Subject: Art, Nepali--Influence--Exhibitions

The Nepalese legacy in Tibetan painting
AuthorRubin Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.)Jackson, David Paul
PlaceNew York
PublisherRubin Museum of Art
CollectionRicci Institute Library [Luce]
Edition
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook (Exhibition catalog)
SeriesMasterworks of Tibetan painting series ; 2nd
ShelfSeminar Room 102-103
Call NumberND1046.T5 J27 2010
Descriptionxxiii, 239 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 31 cm.
Note

The Nepalese legacy in Tibetan painting /  David P. Jackson.

Published in conjunction with an exhibition organized and presented by the Rubin Museum of Art, New York, Sept. 3, 2010-May 23, 2011.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction. A stylistic overview -- Basic principles of structure -- Lineage and structure -- Previous research on the Beri style -- Connections with Sakya, real and imagined -- Stylistic features of the Beri -- Early Newar-inspired painting -- The Beri as a universal style -- Ngor and its Beri paintings.

With the Destruction of India's Buddhist monasteries in 1203, Tibet lost its main source of artistic inspiration. Nepal was the only nearby surviving center of traditional arts, where Newar artists of the Kathmandu valley had formed their own artistic style. Originally basing their work on Indian artistic models, the Newar gradually developed their own style demonstrating their excellence in painting, sculpture, and woodworking. These talents were not lost on the Tibetans, who copied and learned from their neighbors as the style spread throughout Tibet. This style, now known as Beri, flourished for more than four centuries, reaching its height from 1360 to 1460, when it was adopted as Tibet's universal painting style.

In this second publication and related exhibition in the "Masterworks of Tibetan Painting Series," the noted scholar David Jackson identifies the full extent of the Beri style, and shows the chronological development, religious patronage, and geographic scope that define the development of Beri style. In order to contradict the erroneous limitation imposed by early scholars' assumption that Beri is limited to the Ngor, Jackson gives a basic stylistic overview of five key features unique to Beri, as well as providing examples of the Early, Universal Tibetan Style, and Later Beri periods.

Featuring several major works, including a painting of four minutely detailed mandalas by fifteenth-century Newari artists and the last two known commissions in the Beri style, The Nepalese Legacy in Tibetan Painting places Beri in a context more complex than previously imagined. --Book Jacket.

 

Multimedia
ISBN9780977213184 ; 0977213188
LCCN2010009081