- 732
A THANGKA DEPICTING TSONG KHAPA WITH TWO KADAM LINEAGES Western Tibet, circa 1500
Description
- cloth
Condition
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Catalogue Note
In the immediate years following his death in 1419, many of Tsong Khapa’s patrons and disciples commissioned portraits of their late master. The current work is likely one such commission, created in West Tibet in the 16th century during the beginning of the Guge revival period, in which the local style with its powerful Kashmiri/Western Himalayan influence fused with Indo-Newari and Chinese stylistic elements popularized in Central Tibet.
In the current work, compare the long, elegant fingers and the narrow shape of the eyes of the three central figures, as well as the crenellated edges and red decoration of the lotus throne to a late 15th century thangka depicting Shakyamuni Buddha from the Guge revival period, see Marylin Rhie and Robert Thurman, Wisdom and Compassion: The Sacred Art of Tibet, San Francisco, 1991, 9. 87, cat. no. 6.
Also compare a late 15th Century wall painting of Prajñaparamita at Tholing in West Tibet for further examples of the elongated fingers, narrowed eyes, the crenellated edging of the lotus petals, and the red on white decoration of the lotus throne, see ibid., p. 57, fig 23.
Although in the present work the individuals in the outer borders are not identified, we can infer from the composition that these represent the two Indo-Tibetan lineages of Yogachara and Madhyamaka, the legacy of the Kadampa tradition first propagated by Atisha, and later, by Tsong Khapa. These two lineages begin at the upper register: the Yogachara lineage descends anticlockwise from Shakyamuni Buddha at upper center; the Madhyamaka lineage descends clockwise from the same central point. For further discussion and similar compositions of Tsong Khapa with Kadam lineages, see two contemporaneous fifteenth century Tibetan paintings in the Rubin Museum of Art, acc. nos. F1997.31.14 and F1996.5.1.