Rubin Museum of Art

Masterworks
02/06/2013 - 01/13/2014

Masterworks: Jewels of the Collection showcases the best of Himalayan art in the Rubin Museum's collection in their international context. This new presentation provides access to old favorites and new acquisitions and gifts. Organized geographically, it sets the diverse regional traditions of western Tibet, central Tibet, eastern Tibet, and Bhutan in relation to the neighboring areas of India, Kashmir, Nepal, China, and Mongolia.

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Masterworks

Jewels of the Collection

March 11, 2011 - January 7, 2013


Amoghapasha;Nepal; ca. 1400; mineral pigment on cloth; C2006.66.592 (HAR100003)

Masterworks: Jewels of the Collection displays some of the museum's most stunning works of art. The stylistic diversity and relationships between various strands of Himalayan and neighboring cultural and artistic traditions are represented by important works of art spanning a period of over one thousand years. In addition to a wide range of Buddhist and Hindu deities rendered in all major media, Masterworks also highlights the museum's most notable recent acquisitions, all of which have rarely or never been exhibited.

Life-size facsimiles of an entire sequence of murals from the Lukhang, the Dalai Lamas' Secret Temple near the Potala Palace in Lhasa, Tibet, provide an exceptional opportunity for viewing Himalayan art at its most lavish. The original eighteenth-century wall paintings--inaccessible to the public until the late twentieth century--uniquely depict the most esoteric of meditation and yoga practices in vivid color and detail. Created with new photographic methods by Thomas Laird and Clint Clemens, this display of large-format, high resolution pigment prints allows for even better access to the paintings than is possible in the temple itself. Their presentation at the Rubin marks the first showing in the world of prints created using this technology and also provides the first-ever opportunity outside Tibet to view full-size Tibetan murals in their relationship to portable art from the region.

To learn even more about Masterworks, read the press release.

Curated by Christian Luczanits

Masterworks: Jewels of the Collection was made possible, in part, with an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.

 

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Audio Tour

Download the exhibition audio tour from iTunes U

Related Presentation: The Chase and the Dharma

View Slide Presentation

An illustrated keytalk by Dr. Toni Huber which explores images of hunting found in Tibetan paintings and manuscript illustrations. Learn More

Explore Organization and Iconography

Explore the Organization and Iconography in early Tibetan paintings and how the relative size and placement of figures is based upon the religious hierarchy of deities.  To experience the interactive please use the link above.

Explore Composition and Structure

Explore the Composition and Structure of a beautifully intricate early 19th century Tibetan painting. Learn the three-fold division that is typical of Tibetan paintings. To experience the interactive please use the link above.

Educator Resource Guides

Click here to view the Educator Resource Guide for the exhibition Masterworks: Jewels of the Collection.

View the Educator Resource Guide Online *New

Download the Resource Guide

Installation Photographs

Click here to view the current installation of Masterworks: Jewels of the Collection (2012, Rotation B).

Masterworks: Jewels of the Collection (2011, Rotation A)

 

Reading List

The Nepalese Legacy in Tibetan Painting by David P. Jackson

Mandala: Sacred Circle in Tibetan Buddhism by Martin Brauen

Demonic Divine:Himalayan Art and Beyond by Robert N. Linrothe and Marylin M. Rhie

Patron and Painter: Situ Panchen and the Revival of the Encampment Style by David P. Jackson

Worlds of Transformation: Tibetian Art of Wisdom and Compassion by Marilyn M. Rhie and Robert Thurman

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