Where devotion transcends work and art
Updated: 2016-11-11 08:14
By Wang Kaihao and Li Yingqing in Shangri-La, Yunnan (China Daily)
|
||||||||
He often spends months fully focused on a work. One 7-meter-long thangka took him and another painter two years to finish.
There are six longtime painters in his workshop, but dozens gather there in summer. He has compiled a textbook on thangka as their reference guide.
He is the son of a thangka painter and first picked up drawing pens when he was 6. The technique has been passed down in his family for more than 10 generations.
"When my father finished a work for a monastery, he was treated like a god at the ceremony. Though the work was very energy-intensive, my father only asked for some yak meat or butter as payment. For a thangka painter the most important thing is to earn pilgrim's homage."
Kelsang Dawa became a lama in a monastery of his hometown when he was 11, following a thangka guru.
"I had to be very diligent, like getting up at 5 am for practice. But the hardships were worth it. No one can be a qualified thangka painter without at least seven years' learning and practice."
That was just a part of his syllabus to hone painting techniques; the study of Buddhism classics also played an important role.
To get more inspiration he has traveled to India, Bhutan and Nepal.
"It's impossible to be a good thangka painter without in-depth research in Buddhism, and someone exposed to different cultures can also breed new thoughts."
Kelsang Dawa later went to New York to teach thangka to local people and college students. But he felt it was more important to teach Chinese people about the art of their country, so he returned to China in 2007.
His paintings still keep attracting foreigners.
- A foreigner's guide to Singles Day shopping spree
- China jails 49 for catastrophic Tianjin warehouse blasts
- Taobao village gets ready for shopping spree on 11/11
- Parents leave behind 9 million children in China
- 60% Chinese rich people plan to buy house overseas, US most preferred
- Lovable cub Pandora recalled 78 years later
- Clinton concedes election, urges open mind on Trump
- Places to enjoy golden gingko tree leaves
- Taobao village gets ready for shopping spree on 11/11
- Overhead bridge rotated in East China's Shandong
- The 75th anniversary of Red Square parade celebrated
- Trump trumps Hillary: Cheers, tears and shock
- Bi-level bicycle storage in East China's Hangzhou
- In pics: Dine deep underground in a cave
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Anti-graft campaign targets poverty relief |
Cherry blossom signal arrival of spring |
In pictures: Destroying fake and shoddy products |
China's southernmost city to plant 500,000 trees |
Cavers make rare finds in Guangxi expedition |
Cutting hair for Longtaitou Festival |
Today's Top News
US election rhetoric unlikely to foreshadow future US-China relations
'Zero Hunger Run' held in Rome
Trump outlines anti-terror plan, proposing extreme vetting for immigrants
Phelps puts spotlight on cupping
US launches airstrikes against IS targets in Libya's Sirte
Ministry slams US-Korean THAAD deployment
Two police officers shot at protest in Dallas
Abe's blame game reveals his policies failing to get results
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |