Artist: Ang Tsherin Sherpa
Title: Untitled 2017
Year created: 2017
Medium: Mixed media on canvas
Signed by the artist
Height (inches): 17
Width (inches): 15
This piece is framed.
Artist statement:
Through “Untitled-2017”, I am trying to re-imagine and organize deity mudras and feet in order to explore how gestures can convey meaning despite the absence of a vocal language. Personally, the usage of physical gesture becomes a significant component for communicating chaos and unity, parallel and divergence, a duality that is ever-present in human society.
Artist bio:
Ang Tsherin Sherpa masters the tradition of Tibetan thangka painting, having been trained in the art from a very young age under his father, Master Urgen Dorje, a renowned thangka artist from Ngyalam, Tibet. His work is concerned with contemporary issues of the Tibetan diasporic experience, displacement and loss of cultural heritage. Sherpa paints demons, spirits and deities from Tibetan tradition that function as an exploration of the detachment and estrangement of the Tibetan diaspora towards their homeland. In his work, Sherpa ‘interrogates the way we understand objects today as works of art or for devotion.’ ‘What happens,’ he says, ‘when a deity from an altar or a monastery is taken out of context? Is it still sacred or does it become secular? When an object or even a whole temple is placed in a museum, is one to engage with it as a sacred object or as a work of art?’ His work draws from the same principles illustrated by Warhol or Duchamp, by questioning the way we see and perceive things around us. Sherpa has been included in numerous groundbreaking exhibitions around the world including The
Scorching Sun of Tibet (2010) in Beijing, Tradition Transformed–Tibetan Artists Respond (2010) at
the Rubin Museum of Art in New York and Anonymous (2013/2014) at the Dorsky Museum at SUNY,
New Paltz and Queens Museum. He has
also completed residencies at the Sonoma Museum of Visual Art, Asian Art Museum of San
Francisco and the Dharamsala International Artists Workshop, and in 2010 was awarded the
Himalayan Fellowship at the Vermont Studio
Center. Tsherin currently lives and works in Northern California, USA.
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