Sacred Realms: Temple Murals by Shashi Dhoj Tulachan From the Gayle and Edward P. Roski Collection.
I´ve been enjoying this great exhibition today at the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana. It´s impossible to capture the beauty of the whole temple murals but at least I am sharing some details. Please do not reproduce without my permission.
From the Museum´s web page:
¨ The nine oversized paintings shown in this exhibition are all the
work of one extraordinary 69-year-old Buddhist monk named Shashi Dhoj
Tulachan, a second generation thangka artist living
in Tuksche, a remote village located in Mustang, Nepal's northernmost district adjacent to Tibet.
Shashi Dhoj Tulachan has devoted much of his life to the restoration
of a nearby 16th century gompa (Tibetan monastery) known as the Chhairo
Gompa.
He is part of a local initiative, the Kali Gandaki Foundation Trust,
which is dedicated to raising money to preserve the Chhairo Gompa.
The practice of thangka painting is centuries old and is an art
carried out by highly trained monks for the purpose of teaching about
Buddha and the tenets of the Buddhist religion. The overwhelming amount
of detailed imagery in each painting includes deities, mythologies, and
the use of repeated and abstracted design. For those seeking
enlightenment, thangka paintings exist as objects of meditation.
The paintings in this collection are not thangkas in the traditional
sense. Thangkas are usually much smaller and are rolled on canvas so
that they can be easily transported and hung anywhere for teaching. The
thangkas exhibited here are similar in size to mural paintings found in
monasteries. These paintings also deviate from the rules for the
creation of a thangka where the exact use of color, shape, proportion,
characteristics and qualities of the imagery are all strictly regulated.
Shashi Dhoj Tulachan has painted this set of images by combining the
traditional motifs of one of the foremost schools recognized by
high-level monks in Tibet today, the Tibetan Karma Ghadri School, with
images that are purely and cleverly of his imagination. The vibrant
colors he used are made from natural mineral pigments.¨
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