Skip to main content
A THANGKA OF JONANG TARANATHA CENTRAL TIBET, 17TH CENTURY image 1
A THANGKA OF JONANG TARANATHA CENTRAL TIBET, 17TH CENTURY image 2
Lot 1022

A THANGKA OF JONANG TARANATHA
CENTRAL TIBET, 17TH CENTURY

2 December 2021, 19:00 HKT
Hong Kong, Six Pacific Place

HK$300,000 - HK$500,000

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

How to sell

Looking for a similar item?

Our Indian, Himalayan & Southeast Asian Art specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.

Find your local specialist

Ask about this lot

A THANGKA OF JONANG TARANATHA

CENTRAL TIBET, 17TH CENTURY
Distemper on cloth; recto with Tibetan inscriptions in gold identifying each figure.
Himalayan Art Resources item no.23550
Image: 69 x 48 cm (27 x 19 in.);
With silks: 120 x 70 cm (27 x 27 in.)

Footnotes

藏中 十七世紀 覺囊多羅那他唐卡

This thangka depicts the great historian, Taranatha (1575-1634), the foremost sage of the Jonang school of Tibetan Buddhism, one of the key Tibetan leaders of the turbulent 17th century, and pivotal to any discussion of Mongolian Buddhism.

Gold is lavished upon the painted surface, heightening textiles, architecture, and the verdant paradise with blue craggy rocks that nod to the tradition of landscape painting in China. The thangka's high quality resounds within its smallest details, such as the draftsmanship of Taranatha's elegant hands, the vigor of each mythical beast within his elaborate mandorla, and the division of space through the employ of subtle brown and green washes within the landscape.

Taranatha is one of the most frequently referenced Tibetan historians by modern writers on the history of Buddhism. He was a polymath who penned a vast bibliography, including numerous treatises on Buddhist philosophy, art, and "the most important history of Indian Buddhism to be written in any language." (Martin, Tibetan Histories. A Bibliography of Tibetan Language Historical Works, London, 1997.) Taranatha was an avid patron of the arts and one of the principal agents behind the 'Pala Revival' style in Tibet, commissioning the restoration of Pala-style murals at his order's primary enclave, the Jonang Puntsog Ling.

Escaping increasing pressure from Gelug domination and its policies of 'unification' within the 17th century, Taranatha spent his last years missionizing dwindling Sakya monasteries in Mongolia. Subsequently, Mongolia's great spiritual leader, Zanabazar (1635-1723), was identified as Taranatha's reincarnation, upholding the latter's reputation as "a man of deep learning who made his field of enquiry as wide as humanly possible." (Templeman, "Taranatha the Historian", in The Tibet Journal, vol.6, no.2, 1981, pp.41-6.) All eight of his Mongolian incarnations held Taranatha's posthumous epithet, Jebtsundamba Khutukhtu ('Venerable and Saint Master Incarnate'), until 1924.

Provenance:
Rossi & Rossi Ltd., London
Private European Collection

Additional information

Bid now on these items