Thangka: Sacred Paintings of the Tibetan Buddhist World
Somewhere on the high plateau of Central Asia, at altitudes where the air is thin and the sky an almost unnatural shade of deep blue, a tradition of sacred painting evolved over a thousand years that is among the most technically demanding, spiritually concentrated, and visually overwhelming art forms in human history. These are the **thangkas** — sacred painted scrolls of Tibetan Buddhism — and to look at one carefully is to enter a visual cosmology of extraordinary complexity, in which every color, gesture, proportion, and symbol has been determined by generations of scholarly and contemplative tradition, and in which the painting itself is understood not as aesthetic expression but as a technology of liberation. The word "thangka" (also spelled *thanka* or *tanka*) derives from the Tibetan *thang yig*, meaning roughly "something flat." Unlike the fixed panel paintings of European Christian tradition or the wall murals of ancient Egypt, thangkas are painted on co...