with Michael Cardew, then aged eighty, at Wenford Bridge Pottery from 1980 to 1982. He graduated from West Surrey College of Art and Design with a BA in 1983.
Ceramic artist
In 1984, Spira opened his own studio at Lower Froyle in Hampshire. His early wheel-based pottery work reflects the influence of the traditional Bernard Leach utilitarian style. This work was mostly practical in nature, taking the form of teapots, vases, vessels, plates and other culinary ware.
In 1996, he set up his own pottery at Church Farm in Shropshire, described in a profile in The Guardian as a "potter's paradise".{{Cite news |last=Blanchard |first=Tamsin |date=2002-06-29 |title=My ode china |url=https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2002/jun/30/features.magazine7 |access-date=2024-04-19 |work=The Observer |language=en-GB |issn=0029-7712}} Here his style changed from a functional to a more minimalist, finer, more complex style ranging in size from miniature to large-scale. While he continued to make and sell functional pottery, he became known for his studio pottery.
His best and most recognisable work contains poems, both self-written and by Kathleen Raine the celebrated British poet. The poems are either scratched into the glaze in the sgraffito style or written as embossed letters either in a square block or in a single line across the surface of the vessel.[http://www.scva.org.uk/exhibitions/archive/?exhibition=32 Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts – Exhibitions – Archive] These works vary in size from small prayer bowls only a few centimetres across through to huge, open bowls 50 cm or more in diameter.
He is also known for his cylinders which are often made as part of a series and while each stands alone, are meant to be exhibited as a group. These also vary in scale from a few centimetres high through to the largest being a meter or more tall. He works in a limited palette, mainly simple white, off-white and black monochromes but he does also occasionally make deep, red-glazed bowls and bright yellow tea sets.{{Cite web |title=Rupert Spira {{!}} Widewalls |url=https://www.widewalls.ch/artists/rupert-spira |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=www.widewalls.ch |language=en}}
Following in the tradition of artists such as Paul Cézanne and William Blake, Spira understands art to be a sacred activity: "A bowl is a sacred transmission. Its potency lies in its capacity to evoke in us the visceral memory of its infinite reality. This potency invites us to participate in its being."{{Cite web |title=Publication: RUPERT SPIRA / A LIFE IN CERAMICS |url=https://www.oxfordceramics.com/publications/18-rupert-spira-a-life-in-ceramics/ |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Oxford Ceramics Gallery |language=en}}
In 2004, his work was documented in Bowl, published by the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts{{Cite web |title=Rupert Spira : bowl {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://search.worldcat.org/title/56979324 |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=search.worldcat.org |language=en}} which featured a foreword by David Attenborough and collection of essays including one by the leading English potter and writer Edmund de Waal.
After being active as a potter for over 30 years, Spira closed his studio in 2013 to focus on speaking and writing about Non-dualism. In 2015, a major retrospective of his works at The Oxford Ceramics Gallery – Rupert Spira: A Life in Ceramics – bought together pieces from every stage of Spira's career.{{Cite web |title=Publication: RUPERT SPIRA / A LIFE IN CERAMICS |url=https://www.oxfordceramics.com/publications/18-rupert-spira-a-life-in-ceramics/ |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Oxford Ceramics Gallery |language=en}} According to the Oxford Ceramics Gallery, Spira is "...among the finest ceramicists of his generation, known for his elegant tableware, his undulating open bowls, his eloquent groupings of slender cylinder vessels and his unique poem bowls".{{Cite web |title=Rupert Spira - Overview |url=https://www.oxfordceramics.com/artists/62-rupert-spira/overview/ |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Oxford Ceramics Gallery |language=en}}
His work can be found in private and public collections throughout the world, including the V&A,{{Citation |last=Spira |first=Rupert |title=Poem Bowl |date=2003 |url=https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O116002/poem-bowl-bowl-spira-rupert/ |access-date=2024-04-19}} the Fitzwilliam Museum,{{Cite web |title=Bowl, by Rupert Spira |url=https://collection.beta.fitz.ms/id/image/media-196771 |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=The Fitzwilliam Museum |language=en}} the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts{{Cite web |title=Rupert Spira Archives |url=https://www.sainsburycentre.ac.uk/art_object_artist_maker/rupert-spira/ |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Sainsbury Centre |language=en-GB}} and the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo.{{Cite web |title=SPIRA, Rupert (作家) |url=https://www.momat.go.jp/craft-museum/en/artists/bsp010 |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=National Crafts Museum |language=en}}
Sharing the non-dual understanding
Spira considers that his spiritual journey started when, aged fifteen, he first discovered the work of the 13th-century Persian poet Rumi. Following in his parents' footsteps,{{Cite web |title=Rupert Spira: The Direct Path to Freedom {{!}} Psychology Today United Kingdom |url=https://www.psychologytoday.com/gb/blog/the-seekers-forum/202011/rupert-spira-the-direct-path-freedom |access-date=2022-07-22 |website=www.psychologytoday.com |language=en}} he started studying at Colet House in London at the age of seventeen under Dr Francis Roles (himself a student of Ouspensky and Gurdjieff and the Advaita Vedanta teacher Swami Shantananda Saraswati). In tandem with his life as a ceramic artist, Spira thus began a twenty year period of study and meditation practice in the classical Advaita Vedanta tradition.
He also continued to investigate Sufism through the art of Mevlevi Turning, a form of sacred movement combining prayer and meditation. During this time he also immersed himself in the teachings of Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj and Ramana Maharshi and, in the late 1970s, he attended the last teachings Jiddu Krishnamurti gave at Brockwood Park.[https://brockwood.org.uk/brockwood-park Brockwood Park]
In 1997, Spira met his main teacher Francis Lucille, who introduced him to the teachings of Atmananda Krishna Menon and the Tantric tradition of Kashmir Shaivism (which Lucille had received from his teacher Jean Klein). These teachings form the basis of Spira's 'Direct Path' non-dual approach to spiritual awakening.[https://www.psychologytoday.com/gb/blog/the-seekers-forum/202011/rupert-spira-the-direct-path-freedom Psychology Today article on Spira]
In his writings on non-duality, Spira summarises his approach in the following way: "Non-duality is the recognition that underlying the multiplicity and diversity of experience there is a single, infinite and indivisible reality, whose nature is pure consciousness, from which all objects and selves derive their apparently independent existence. The recognition of this reality is not only the source of lasting happiness within all people; it is the foundation of peace between individuals, communities and nations".[https://rupertspira.com/non-duality Spira's website] In essence, Spira shares that happiness, or 'enlightenment', can be found if one can identify with the essential nature of our being – pure consciousness – that lies beyond feelings and thoughts.{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=73jmaTLBkpg |title=The Direct Path {{!}} Rupert Spira & Mooji Baba share their wisdom for enlightenment |date=27 May 2021 |publisher=YouTube}} For Spira, "The greatest discovery in life is that our essential nature does not share the limits or the destiny of the body and mind".{{Cite web |title=About author and speaker |url=https://rupertspira.com/about |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Rupert Spira |language=en}}
His work has been featured in the media in the UK on both BBC Radio 4{{cite web | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/p09b0752/ | title=Don't Tell Me the Score - A philosophy of sport: Rupert Spira - BBC Sounds }} and The Guardian.{{Cite news |last=Bishop |first=Cath |date=2024-01-20 |title=Looking beyond glory: rediscovering the soul of sport in front of us |url=https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2024/jan/20/the-need-for-the-spectacle-of-sport-puts-athletes-personal-identity-at-risk |access-date=2024-04-19 |work=The Guardian |language=en-GB |issn=0261-3077}}
Selected public collections
Works
=Ceramics Publications, Catalogues and Films=
- Rupert Spira Ceramics, Japan Touring Exhibition, 2003–2004
- River of Words, a short film by Helen Miller, commissioned by Lisa Sainsbury to accompany Spira's 2004 Japanese Touring Exhibition. Published on Vimeo in 2015.{{Cite AV media |url=https://vimeo.com/127255055 |title=River of Words |date=2015-05-08 |last=Miller |first=Helen |access-date=2024-04-19 |via=Vimeo}}
- Bowl, Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, 2004
- Rupert Spira: A Life in Ceramics, Oxford Ceramics Ltd, 2015. Published online on The Oxford Ceramics Gallery website.{{Cite web |title=Publication: RUPERT SPIRA / A LIFE IN CERAMICS |url=https://www.oxfordceramics.com/publications/18-rupert-spira-a-life-in-ceramics/ |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Oxford Ceramics Gallery |language=en}}
=Non-Duality Publications=
- The Transparency of Things: Contemplating the Nature of Experience, Non-Duality Press, 2008
- Presence, Volume I: The Art of Peace and Happiness, Non-Duality Press, 2011
- Presence, Volume II: The Intimacy of All Experience, Non-Duality Press, 2011
- The Ashes of Love: Sayings on the Essence of Non-Duality, Non-Duality Press, 2013
- The Light of Pure Knowing: Thirty Meditations on the Essence of Non-Duality, Sahaja Publications, 2014
- Transparent Body, Luminous World: The Tantric Yoga of Sensation and Perception, Sahaja Publications, 2016
- The Nature of Consciousness, Sahaja Publications, 2017
- Being Aware of Being Aware – The Essence of Meditation Series, Volume I, Sahaja Publications, 2017
- A Meditation on I Am, Sahaja Publications, 2021
- The Essential Self, Sahaja Publications, 2021
- Being Myself – The Essence of Meditation Series, Volume II, Sahaja Publications, 2021
- You Are the Happiness You Seek: Uncovering the Awareness of Being, Sahaja Publications, 2022
- I Am Always I, Sahaja Publications, 2023
- The Heart of Prayer – The Essence of Meditation Series, Volume III, Sahaja Publications, 2023
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category|Rupert Spira}}
- {{official website|rupertspira.com}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Spira, Rupert}}