The earliest surviving Tibetan images date
from the ninth century AD, and from that time until the present
a wealth of magnificent painting and sculpture survives which
has served both as the focus of meditation visualisations for
many generations of Buddhist adepts, as well as educational
illustrations for ordinary Tibetan people. Tragically, since
the Chinese occupation began in 1949, many thousands of temples
with their splendid wall paintings and magnificent sculptures
have been destroyed, so that today there are probably many more
beautiful Tibetan works of art in Western museums and private
collections than presently exist in Tibet.
Painting
Magnificent examples of Tibetan temple wall
paintings still exist, however, both in Tibet itself (Tsaparang,
the Gyantse Kumbum), in the Tibetan cultural areas of Indian
Ladakh Alchi), and Himachal Pradesh (Tabo), in Nepal (Mustang)
and in Bhutan (Paro Dzong).
However, the painting
medium best known outside Tibet is the thangka, or scroll painting.
Usually painted on cotton cloth, more rarely on silk, colours
are traditionally made from minerals as well as vegetable dyes.
Before application they are de-saturated in varying degrees
in lime and mixed with boiled gum Arabic. These stone
colours maintain their intensity so well that many old thangkas
still retain striking colours. Today, Tibetan artists also use
modern synthetic dyes.
Thangkas are traditionally mounted in frames
of silk brocade with a pole or batten at the top and bottom
so that it can be easily hung. Since it is also easily rolled
up, the thangka can be stored away or readily transported from
once place to another. Itinerant lamas used them as icons of
personal devotion and to sanctify tents in which they held teachings
of Buddhist doctrine. They are also used as effective teaching
aids. In most Tibetan homes the thangka, together with small
bronze images, is an integral part of the family altar and a
vehicle of visual dharma.
Manuscripts also are often adorned with
miniature paintings, as are their wooden covers, and sets of
initiation cards, called tsakali, which are another medium of
miniature painting.
Sculpture
Metal, clay, stucco, wood, stone, and butter
are all used in the creation of sculptural images, yet by far
the best known of these is metal, since small, portable, bronze
images of a great variety of meditation deities are most frequently
encountered. Nevertheless, clay and stucco have been used since
ancient times, particularly in the creation of very large images
installed in monasteries and temples. Wood is also widely used,
intricately carved for entrances to temples and for interior
pillars and in covers for scriptures in monastery libraries.
Most portable images, however, are made
from metal, usually bronze, but occasionally silver or gold.
Bronzes are usually made by the lost wax process,
where a wax image is created, then coated with a clay based
mould which is subsequently baked allowing the wax to melt and
drain away, replacing it with molten metal. The finished image
is often then gilded and adorned with precious and semi precious
stones. Metal images are also sometimes made by the repousse
method, where copper, or less commonly silver or gold, is hammered
out into the required shape from `the reverse side.
Works of art are usually commissioned, either
by monasteries or lay patrons, and their execution generally
follows strict canonical rules as to proportions, symbols and
colours, in accordance with artistic manuals.
Tibetan art is largely anonymous, and this
custom of artistic anonymity is grounded in the Buddhist belief
in working toward the elimination of the individual ego. The
Tibetan attitude to a work of art is that when it is successfully
completed it has an existence of its own and an inherent power
to help the viewer come to spiritual realisation. It ceases
to be the property of the artist when it leaves his studio.
Form
and Function
The form given to a painted or sculpted
image follows a clear and well defined iconography set out in
the appropriate texts, whilst artists manuals illustrate
the strict measures to be observed in achieving correct proportion
and balance. The Tibetan artist, like his Indian counterpart,
is not free to improvise on his personal concepts of the appearance
of an individual deity but is required to work within a well
defined structure. In the tantric art of Tibetan Buddhism, benign,
wrathful, serene or terrifying deities all illustrate an aspect
of the Buddha mind, or the potential to be found in each of
us, so that the artist projects for us archetypal images from
deep within our subconscious, inviting us to contemplate those
aspects of our being which usually remain hidden. For the meditation
practitioner, such images are models for the process of visualisation,
where the adept develops the ability, through stabilised concentration
and cultivated inner vision, to visualise the deity in all its
phenomenal detail and then absorb this vision into him/herself
and so absorb the spiritual qualities particular to that deity.
Butter
Sculptures
These are a complex and uniquely Tibetan
concept and are usually constructed by teams of monks for a
festival or religious event.
They are not entirely made from butter,
however, being constructed on frames of wood and leather, to
which are applied barley flour and butter dough. They are then
painted. Some were truly gigantic being as high as a three storey
building. After the ceremony they are destroyed. In this they
are like sand mandalas such as the well known Kalachakra Sand
Mandala, painstakingly constructed over many days from different
coloured grains of sand before being swept away at the end of
the ceremony. The symbolism behind the destruction of such works
is based on the illusory nature of things, even those we cherish
most.
Decorative
Arts and Craft
Although Tibet had no political ties with
China after the end of the Yuan Dynasty (mid 14th
century), there were nevertheless frequent visits of monks and
lamas to China from the great Tibetan monasteries. This enhanced
trade between the two countries and added greatly to the monasteries
wealth, at the same time providing a channel through which cultural
and artistic influences enriched Tibetan life.
The
Arts in Exile
In Dharamsala, the Centre for Tibetan Art
and Crafts was established in 1977 under the auspices of His
Holiness the Dalai Lamas Charitable Trust. Its primary
purpose is not only to preserve essential areas of the endangered
Tibetan culture but to inspire fresh enthusiasm and creativity
in Tibetan artistic expression.
Selection of students is made on the basis
of both aptitude and economic background with priority given
to those applicants who are particularly needy. Most of the
crafts produced are exported through the offices of the Charitable
Trust.
The Library of Tibetan Works and Archives
(LTWA) was established in Dharamsala in 1971 as a repository
for ancient cultural objects, books and manuscripts from Tibet.
LTWA now has eight departments: Research and Translation, Publications,
Oral History and Film Documentation, Reference (reading room),
Tibetan Studies, Tibetan manuscripts, Museum, School for Thangka
Painting and Wood Carving. LTWA has a team of Tibetan scholars
engaged in research, translation, instruction and the publication
of books.
Since its founding the Library has acquired
a reputation as an international centre for Tibetan Studies.
To date, more than five thousand scholars and research students
from all over the world have benefited from this unique educational
institution. LTWA also offers regular classes in Buddhist philosophy.