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Amulet Box (Ga'u) Contents

Amulet boxes are commonly used to store all manner of sacred materials such as small texts, blessing cords, consecrated medicine, relics, and the like. Objects such as this were generally carried when traveling for some distance away from home, such as on pilgrimage, or for extended business trips away.


A complete amulet box generally has three parts: (1) the metal container of whatever shape, (2) a cloth covering with a buttoned fold for opening, and finally (3) the contents of the amulet box which can be an image made of metal, a small painting, tsa-tsa (stamped clay images), cuttings of cloth - such as from the robes of a sainted teacher that has passed away, protection string that has become too thread worn to wear, Tantric medicine (mendrub), or anything that is deemed special or blessed in some way.


Links:

Amulet Box Main Page

Amulet Box Contents Page

Protector Rahula - Updated & New Outline Page Added

The name Rahula belongs to three important figures in Buddhist iconography. The (1) first use is as the proper name for the biological son, Rahula, of Gautama - Shakyamuni Buddha. The (2) second use of the name is for the Indian cosmological deity Rahula, the deification of the phenomenon of an eclipse. The (3) third use of Rahula is for the horrific Nyingma protector deity, wrathful, with nine heads and a giant face on the belly. It is likely that this Buddhist protector is a Tibetan creation and not linked to any Sanskrit literature or Indian religious tradition. Aside from these three uses of the name there were also numerous Indian pandits and siddhas with the name Rahula, Rahula Bhadra, Rahula Gupta, etc.


Links:

Protector Rahula Main Page

Protector Rahula Outline Page

Dorje Legpa - Updated & New Outline Page Added

Indigenous to Tibet, it is said that the worldly spirit Dorje Legpa was subjugated in the 8th century by Guru Padmasambhava and oath bound as a protector of Buddhism. His primary function is to safeguard the Revealed Treasure texts (Terma) of the Nyingma Tradition of Tibetan Buddhism.


Dorje Legpa belongs to the category of Tibetan Buddhist Worldly Protector. He is depicted in two principal forms primarily differentiated by the mount he rides atop. The more common form is atop a (1) lion - depicted as a Tibetan snow lion and the second form is atop a (2) brown goat.


Links:

Dorje Legpa Main Page

Dorje Legpa Outline Page

A Controversial Tibetan Buddhist Deity

Dorje Shugden is generally believed to be a worldly protector deity that was likely practiced first in the Sakya Tradition of Tibetan Buddhism. According to some accounts he was inducted into the pantheon of Sakya protectors by Sakya Trizin Sonam Rinchen (1705-1741). Later, placed together with the two protector deities Dorje Setrab and Tsi'u Marpo they were collectively known as the Three Kings (Gyalpo Sum). In the Sakya texts Shugden is known as Dorje Shugden Tanag, or rather Dorje Shugden Riding a Black Horse. He holds a butcher's stick upraised in the right hand and a heart in the left lifted up to the mouth. Dressed in the robes of a monastic and wearing a gold lacquer riding hat, he sits atop a black horse. In the early 20th century Dorje Shugden Tanag fell out of favour with the Sakya Tradition in general. His devotees and practices have subsequently diminished. Since the late 20th century the offering rituals for the Three Kings are no longer found in the standard daily use Sakya Protectors manuals in monasteries in India or Tibet.


Sakya depictions of Dorje Shugden Tanag in paintings can be dated to circa 1800 (see examples). Although so far no sculpture have appeared nor are there any paintings with Shugden Tanag as the principal central figure. In all there are approximately half a dozen Sakya paintings known that have Shugden Tanag as a minor figure in the composition, a number of these are from the first half of the 20th century - research is ongoing.


Liturgical formulas and religious texts for presenting offerings to Dorje Shugden were created in the Sakya, Gelug, and Drugpa Kagyu Traditions of Tibetan Buddhism. The Drugpa Kagyu texts are from Bhutan.  (No Drugpa Kagyu paintings have so far come to light). It is possible that other traditions aside from these three mentioned also propitiated the worldly deity and created visual depictions. The Sakyas have several short liturgical works all written approximately 200 years ago or more, whereas in the last century the Gelugpas have feverishly written enough new material to fill two standard size Tibetan volumes. This collection of works is called in short the Dorje Shugden Be'u Bum. The collection also includes those early Sakya writings.


In these less than harmonious times, with reference to the study of Dorje Shugden, the academic world is not so inclined to search out and study these and other historically interesting Dorje Shugden texts.


In the Gelug Tradition evidence suggests, textual and visual, that the practice of Dorje Shugden became popular in the early 20th century and very prominent by the mid century. The popularity was also carried forth by such great teachers of the time as Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo and others. However, since very recent times, specifically the 1970s and a frenzied exchange of Tibetan language publications on the topic of Dorje Shugden, there are now two groups of Gelug followers that espouse two different views on the nature of Dorje Shugden. There are those who follow the Dalai Lama and have put the practice of Dorje Shugden aside believing that it is nothing more than the worship of a ghost or spirit (preta) and potentially harmful in the end. A second group of Gelug followers believe that Dorje Shugden is in fact a Wisdom Deity of the highest level and none other than Manjushri himself emanating in various forms through the last millennium - appearing now as Dorje Shugden - protector of the true faith.


The two Gelugpa groups remain unreconciled over the issue of Dorje Shugden.


Gelug Forms of Dorje Shugden:

1. Riding a Lion

2. Seated on a Throne

3. The Five Kings & Retinue

4. Others.....


In the Gelug protector pantheon the main form of Dorje Shugden holds a wavy long edged sword up to the sky in the right hand and a heart in the left. A mongoose sits perched at the bend of the left elbow and an upright katvanga staff leans against the left shoulder. He typically rides a lion, depicted as a Tibetan snow lion, although a number of texts state that he can ride any number of mounts. An alternate form of the deity has him holding a butcher's stick aloft with the right hand and a heart in the left, seated on a cushioned throne with one leg pendant. A variation of both these two appearances is the addition of four accompanying forms of Dorje Shugden creating a total of five prominent figures known as the Five Kings. (As an aside, the traditional Gelug depiction of Dorje Shugden is very close in appearance with the Nyingma protector Dorje Legpa).


The two earliest known depictions of the Gelug iconography of Dorje Shugden are those presented above. The sculpture, whether it is the original or not, was created in the early years of the 1900s to decorate the Chojin Lama Temple in Ulan Bator, Mongolia - where it can be found today. The painting, in the collection of the Field Museum of Chicago, was collected in Eastern Tibet or China by Field Museum anthropologist Berthold Laufer between 1908 and 1909. Early visual examples of a Gelug depiction of Dorje Shugden prior to the 1900s are rare at best. What is even more curious is a lack of any Dorje Shugden image depicted among the protectors in the many good and early examples of Gelug Refuge Field Paintings - Refuge Field paintings being a Gelugpa invention of the 17th and 18th century. The HAR website has over 60 specifically Gelug examples of these Refuge Field paintings from collections throughout the world - research is on going. (See a small selection of source texts).



Jeff Watt 12-2010


Links:

Dorje Shugden Main Page

Dorje Shugden Outline Page

Tibet House Museum (New Delhi) - Sculpture Collection

To help organize the Tibet House Museum sculpture collection a new Outline Page has been added.


Due to the large numbers of sculpture and ritual objects in the museum collection the objects have been further divided into eight broad groups for easy viewing. The HAR Search is always available for more in depth and refined searching of the Tibet House Collection:

1. Ritual Objects

2. Book Covers & Pages

3. Stupas

4. Buddhas

5. Bodhisattvas

6. Deities

7. Teachers: Siddhas & Lamas

8. Padmasambhava

Tibet House Collection (New Delhi) - Updated

The Tibet House Collection Main Page has been updated and re-organized with added sets pages and a new page for the Miscellanous Paintings.


"Tibet House was established in 1965 by His Holiness the Dalai Lama for the purpose of preserving the unique cultural heritage of Tibet at a time when it faced extinction in its homeland, as well as for providing a centre for Tibetan and Buddhist studies".


For an overview of the art holdings of Tibet House see the Tibet House Quick Guide. The collection of paintings have been placed in one large gallery which also serves as the Tibet House Main Page. It is somewhat awkward to navigate because of the size and also because of the sets included.


A separate page has been created for the Miscellaneous Paintings that are not that great in number compared with the sets of paintings. The strength of the Tibet House Collection is the vast number of sets - mostly complete. There is a small Textile Gallery and a separate Sculpture Gallery. Other than identifying each sculptural piece the sculpture has not yet been divided up into type, subject or sets.


Painting Sets:

1. Arhat Set (complete)

2. Avadana Stories Set (complete)

3. 7th Dalai Lama Biography Set (complete)

4. Dalai Lama Incarnation Set (complete)

5. Longdol Lama Set (complete)

6. Mahasiddha Set (incomplete)

7. Padmasambhava & Mahasiddha Set (complete)

8. Panchen Lama Incarnation Set (complete)

9. Shakyamuni Buddha Life Story Set (incomplete)

10. Tsongkapa Life Story Set (complete)

11. Amitayus Set (unknown)

12. Hands & Footprint Paintings (incomplete)

13. Mitra Gyatsa Mandala Painting Set (incomplete)

14. Miscellaneous Paintings Gallery

Kshetrapala: The Protector Who Rides a Bear

Kshetrapala is one of five retinue figures belonging to the practices of Shadbhuja Mahakala (one face, six hands) originating with the Shangpa Kagyu Tradition of Tibetan Buddhism. Kshetrapala, wrathful with one face and two hands, can typically be recognized by the brown or black bear that he sits or stands atop as a mount. For very wrathful rites and rituals Kshetrapala is practiced independently from the primary Shadbhuja Mahakala. In these fearsome situations Kshetrapala is often paired with a wrathful consort. (See Kshetrapala Outline Page).

Publication: The Guardian Deities of Tibet (Contents List)


A page listing the contents of The Guardian Deities of Tibet by Ladrang Kalsang (first published 1996) has been added along with links to the relevant subject pages on the HAR website.

Publication: Oracles & Demons of Tibet (Contents List)


A page listing the contents of Oracles and Demons of Tibet by Rene De Nebesky-Wojkowitz (1956) has been added along with links to the relevant subject pages on the HAR website.

Protector Deities: Traditions & Schools

The designation of 'Protector Deity' is common within the Buddhist and Bon religions of the Tibetan and Himalayan regions. The term is one designation in a rather fluid yet elaborate set of religious hierarchies in the various pantheons. (See the Protector Deities: Traditions & Schools Outline Page. Many additional pages have been both added and updated).


There are two basic types of Protector Deity, 1. worldly and 2. beyond worldly. The latter is typically called wisdom or enlightened protector, meaning that they are beyond samsara or worldly existence. How this actually works is for example the Buddhist protector deity Mahakala - Mahakala is a wrathful form of the primordial Buddha Vajradhara - therfore he is enlightened. In various other forms Mahakala can be an emanation of Akshobhya Buddha or any number of other Buddhas. The three main Anuttarayoga Tantra deities of Hevajra, Chakrasamvara and Guhyasamaja each have a specific Mahakala associated with the particular tantra such as: Panjara Mahakala - Panjarnata Tantra (Hevajra), Chaturmukha Mahakala - Guhyasamaja Tantra and the Chaturbhuja Mahakala associated with the various Chakrasamvara Tantras. The same system of logic and textual sources applies to Shri Devi.


Worldly protectors are not enlightened and not considered completely trustworthy. There is a bias in Tibetan Buddhism to treat all or almost all protectors coming from India to be wisdom protectors. The exception here are the Four Guardian Kings and what might be considered the traditional Hindu Gods, often referred to in the Tantras as worldly gods, or protectors.


Numerous mountain gods and indigenous Tibetan and Himalayan deities (often claimed by the Bon Religion) have been incorporated into the Tantric Buddhist pantheon as worldly deities with the function of a protector. Their job is to safe-guard Buddhism in general, geographic regions, specific monasteries, religious traditions or even a specific text as in the Nyingma 'Treasure' Tradition.

Protectors of the Bon Religion

Amongst the group of protector deities of the Bon Religion (bon skyongs srung ma) it is said that only Sipai Gyalmo is regarded as an enlightened deity. All of the rest are classified as worldly deities. Sipai Gyalmo is the wrathful aspect of Satrig Ersang (Sherab Chamma), one of the Four Transcendent Lords of the Bon Pantheon and foremost deity/god of the Bon Religion.


The most important group or set of guardians of Bon are known as the Three Protectors, Ma, Du, Tsen: meaning the female protector Sipai Gyalmo, Midud, male, who rides atop an otter and Tsen Apse, male, red in colour, in the appearance of a warrior. The protectors listed are only the most important or most common as found in art. There are many other special protectors unique to specific practice cycles such as the Tiger-face Protector unique to the deity Tagla Membar pictured on the Outline Page.

Gene Smith - Icon & Legend

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It is with a very sad heart that I announce that Gene Smith has passed away, Thursday, December the 16th, 2010. I have known of Gene through his writings and publications since 1973, visited his home in New Delhi, India, in 1980 and worked closely with him since 2001 to the present in New York City.


What always struck me most about Gene was his drive to not have students undergo the difficulties that he went through in learning and studying Tibetan literature and associated subjects. This is what was close between us and came up most often in conversation, the next generation - the future - making the literature and tools accessible. Gene and I shared a very important teacher, Dezhung Rinpoche Lungrig Tenpai Nyima. Dezhung Rinpoche was maybe the most important influence for what was to become the Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center, the second crowning jewel of Gene's career. The first great accomplishment, the first great crowning jewel, was of course the publication of thousands upon thousands of rare Tibetan texts and manuscripts while he worked in the New Delhi office of the U.S. Library of Congress.


As just one individual, Gene has been the most important single figure in the last half century working for the preservation of Tibetan literature. Gene has been the singular figure to galvanize the most important Tibetan scholars in the last 45 years in the preservation of Tibetan literature. In a half century, again, Gene has been the most important single figure to tirelessly work for the literary culture of Tibet and the Himalayan regions - to publish, to modernize, to digitize and to electronically archive for the present and future generations. Gene was truly a man suited for his time, an individual that accomplished what he set out to accomplish, responding to the needs of others. His passing is not a time for sadness but a time to celebrate the truly enormous accomplishment of his life that has benefited so many of us and in so many ways.


Jeff Watt

Director & Chief Curator

Himalayan Art Resources

Footprints!

Footprints of the 3rd Karmapa, Rangjung Dorje (1284-1339): belonging to the Karmapa incarnation lineage of the Karma Kagyu Tradition of Tibetan Buddhism. The footprints are accompanied by the early Marpa Kagyu lineage, predecessors to the Karma Kagyu (Kamtsang) lineage, along with Buddhas, protectors and wealth deities.

An Early Tibetan Painting of Manjushri

This painting is an early Tibetan depiction of Manjushri as the leader of the Three Lords a popular grouping of the bodhisattvas Manjushri, Avalokiteshvara and Vajrapani. The Seven Buddhas of the Past are depicted in the top register along with eight different forms of Manjushri placed throughout the composition.


Manjushri is a popular Buddhist figure commonly represented in art. He first arises from the Mahayana Sutra literature where he is regarded as a bodhisattva, a principal student of the Buddha, specializing in the subject of wisdom.


In the Tantric literature of Northern Buddhism he is seen as a completely enlightened Buddha with a great number of manifestations and appearances spanning all classes of Tantra. He can appear both simple or complex in form. All of these various forms function as Tantric meditational deities. (View more of the various forms of Manjushri as a Tantric deity).

Vajrayogini - Naropa Tradition - Outline Page

A new Vajrayogini Outline Page for the Naropa Tradition has been added to the site. Numerous specialty pages have been added along with new images both painting and sculpture.

Textiles Outline Page - Updated

The Textiles Outline Page has been updated as have many of the individual types pages such as applique, embroidery and weaving. (See the Outline Page).

Textiles - Selected Masterworks

There are three main types of textile art: embroidery, weaving and applique. Often the embroidery and applique types are combined together in a single composition making it difficult to catalogue as precisely one or the other. Appliques are created in all sizes and are well known as the giant 'tangkas' hanging from the sides of large architectural structures such as the Potala Palace in Lhasa. Embroidered 'tangkas' can be either small or in a medium sized composition. Woven works, generally from China, are very intricate and refined and can be quite large in size.


See the Textile Masterworks Page

Torana - Arches & Throne Backs in Himalayan Art

Torana Definition: The word 'torana' is from the Sanskrit language and is used commonly as the term to describe the stylized decorative framework surrounding sculptural and painted figures in Indian art specifically and Asian art in general. A torana can be described as a gate, gateway, arch, throne-back, backrest, or decorative niche surrounding a deity, god, buddha, bodhisattva or religious hierarch, teacher or saint. A decorative torana can also be employed above a temple doorway or decorating temple windows as found in the Kathmandu Valley of Nepal.


See the Torana Main Page