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MEGAN ASHMAN GALLERY

EXPERIENCE ART AS MAGIC

ORIGINAL MIXED-MEDIA ARTWORK

The Buddha Burns

Megan Ashman

400

PUBLISHED

SIZE

11x14

MEDIUM

Mixed media on canvas

COLLECTION

Elements & Seasons, Places & Spaces, People & Portraits, Emotion & Themes, Spirit & Dreams, Abstract & Concepts

SUBCOLLECTION

Fire, Fall, Ancient & Sacred Places, Men, Statues, Mental Health, Ethereal & Divine, Abstract

YEAR

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Carefully Packaged

Certificate of Authenticity

Direct Studio Support

FULL ARTWORK

ABOUT THE WORK

Artwork Description

A monumental Buddha statue sits in meditative repose while the world combusts around him in flames of orange, yellow, amber, and burnt sienna.

The enlightened one remains untouched by the inferno—his bronze or stone presence centered, calm, eyes closed in eternal contemplation.

The fire is not destructive but transformative, rendered in thick impasto that creates actual dimensional flames climbing the canvas surface.

Hidden within the conflagration are collaged fragments: architectural ruins, stairways leading nowhere, brick walls, windows, organic forms suggesting both creation and cremation.

A modern window appears incongruously in upper right—suggesting this apocalypse happens in contemporary time, that enlightenment must be sought amid twenty-first century burning.

The Buddha's form darkens to silhouette in places, as if he's becoming pure archetype, the idea of peace persisting beyond any single representation.

HOW IT WAS MADE

Materials & Process

ACRYLIC PAINT
INK
OIL PASTEL
ARCHIVAL VARNISH
COLLAGE ELEMENTS
CANVAS SURFACE
mediums/materials: phosphorescent paints, found objects, paper, wax, photo collage, oxidative inks, distress paint and inks, acrylic pouring, digitally altered images, acrylic paint, watercolor, spray paint, walnut ink, staining mediums, tissue paper, mica powders, glitter, heavy gel medium, gesso, pebeo prism and fantasy paints, ceramic paint, stained glass paint, alcohol inks, iridescent inks, distress crayons, charcoal, pastels, oil pastels, string, beads, jewelry, gems, chains, buttons, foils, newspaper, vinyl, plastic, walnut inks, india ink, colorshift paints and more!

mediums/materials: phosphorescent paints, found objects, paper, wax, photo collage, oxidative inks, distress paint and inks, acrylic pouring, digitally altered images, acrylic paint, watercolor, spray paint, walnut ink, staining mediums, tissue paper, mica powders, glitter, heavy gel medium, gesso, pebeo prism and fantasy paints, ceramic paint, stained glass paint, alcohol inks, iridescent inks, distress crayons, charcoal, pastels, oil pastels, string, beads, jewelry, gems, chains, buttons, foils, newspaper, vinyl, plastic, walnut inks, india ink, colorshift paints and more!

THE ARTIST'S VOICE

Interpretation / Story

This powerful piece speaks to the need for spiritual centeredness as the world literally burns around us. It's both ancient wisdom and contemporary necessity—how do we maintain peace when everything is on fire? The Buddha doesn't escape the flames, he simply isn't consumed by them. The piece might also explore the destructive side of enlightenment—the burning away of ego, attachment, the comfortable lies we live by. Or perhaps it suggests that true spiritual practice must acknowledge rather than deny catastrophe, finding peace not through escape but through radical acceptance of what is.

This powerful piece speaks to the need for spiritual centeredness as the world literally burns around us. It's both ancient wisdom and contemporary necessity—how do we maintain peace when everything is on fire? The Buddha doesn't escape the flames, he simply isn't consumed by them. The piece might also explore the destructive side of enlightenment—the burning away of ego, attachment, the comfortable lies we live by. Or perhaps it suggests that true spiritual practice must acknowledge rather than deny catastrophe, finding peace not through escape but through radical acceptance of what is.

When the world became fire, he finally understood why they called it practice.

WHAT LIVES INSIDE

Hidden Images & Symbolic Elements

The Buddha represents enlightenment, inner peace, detachment from worldly suffering, and the consciousness that observes without being consumed. Fire symbolizes purification, destruction, transformation, the burning away of illusion, and the apocalyptic anxiety of contemporary life (climate crisis, social collapse, personal burnout). The Buddha remaining serene amid flames evokes the Buddhist concept of equanimity—not being disturbed by circumstances. Architectural fragments suggest civilization burning, empires falling, the impermanence of all constructed things. Hidden stairways might represent spiritual ascension or the paths we climb even as everything falls.

BEFORE YOU COLLECT

Framing & Shipping Notes

01

ORIGINAL ARTWORK

This is the one-of-a-kind original, hand-created by Megan Ashman. No prints or reproductions are sold as originals.

02

SHIPS CAREFULLY PACKAGED

Each work is packed with archival materials and shipped with care. Insurance and tracking are included with every order.

03

FRAMING

This work ships unframed. Framing advice is available on request — we can suggest dimensions that suit the piece and your display context.

04

QUESTIONS BEFORE PURCHASING

Collectors are warmly encouraged to contact the studio before purchasing. We welcome all questions about scale, display, and condition.

PRIVATE COLLECTOR SUPPORT

Need to see more before collecting?

Request additional images, ask about scale and display, or schedule a private studio visit.

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