Painting Thangkas on the Tibetan Plateau: Buddhist Art Making in Transition - Paperback
Painting Thangkas on the Tibetan Plateau: Buddhist Art Making in Transition - Paperback
Shipping: $8.00 or FREE when you spend $100+
Couldn't load pickup availability
by Xue Ming (Author), Stevan Harrell (Editor), Stevan Harrell (Foreword by)
Artists navigate faith, commerce, and gender as thangkas thrive beyond tradition
Xue Ming offers a rare and deeply researched look into the lives of Rebgong thangka painters, whose sacred art is at once devotional, commercial, and political. Rebgong, a major center of thangka painting since at least the eighteenth century, has long been a site of artistic and religious significance. But in contemporary China, thangkas exist within multiple, sometimes conflicting, markets. Tibetan communities near and far continue to commission these intricate paintings for ritual use, while the Chinese state promotes them as folk art and a national heritage commodity. At the same time, a growing number of non-Tibetan patrons seek thangkas for their religious efficacy--the very quality often elided in official narratives.
Bringing together over a decade of ethnographic research, Xue illuminates the complex intersections of artistic tradition, state narratives, and shifting economies Rebgong artists must negotiate. She gives particular attention to female thangka painters, who were only allowed to paint beginning in the twenty-first century, and who continue to face cultural and market constraints unique to their gender. The book challenges assumptions about commodification, showing that rather than diminishing the religious value of thangkas, the market can serve as a platform for painters to assert their faith, preserve their cultural traditions, and establish their artistic authority.
Blending anthropology, material religion, and art history, Painting Thangkas on the Tibetan Plateau reveals the evolving social life of Tibetan sacred art in the twenty-first century.
Author Biography
Xue Ming is a research associate in the division of anthropology at American Museum of Natural History.
Share
