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21 septembre 2008

"The Dragon's Gift: The Sacred Arts of Bhutan" @ the Rubin Museum of Art, NY

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Je Jampel Dragpa (1766-1834), Bhutan, 19th century, Embroidery and brocade. 130.7 x 85.4 in. Phajoding Gonpa, Thimphu. Catalog number 92.

NEW YORK.- Wedged between India and China, Bhutan is one of the most remote places on earth. This fall, however, one need venture no farther than 17th Street and Seventh Avenue to view the finest examples of its artistic patrimony, the vast majority of which has never before traveled outside the tiny Himalayan kingdom. The occasion is the opening of the first comprehensive exhibition of Bhutanese sacred art in the continental United States at the Rubin Museum of Art (RMA), the foremost museum in the West for the study and display of the art of the Himalayas and surrounding regions.

The Dragon’s Gift: The Sacred Arts of Bhutan opens on Friday, September 19, 2008, and remains on view through January 5, 2009.

The Dragon’s Gift has been organized by the Honolulu Academy of Arts in Hawaii in cooperation with the Royal Government of Bhutan’s Department of Culture and the country’s Central Monastic Authority. The exhibition debuted in Honolulu earlier this year, before traveling to New York for its North American premiere this fall.

“Because Bhutan is unique among its Himalayan neighbors for never having been conquered, invaded, or colonized, its treasures have resided, largely intact, in the monastic settings for which they were created,” says Martin Brauen, the new Chief Curator of RMA. “This exhibition is therefore a rare opportunity to explore an entire ethos untouched by the modern world.” Ramon Prats, Senior Curator of RMA, who is responsible for the New York presentation, said, “RMA is especially pleased to provide a showcase on the East Coast for these rare objects, which are as valued for their function within a living spiritual tradition as for their considerable visual beauty.”

“Almost a quarter of the works featured in this show were discoveries for the curatorial team, objects we never expected to find as we set out on an arduous selection process three years ago,” adds Academy Exhibition Coordinator John Johnston.

The Dragon’s Gift comprises 87 works of art in the New York presentation, including intricate paintings and images created using appliqué and embroidery framed in brocade, called thangkas; gilt bronze and wooden sculptures; and ritual objects ranging in date from the 8th to the 20th century, with especially strong examples from the 17th through the 19th century. Because most of the works of art come from active temples, where they still serve as consecrated objects, Buddhist monks will remain in residence at RMA during the period of the exhibition, performing the necessary ritual observances.

The exhibition is divided into sections designed to lead the visitor through the richly symbolic content of Tantric Buddhism, the official religion of Bhutan.

Exhibition Highlights
A brilliantly colored scroll painting showing the Buddha Shakyamuni as a luminous, golden figure in the supreme moment prior to his enlightenment is one of the works encountered in the first section of the exhibition, which is devoted to the historical Buddha (Shakyamuni) and other Buddhas. Circling the central Shakyamuni figure in this rare painting are 16 Arhats, or sages, each with different attributes, minutely observed and rendered. Nearby, a little-seen painting depicts five Buddhas in a densely layered mandala form. Valued for its bestowal of protection, this thankga is ordinarily kept in one of the most important religious centers in Bhutan and displayed only at special festivals, where it is said to bring blessings.

A finely carved and painted seated figure, not quite seven inches tall, is found in the second section, which comprises images of bodhisattvas, those beings who defer their own attainment of buddhahood to assist others on the path to enlightenment. This sculpture of the Bodhisattva of Compassion was found and selected for the exhibition in an early 17th-century temple set into a mountain above the oldest fortress in Bhutan. Its gilding and the painting of the face and hair, brightened to a degree unusual in Western restoration, are evidence of proper respect in the Buddhist tradition.

Many of the faces that peer out from the works in The Dragon’s Gift are vivid, animated, and full of individual character, like that of Drugpa Kunleg (1455-1529), who bestowed his teachings in the 16th century. Such charismatic historical figures as Shabdrung Ngagwang Namgyal (1594-1651), a revered teacher and the founder of modern Bhutan, are depicted, as are legendary figures, such as Padmasambhava, who is said to have spread Tantric Buddhism throughout the region in the 8th century. The three ferocious faces of an 18th-century statue portraying a deity draped in human skins, skulls, freshly severed heads, and intertwined serpents—are simply terrifying.

A tiny, gem-studded gilt bronze statue showing the deity Vajrasattva and his consort in an erotic embrace highlights a section illustrating how Buddhist deities represent ritual practices like visualization. In this case, the complementary connection between masculine action and feminine wisdom—a principle called “yab-yum”—is powerfully evoked.

Ritual Dance (Cham)
Doubtless one of the most lasting contributions of The Dragon’s Gift is its documentation of the ritual dance forms of Bhutan (cham), which are both spiritual practices in themselves and a means of communicating Buddhist teachings.

The Honolulu Academy of Arts, in conjunction with Core of Culture, a Chicago based non-profit foundation devoted to dance preservation, compiled more than 300 hours of video documentation of cham: in the process, one dance was saved from extinction and four others revived for contemporary practice. This extensive database will be available to the public during the showing at RMA.

RMA plans to present free performances of the sacred cham dances in public spaces throughout New York City to coincide with the opening of the exhibition in September. Other programs will focus on the arts and crafts of Bhutan, its unique flora and fauna, its folklore and history, as well as a look at the youngest democracy’s burgeoning film industry. Because there is often an intimate connection between dance and the arts in Bhutanese rituals, on occasion dance footage will be screened in the exhibition galleries, nearby related works of art.

The cham database has been given to the Royal Government of Bhutan and the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center, New York, the largest dance archive in the world, by the Honolulu Academy of Arts and Core of Culture.

After its showing at RMA, The Dragon’s Gift: The Sacred Arts of Bhutan travels to the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, where it will be on view from February to May 2009.

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Buddha Akshobhya, Bhutan, 18th century, Parcel gilt silver alloy with cold gold, pigments, and turquoise, 8.5 x 5 x 4 in. Norbugang Zimgong Lhakhang, Punakha. Catalog Number 12.

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