Hey there! How the heck are you today? Thanks for clicking by. Coffee's brewed and the virtual treats are extra buttery today. Soon as you fill your mug, I'll tell you about soft and creamy art in a different form.
You know how many places have ice festivals in the middle of winter, eh...like here in Canada the Quebec Winter Carnival is famous. There's Harbin in Northern China and other ice festivals in Finland, Russia, France, Alaska and Sapporo, Japan. Well in Tibet, they sculpt from butter - not ice.
For the last 400 years, Tibetan monks have been using butter from yak
milk to create large and intricate sculptures inspired by stories of
Buddha, animals or plants and putting them on display during the annual
Butter Lantern Festival. Unfortunately, the long and difficult process
of making these exquisite works of art has led to a shortage of gifted
lama artists.
The art of butter sculpting was born from the Tibetan tradition of
giving Buddha everything they got from their domestic animals. Nomadic
tribes with large herds of sheep and yaks regarded the first butter from
each dri (female yak) as the most precious one and offered it to
Buddhist monasteries, where monks shaped it into beautiful colored
sculptures and offered it to the enlightened ones.
The tradition was
passed on from generation to generation, and even today, dozens of
Tibetan monks work for months on a single giant butter sculpture that
must be ready before the 15th of January, the climax of celebrations of
the Tibetan New Year, as it mark the triumph of Lord Buddha over his six
non-Buddhist teachers who challenged him in performing miracles.
During
the day, people pray in temples and monasteries, and as the night comes
they head to Lhasa’s Barkhor Street to admire the hundreds of artistic
butter sculptures, ranging from just a few centimeters in size to
several stories high. This colorful display attracts millions of
tourists both from Tibet and abroad.
Lots of buttering up going on in Lhasa, eh. Imagine how much butter goes into a sculpture several stories high. I wonder if they check your luggage for toast as you go through customs at the airport?
See ya, eh!
Bob
Saturday, June 1, 2013
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