Tibetan Art
Lokesh Chandra
216 pages
9-1/2 x 12-1/4
over 150 color plates
ISBN: 1-56852-761-6
The rich artistic heritage of Tibet
stems from the depths of the medita-
tions of great masters. It translated
into them an elaborate symbolic
sytem that takes the form of three-di-
mensional images or two-dimensional
thankas and mandalas. Tibetan art is a comprehensive introduction
to this complex iconography. It provides a glimpse of the under-
pinnings of this art and the land where it flourished. The reader is
introduced to a panoply of divine and earthly beings: the historic
Buddha Sakyamuni, arhats, spiritual masters, great lamas, and
founders of different religious lineages, as well as celestial Bud-
dhas Bodhisattvas, female deities, protectors or tutelary gods, (yi-
dams), defenders of the faith, guardians of the four cardinal points,
minor deities and supernatural beings. The leading gods are also
depicted in various forms and manifestations. It looks deeply into
tantric ideas and the energetic union of opposites represented in
Yab-Yum imagery with its emphasis on the dakini, the embodiment
of the feminine.
Lokesh Chandra is an internationally renowned scholar of Tibetan
and Sino-Japanes Buddhism. Enormously prolific, he is the author
of numerous important works, including critical editions of texts in
Sanskrit, Tibetan, Mongolian and Chinese, as well a the Tibetan-
Sanskrit Dictionary, Buddhist Iconography of Tibet and the Dic-
tionary of Buddhist Icongraphy in 15 volumes. He served in the
Indian Parliament from 1974–1980 and again from 1980–1986. At
present he is the Director of the International Academy for Indian
Culture.