Painting
Item number 832/1 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number 832/1 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Hanging textile Thangka painting. The imagery shows the Vajrayoginī/Vajravāhārī Mandala, multiple-armed figures arranged like a six-pointed star, with an eight-petalled flower at the centre. All in polychrome on a green background. The scene is bordered all the way around with a patterned orange-red, orange-yellow, and brown fabric. The painting has a plain orange-yellow silk cover. The top has a flat hanging rod with orange-red ribbons, and a light orange loop.
A thangka is a Tibetan Buddhist painting, usually depicting a Buddhist deity, scene, or mandala. Thangka serve as important teaching tools, depicting the life of the Buddha, various influential lamas and other deities and bodhisattvas.
The Vajrayoginī/Vajravāhārī Mandala is popular in different Tibetan Buddhist schools, in particular, the Karma Kagyü. The inscription on the reverse reads, in Tibetan, Om Ah Hum.
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A thangka is a Tibetan Buddhist painting, usually depicting a Buddhist deity, scene, or mandala. Thangka serve as important teaching tools, depicting the life of the Buddha, various influential lamas and other deities and bodhisattvas.
Hanging textile Thangka painting. The imagery shows the Vajrayoginī/Vajravāhārī Mandala, multiple-armed figures arranged like a six-pointed star, with an eight-petalled flower at the centre. All in polychrome on a green background. The scene is bordered all the way around with a patterned orange-red, orange-yellow, and brown fabric. The painting has a plain orange-yellow silk cover. The top has a flat hanging rod with orange-red ribbons, and a light orange loop.
The Vajrayoginī/Vajravāhārī Mandala is popular in different Tibetan Buddhist schools, in particular, the Karma Kagyü. The inscription on the reverse reads, in Tibetan, Om Ah Hum.
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