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Three Fine Old Tibetan Tsakli Paintings Buddhist Teaching Cards 19th Century Tibet


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Collection No. TB-2705
Size 13cm x 10.5cm each painting
The Art of Compassion The Todd Barlin Collection
Asian Buddhist Art Todd Barlin Collection
Oceanic Arts Australia - Asian Art Natural Wood

Three Fine Old Tibetan Tsakli Paintings Buddhist Teaching Cards 19th Century Tibet

These three Tibetan Tsakli paintings depict offerings. From left to right: An Elephant Skin, A Tiger Skin, Ritual Objects. They are all finely painted with polychrome pigments on thick hand-made cotton paper. The back of each is painted with Tibetan script. Dating from the 18th Century and in very good condition. They are mounted in a single row with museum-quality archival card in dark blue, they are ready to put into a frame of your choice.

According to the Tibetan Art Scholar David Templeman writing in my exhibition catalogue: The Art of Compassion: Buddhist Art in The Todd Barlin Collection 2018,

” Buddhist teaching is not something learned from books, although they certainly play a part in reinforcing what one has already learned. The prime way of learning in Tibeto-Mongol Buddhism is through one’s master’s words. A common sentiment in those lands is that, without a fully qualified master to transmit them, the Buddha’s teachings may well never have existed. In learning the many complex rituals involving sometimes hundreds of deity forms, their names, iconography, secret syllables, and so on, a student must have a teacher who almost always transmits this information orally. As an aid to memory, especially where complex deities are to be learned, small cards representing these myriad forms are shown by the master to the teacher, and the details, often found on the back of each card, are read aloud by the teacher with the intention that the student retains the details in their memory. These small cards are called tsakli or tsakali. When a deity form has been fixed in the mind and one has embarked on the path of Buddhist tantra, at a certain stage one is expected to select a tutelary deity; that is, a deity that is core to one’s heart practice. This deity then becomes the focus of one being, and it is not unusual for both monks and laypeople to spend a great deal of money commissioning a large painting of such deities. These scroll paintings are known as thangkas ”

Provenance: The Todd Barlin Collection of Tibetan and Mongolian Buddhist Art & Asian Art

Exhibited: The Art of Compassion: Buddhist Art from The Todd Barlin Collection. Sydney Australia 2018. Catalogue written By David Templeman,

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