Tibetan Thangka Painting

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 13. 04. 2020
  • For many traditional Tibetan artists, painting a deity becomes an act of worship, especially in the creation of traditional Tibetan scroll paintings known as thangkas. As a form of visual scripture, thangkas depict buddhas, bodhisattvas (enlightened beings), and teachers, and illustrate their sacred stories and the principles they embody. As both objects of worship and expressions of religious ideals, thangkas are a central feature in monastic shrines as well as in domestic altars.
    This video begins with scenes from the Seng Ge Shung monastery in Rebgong (Qinghai Province), a region famous for its thangkas, but focuses on the work of freelance artists Shawo Dukgyal and Shawo Thar. As they explain the processes of painting a thangka, we watch them prepare the canvas and begin outlining either in black or red ink, then painting the background, and finally the central figure-first the body and then the facial features. Once finished, the painting is usually gilded or embellished with gold leaf.
    Learn more about thangka painting: s.si.edu/2RD5mTw
    Producer: Dawa Drolma
    [Catalog No. CFV11276; © 2017 Smithsonian Institution]

Komentáře • 4