Today’s 
Enlightening Entertainment 
will be presented 
in Turkish, 
with subtitles in Arabic, 
Aulacese (Vietnamese), 
Chinese, English, 
French, German, 
Indonesian, Italian, 
Japanese, Korean, 
Malay, Mongolian, 
Persian, Portuguese, 
Russian, Spanish, 
Turkish and Thai.
Welcome, 
art-loving viewers 
to today's episode of 
Enlightening Entertainment. 
Today, we are travelling 
to a land of 
an ancient civilization, 
Türkiye (Turkey), 
to meet a 
genuinely gifted painter.
Ms. Emine Güler 
has been inspired 
since childhood 
by the colors and images 
of central Anatolia, 
a place abundantly blessed 
by a rich cultural 
and natural heritage.
My works started 
perhaps before writing, 
before learning 
to read and write.
Actually I have been 
drawing as early as 
I could remember.
Naturally, 
the interactions are back 
in my earliest childhood.
During my childhood, 
I was wondering about 
the ancient time, 
I was trying to find out 
about the lives in the ancient
ruins by imagining; 
this I think 
was pure curiosity, and 
this curiosity gave rise to 
more mythological thoughts.
I started to go back 
to the very beginning of
the evolution of humankind.
Naturally, 
they say there is no limit 
to the imagination.
Ms. Emine Güler 
was born in Konya, 
in the Central Anatolian 
region of Turkey. 
Konya was the hometown 
of the great Sufi poet 
and theologian, 
Mevlana Celaleddin Rumi. 
In Konya, 
vast wheat fields 
glow in the sun 
with amber light, 
as an endless horizon 
reveals the land’s 
beautiful brown shades.
I simply reflected 
earth, the soil 
in my first paintings.
I was using 
mineral oxide colors 
and these paintings were 
inspired from the earth.
I even gave the light
using transparency, 
I mean with the browns 
or blues I use. 
Making use of 
the whiteness of the canvas, 
I just give the whiteness
of light.
Naturally, there are 
reflections of traditions 
in the paintings, 
like the ones 
featuring horse figures. 
They are much connected 
with Anatolia.
In Anatolia, 
when the father agrees 
to a son-in-law, 
the daughter 
marries this man, the girl 
goes to her new home.
She both cries and goes. 
The name of this painting 
is also “I both cry and I go.” 
And traditionally 
brides traveled 
to their new homes 
on horseback.
In other words, the feelings 
in my pictures 
are rooted in Anatolia.
Since there are 
certain abstractions 
in the painting, the figures 
are not very clear. 
But I made them like that 
on purpose.
The artist must leave 
a little bit of imagination 
to the beholder as well,
the beholder 
should be allowed 
to think over the painting 
and find the depth; 
actually the moment
he finds it, 
he has established a bond 
with the painting.
I named my concept 
in my paintings 
“the hidden impressions,”
meaning there is more 
to find in the painting, 
but hidden.
Emine Güler is 
a prolific artist 
who has held at least 
20 exhibitions so far, 
with the latest at 
the Hagia Sophia Museum 
in Istanbul, Turkey. 
The museum, which 
once used to be a church 
and a mosque, 
is a timeless shrine 
of history, spirituality 
and aesthetics.
I don't accept that there is 
a single living being 
who doesn't have faith.
And everyone would 
absolutely have one belief 
even deep inside.
More accurately, the world 
is such a wonderful place 
and there are so many 
wonderful creations, 
that, it should come from
some source 
and such beauties have 
necessarily been created 
in a way or another     
by the power of creation.
Ms. Güler has developed 
a unique painting technique 
and an elegantly detailed 
yet mysteriously 
enchanting style.
In my paintings, 
as I call them 
the “hidden impressions,”
the past is certainly 
carried to our day, 
with experiences 
lived in the past lives.
That is 
the concealed purpose, 
because according to 
the laws of the world, 
nothing existing vanishes 
and nothing can be created 
from the nonexistent.
So, in one way or another 
we continue to carry 
the traces of the past.
The soil 
which has hosted people 
since many centuries
continues to carry 
the traces of living beings 
ever present on it.
For Ms. Güler, 
painting itself is 
a meditative experience.
When I am deeply 
concentrated in painting, 
my contact 
with my surrounding 
really stops.
I am detached 
from the world 
where I am working.
I go back to my thoughts 
as a child. 
Just like describing 
the world to someone 
who can not see
and you describe him 
the external world, 
his surroundings, 
this and that.
In this painting, 
just before the exhibition 
in Hagia Sophia,
on the days when 
I started to get ready 
for this exhibition, 
I had a dream  
and I was awakened by 
the strength of the dream. 
But it was an awakening 
in my dream and in fact 
I was still asleep, 
my mind was so busy 
with the traces 
of past life experiences.
I reflected many types 
of creatures, experiences 
on the canvas without 
being aware of my action.
I solved the mystery 
of the birds by myself 
at a later time, 
which are found in 
almost all my paintings. 
Before, when I depicted 
a piece of land, 
a monument, there were 
always birds beside it.
Of course, 
I was continuously 
making observations 
and I found out that, 
without an exception, 
all old buildings 
had special places where 
birds made their nests.
Of course, there 
any many types of birds 
around such places. 
Like the pigeons present 
in and on Haghia Sofia
What about these globes? 
Everyone has a world 
belonging to him 
or every era has 
its own specific world. 
Actually, in this world 
there are reflections 
and things like these 
you see here. 
The worlds are held 
by hands or there are
actually two, three of them. 
So it represents that 
everyone has a world
belonging to him.
Ms. Güler’s paintings 
exude a spiritual air. 
They contemplate on 
the deep meaning of life 
and the phenomena 
beyond the surface that 
the physical eyes cannot see.
If a figure arises here, 
just behind it 
there are birds, 
it continues with birds, 
birds, a new place,
a new world, 
a new composition, 
a dream, and there, 
the impressions, 
like there will be dreams 
within the dream again.
Some figures in the picture 
do view the painting and 
maybe they are beholding 
the beholders 
of the painting.
Because I feel the eye 
of a beholder 
when I am painting, 
like some figures 
in the painting, 
and everyone has 
his or her own world 
in his or her own hands.
As you know, there are 
many lives coexisting 
within the world as we say 
there are many worlds
within a world.
Even if 
I do not always do  
there can be an elephant 
or a peacock 
in my painting.
In this one, again 
a mythological merman, 
different places, stories...
Making a journey 
into the past 
is amusing for me, 
it also reflects joyfully 
in my painting 
and painting them 
is also a great delight.
I do not do pre-drawings 
in my paintings.
Or in other words, 
there are no pre-drawn 
figures on the canvas 
or the surface, 
there are no lines, 
pencil drawings.
The painting 
directly forms itself.
When starting a painting, 
I start at a single point 
and the painting grows 
by itself.
Once, the artist 
was inspired to paint 
the historical region 
of Cappadocia, 
a central region in Turkey 
that, till that time, 
she had never seen before. 
The outcome 
of the painting was 
remarkably surprising. 
My paintings, 
maybe essentially 
got created from me, 
in idea and thinking, 
in aesthetics,
but when I saw 
the natural structure 
of Cappadocia, 
I saw that the place 
and my imagination 
overlapped almost the same.
The underground city 
in Cappadocia, 
a 12-story structure 
below the ground, 
is the foundation 
for these forms.
The pigeons 
I use in my paintings 
are also an outcome 
of the connection 
I established 
with the dovecotes 
(pidgeon houses) that 
exist very concentratedly 
in Cappadocia.
Currently, Ms. Güler 
contributes her talents 
through teaching art classes 
in private schools 
and working as a curator 
at the Yesilköy 2001 
Art Gallery 
in Istanbul, Turkey.
When she herself 
was being trained 
as a master artist, 
she once received 
cherished advice 
from her teacher 
about perseverance. 
He told her: 
“When you feel desperate 
about creating something, 
go out and watch a worker 
trying to open up rocks 
with a sledgehammer. 
Seeing a massive rock 
turn into pieces 
with the 100th stroke 
of the hammer, 
you will understand that 
it is not the 100th stroke 
but the 99 strokes 
before that is 
what actually fractures it.”
At this moment, 
I don’t have a plan 
as to what will be drawn, 
what kind of painting 
this will be, 
what colors will be needed. 
As the painting evolves, 
whatever the painting 
requires, 
the brushes and the paints 
respond in that way. 
Naturally, that means 
thousands of strokes 
in one painting.
There are no surface layers 
in the painting. 
Thoughts and philosophy, 
and also dreams 
take part a bit in the 
formation of the painting.
Only the textures are 
visible in the painting. 
This can be 
a texture of soil.
It can be the surface, 
the skin, the outer look 
of a living being, 
or any other object.
Any object 
existing in the universe 
can create some products, 
because the cosmos itself 
is living, 
Of course, it is also joyful 
for me; by adding a bit 
of my own imagination, 
I make a joyful trip 
to the past.
And they are reflected 
as hidden impressions.
We thank the gifted 
and celebrated painter 
Ms. Emine Güler, 
for sharing your 
art and words with us. 
May you continue to reflect 
our collective memories 
as human beings 
as well as Turkey’s 
specialness and beauty.
Thank you, 
gracious viewers, 
for joining us 
on today’s episode of 
Enlightening Entertainment. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television for 
Words of Wisdom, 
after Noteworthy News. 
May the Divine creativity 
within guide you 
toward the Light.