

Regional Styles in Tibetan Painting
Historians of Tibetan painting struggle to establish such basic points as iconographical content, place of origin, age, religious affiliation, and painting school or style, especially when confronted by portable works that were removed from their original monasteries and scattered throughout the world. In this groundbreaking catalog, the authors locate paintings geographically using the method similar to that used for locating paintings in time. In both cases they identify the historical people connected with the painting through analyzing the portraits, inscriptions, and lineages that it contains. Then, by establishing where the key people involved in the painting lived and died, and with which monasteries and traditions they were most closely linked, they draw conclusions about the painting’s provenance and style, providing a bed rock of scholarship to support a new era in the field of Tibetan art history.
By David P. Jackson
With an essay by Rob Linrothe
Published: Rubin Museum of Art, New York (October 2012) Distributed by University of Washington Press, Settle and London
Format: HC (Hard Cover), 288 pages, 240 color illustrations
Product Dimensions: 9.75 x 11.5 x 0.75 inches
ISBN: 978-098-4519057
$35.00