The longevity goddess White Tara is shown in union with her consort (yab-yum). Here the female deity is dominant, which is rare.

This woodblock print was printed at the Derge Printing House in the Kham region of Southeastern Tibet (modern day Ganzi, Sichuan Province, PRC). Founded in 1729, it is one of the largest and most important producers of traditional Tibetan woodblock prints. The drawing/painting model (par tsa) for this set is attributed to the painter Tangla Tsewang (1902–1989), a Karma Gardri painting master and scholar from nearby Pelpung Monastery, as well as scribe and court painter to the Eleventh Situ incarnation.

Artwork Details

Title
White Tara and Consort
Medium
Xylograph, ink on paper
Origin
Derge Printing House, Derge, Kham Region, Eastern Tibet
Classification(s)
prints and drawings
Date
2000
Credit Line
Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art, Gift of Jane M. Farmer
Object number
SC2023.1.59
Published references
  • Thang lha Tshe dbang (Tangla Zewang 唐拉泽旺), Dkon mchog bstan ’dzin (Genqiu Dengzi 根秋登子), Sde dge par khang chos mdzod chen mo’i shing par lha ris dang de’i gsal bshad (Dege yinjing yuan Zangchuan muke banhua ji 德格印经院藏传木刻版画集) (Chengdu: Sichuan minzu chubanshe, 2002) no. 87.
  • Yang Jiaming (杨嘉铭), Dege yin jing yuan (德格印经院) (Chengdu, Dege Sutra-printing Academy, 2000) fig. 88, p. 99.

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Female Deities

Collection Type

Female bodhisattvas and tantric deities embody specific enlightened qualities such as wisdom, power, and protection, and can be peaceful or wrathful in appearance.

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Tantric Deities

Collection Type

Tantric deities personify various enlightened qualities and are the focus of esoteric religious practices (tantras) that aim to swiftly and radically transform one’s understanding of reality.

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Tibetan Regions

Region

Today, Tibetans primarily inhabit the Tibetan Plateau, situated between the Himalayan mountain range and the Indian subcontinent to the west, Chinese cultural regions to the east, and Mongolian cultural regions to the northeast. During the 7th to 9th century, Tibetan rulers expanded their empire across Central Asia, and established Buddhism as the state religion.

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