Bid now to win Jetsun Dolma (TARA) Green Mask by Thupten Sherab!
Artist: Thupten Sherab
Title: Jetsun Dolma (TARA) Green Mask
Year created: 2023
Medium: Metal
Height (inches): 24
Width (inches): 24
Depth (inches): 1
Signed by the artist
Signed Area: back
Artist Bio:
Thupten Sherab is an accomplished artist with over 20 years of experience in the traditional and modern art forms of Tibetan thangka brocade, carpet design, applique techniques and mixed media art. His training in carpet design began in 1993 in Nepal and lasted for 5 years. He then went to specialize in Tibetan thangka brocade for the next 10 years and experimented with Traditional Tibetan color theory and painting. Thupten is highly skilled in merging traditional Tibetan art wisdom with modern materials and techniques. Thupten lives in New York City, where he runs a small workshop and continues to create art. His passion for traditional and modern art forms has led him to become a master of his craft.
Art Description:
Within Tibetan Buddhism Tara is regarded as a bodhisattva of compassion and action. She is the female aspect of Avalokiteśvara. Tara is also known as a saviouress, as a heavenly deity who hears the cries of beings experiencing misery in samsara.
Whether the Tara figure originated as a Buddhist or Hindu goddess is unclear and remains a source of inquiry among scholars. Tara became a very popular Vajrayana deity with the rise of Tantra in 8th-century Pala and, with the movement of Indian Buddhism into Tibet through Padmasambhava, the worship and practices of Tara became incorporated into Tibetan Buddhism as well. She eventually came to be considered the "Mother of all Buddhas", which usually refers to the enlightened wisdom of the Buddhas, while simultaneously echoing the ancient concept of the Mother Goddess in India.
Independent of whether she is classified as a deity, a Buddha, or a bodhisattva, Tara remains very popular in Tibet (and Tibetan communities in exile in Northern India), Mongolia, Nepal, Bhutan, Sikkim and is worshiped in a majority of Buddhist communities throughout the world (see also Guanyin, the female aspect of Avalokitesvara in Chinese Buddhism).
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