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Tangka painting
Tangka means scroll mounted with silken cloth. It is usually
in a vertical rectangular shape. The middle part called "beautiful
dragon" is a core of tangka painting. The four sides of the
picture are usually inlaid with yellow and red silks. The lower
middle part is inlaid with a square-shaped silk in different colors.
The
edge of the silk is decorated with red or white thread. Both ends
of the scroll are decorated with pure silver, ivory, jade or copper.
A dragon design is exquisitely carved on the scroll. The entire
picture is covered by color silk to protect the painting. When it
is on display, the silk cover can be put on the upper part of the
painting, showing a excellent decorating result.
The subject of tangka painting is varied, including religious,
autograph and historical paintings, as well as these reflecting
the lives and customs of local people, astronomical and calendar
calculations, Tibetan
medical science and medi-cines and human body dissecting pictures.
They are interesting, knowledgeable and full of religious and artistic
features. Therefore, they are praised as a Tibetan "encyclopedia".
A Buddhist statue is the most commonly seen religious painting.
Generally speaking, the central place is used to depict the main
figures. Beginning from the upper corner of the picture, related
figures, activity places or stories are painted around the central
figure in clockwise direction. Each tangka scroll describes a completed
story.
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