Human Remains in Tibetan Material Religion: An object centered approach episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 29, 2020 · 32 MIN

Human Remains in Tibetan Material Religion: An object centered approach

from Tibetan Graduate Studies Seminar

Ayesha Fuentes shares a unique and interdisciplinary insight into art conservation of human remains in Tibetan material religion This talk introduces research into the use and instrumentalization of human remains in Tibetan material religion – as skull vessels, bone ornaments, thighbone trumpets and the double-sided skull drum – through an object-centered methodology that combines the technical documentation of examples in accessible museums and collections, visual cultural and iconographic study, and observations and interviews made during fieldwork across the Himalayas. This work attempts to describe an interpretive rubric for these objects within a dynamic continuity of material skill and knowledge transfer, social valorization and cultural historical narratives, and which is complementary to textual sources and/or practice-based religious education.

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Human Remains in Tibetan Material Religion: An object centered approach

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This episode was published on October 29, 2020.

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Ayesha Fuentes shares a unique and interdisciplinary insight into art conservation of human remains in Tibetan material religion This talk introduces research into the use and instrumentalization of human remains in Tibetan material religion – as...

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