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Tibetan Thangka

Year£º2006
Sort£ºFolk Fine Arts
Area£ºSichuan Province; Tibet Autonomous Region
Serial No.£º¢÷-14

Thangka, seen in every monastery and family shrine in Tibetan areas in Southwest China's Sichuan Province and Tibet Autonomous Region, is actually a kind of Tibetan scroll-banner painting and is a unique art form of Tibetan culture.

Thangka has been in vogue in Tibet for centuries. In Tibetan, thang means "unfolding" or "displaying," and thangka means "silk, satin, or cloth painting scroll." It is most often painted on scrolls or embroidered on wall hangings of silk or other cloth. Common at monasteries, lamas' residences, family halls for worshipping Buddha, and homes of Tibetan Buddhists, thangka is a mark of devotion to Buddhism and often serves as an object of worship.
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