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Tangkha Paintings(ÌÆ¿¨ Tangka)
Mahasanghika school of tangkha painting. This school of tangkha painting is devoted to Sakyamuni, Maitreya and the Eighteen Arhats who are the main characters of the Mahasanghika sect of Buddhism. Paintings devoted to this sect are found in various temples in Tibet. Esoteric School of tangkha painting. The figures portrayed by this school of tangkha painting are mostly in grotesque and ferocious image. Quite a few of the paintings feature two figures that have their bodies intertwined. Indian Adaptations of tangkha painting. In this school of tangkha painting Buddhist sages are portrayed with their torso naked and their body twisted, with slender waists and fat hips. The facial expressions of the subjects are as a rule calm and gentle.
Apart from these four categories, there are also tangkha paintings that are devoted to folklore, local habits and customs, Tibetan medicine and historical tales. The tangkha paintings can be hung up on walls, and thus they are easy to be collected and stored. Such painting can be done on a variety of media, such as cloth, embroidery, tapestry woven in fine silk and gold thread, and mosaic fashioned out of pearls. Padded embroidery, however, is the most artistic of all, as this school of tangkha painting is made by patching up hundreds or even thousands of pieces of brocade, which is a combination of Han and Tibetan art. Pearl mosaic tangkhas are a rarity anywhere in this world.
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