Portrait of the Indian Monk Atisha

Tibet

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 964

Atisha was the abbot of Vikramashila monastery in northern India, one of the mahaviharas (great monasteries) that granted the learned degree of pandita, here indicated by his yellow hat. In 1042, he traveled to Tibet at the invitation of the western Tibetan king Yeshe ‘Od to help purify Buddhist practices there. Atisha’s authority was rooted in his lineage, an unbroken chain of pupil-guru relationships going back to the Buddha himself. This portrait of Atisha, among the oldest preserved, shows him as an enlightened being with golden skin and a halo, seated on an elaborate jeweled throne. His right hand is held in the teaching gesture and he holds a bound palm-leaf manuscript in his left. The thangka can be dated from a contemporary inscription on the reverse naming known historical figures.

Portrait of the Indian Monk Atisha, Distemper and gold on cloth, Tibet

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