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G. Roger Denson Cultural critic, essayist and novelist published with Parkett, Art in America and Bijutsu Techo
Feminism Awakens In Himalayan Buddhist Art and Meditation Posted: 01/31/2015 5:55 am EST Updated: 02/10/2015 7:29 am EST
This is Mahapajapati Gotami, the Buddha's stepmother and aunt and the first woman to request and receive ordination from the Buddha. It is one detail from the mural, with two other details continued in the two photos immediately below. In those photos we see six of the first Buddhist nuns (bikshunis) who followed Mahapajapati Gotami's example and
here accompany her in making preparations for meditation. It is believed that the Dongyu Gatsal Ling Nunnery and Temple founded by Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo is the first Himalayan Buddhist temple to have installed depictions of these nuns. This rendering, and most of the work in this article, was done by the Tibetan artist-in-exile, Kalsang
Damchoe and his assistants and students from the Kalsang Tibetan Traditional Art of Thangka Painting studio.
In mid-January the British-born Buddhist nun, Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo -- the closest thing we have to a
Thomas Merton figure today -- spoke before a sold-out audience at the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Arts
in Manhattan. The nun of 50 years is known not only for having spent twenty years of her life meditating
in a cave, but for her founding of the Dongyu Gatsal Ling Nunnery for young Buddhist nuns in the Kangra
Valley of the Indian state Himachal Pradesh, a two-hour drive from the Tibetan exile community of
Dharamsala. The topic was Jetsunma's approach to visualization in meditation and the overall place of art
in its embodiment and enhancement of dharma.
A continuation of the Dongyu Gatsal Ling Nunnery Temple mural shown above, with this depicting two of the first Buddhist nuns (bikshunis) who are historically reputed to have followed Mahapajapati Gotami. Painted by Kalsang Damchoe and The Kalsang Tibetan Traditional Art of Thangka Painting studio.
The audience revealed themselves in their questions to be largely enthusiastic Americans, many no doubt
who embrace or are considering embracing Buddhism as the guiding principle for their lives. But there
were also those like myself who are neither Buddhist nor a practitioner of meditation but were there
because the visualization in question regards the art of Himalayan Buddhism -- or Tibetan Buddhism as
it's more often, if narrowly, called. In my case, as a student of world cultures and in particular of belief
systems, mythologies and mythopoetics, I'm interested in why a faith and artistic sensibility that is so
spectacularly mythological in an archaic sense has such an appeal to so many Americans brought up in a
culture of modernism. Most of the new Buddhists I meet are highly rational individuals, yet they meditate
seriously and serenely with the aid of supernatural, even monstrous figurative, sometimes barely
humanoid, iconography that include primary- and secondary-colored entities, some with six or eight arms
-- buddhas, bodhisattvas, yogis and hybrid beings, some even gods and goddesses -- that resemble
characters we today see in comic books and screen animations. Even in the centuries of their elaboration
in Hinduism and Buddhism one-to-two millennia ago, they must have seemed too unbelievable by the
more rational earthbound devotees of Buddhism, especially those concerned with the philosophy of ethics
and compassion, to be considered as anything more than an artist's ingenious escape from the mundane
pictorial constrictions of ordinary life.
A continuation of the same Dongyu Gatsal Ling Nunnery Temple mural shown in the two above photos and depicting four of the first Buddhist nuns (bikshunis) reputed to have followed Mahapajapati Gotami. Painted by Kalsang Damchoe and The Kalsang Tibetan Traditional Art of Thangka Painting studio.
Himalayan Buddhism is particularly possessed of a hyper-magical pantheon of allegorical protagonists
and antagonists especially difficult to reconcile with the more Zen-like principles of many Mahayana
Buddhists and which place value on conceptual, perceptual and physical emptiness, stillness, and even an
art of poverty over the wealth of chromatic and gilded embellishments of the Himalayan art of spirituality.
The Himalayan taste for vivid, some might say electric color, combined with the erotism of certain of its
sculptures and paintings, seems especially out of sync with the Zen-like minimalism of its more famous
artist and intellectual practitioners. I'm referring to such seminal figures in the arts as Phillip Glass,
Meredith Monk, Laurie Anderson and scores of others like them. Then, too, it is to it's credit that
Himalayan Buddhist devotional art and meditative visualization, like much of the Indian art from which it
derives, welcomes the erotic character in art. South-Asian civilization as a whole requires no Freud or
Bataille to instruct them on how and why erotism cannot be deleted from the history of religion, however
much the world's othodoxies would wish it away. In Himalayan sacred art, erotism, like all other
visualizations, activates the mind's eye -- the eye of inward apperception -- to transform our external
perception of our own presumed singular and disparate realities into bridges to endless other
individualities that together build the continuity that binds us as a whole.
Young women come from Tibet, Bhutan and Nepal to the northern border region of Himachal Pradesh, India, to pursue a vocation as Buddhist nuns in the Drukpa (Dragon) lineage. The temple sanctuary seen here has only recently been filled with newly commissioned art rendered in the traditional Himalayan Buddhist style, yet made radically new in
promoting the resilience and self-reliance of women in community. Here the young nuns are overlooked by the presiding statues of Mitrukpa Buddha, also known as Akshobya Buddha, Shakyamuni Buddha and Tara (enlarged below).
But discussions of magical realism, surrealism and the art of spectacle and erotism are not what concerns the impressively serene and pragmatic Jetsunma, as she is called by everyone to her apparent satisfaction. Even when discussing a topic like visualization, she remains focused on the liberation attained in the process, not the abstract or structural, the psychological or the mystical methods and effects. Her priorities are rooted in the social implications of Buddhism, which is attested by her early life focus. It was at the age of 20 in 1964 that she became one of the first Westerners to be ordained as a Buddhist nun. Thanks to at least two biographies written about her since, she has acquired the reputation and recognition of delivering hard financial and concrete results in a career devoted to the advancement of young women. Hers is the kind of character that proved itself capable of navigating through all the
cultural, ideological and political differences that obscure right living, or at least the pathways to right living that manage to run through the bureaucracy and prejudice characterizing life in the northern border region of Himachal Pradesh, India.
Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo, founder of the Dongyu Gatsal Ling Nunnery and Temple, sits at the right foreground with the many young nuns she has surrounded with the commemorative and celebrative art of the female Buddhist principle. A woman who sees adversity spurring her to challenge and alleviate it, she has openly professed that her motivation for founding the monastery has been the forty years of Buddhist practice, during which she witnessed women neglected by their spiritual communities while being
forbidden to receive the highest teachings.
We should remember that despite the region's idyllic, unspoiled scenery, this is a territory bordering the
new Chinese Tibet, a country being gutted of its cultural legacy and governed with an abrasively hostile
Chinese colonialism intent on the complete assimilation of Tibet within the Chinese cultural landscape.
Authorities here must also contend with the insidious trafficking of young girls that transgresses India's
borders with Bhutan and Nepal, two nations from which several of her young nuns have emigrated to seek
out the DGL sanctuary. Yet despite the region's political and legal elusiveness and complexity, somehow
this woman who spent fifty years practicing meditation, has raised the funding to build and maintain a
bricks-and-mortar monastery for women largely of Himalayan descent. The name 'Dongyu Gatsal Ling' is
apt, meaning as it does 'Delightful Garden of the Authentic Lineage'. Yes, ideological competition
interrupts even the serenity of Buddhists, at least those caught up with the rivalry of lineages both
between and within the Theravada and Mahayana schools. Even Jetsunma isn't above showing loyalty to
the Drukpa Kagyu lineage to which she belongs. With "Druk" meaning dragon, the lineage can be seen
literally weaving throughout the monastery's decoration and art in the sculpted and painted dragons that
twist around columns of the DGL temple.
The Mahayana reverence for the female buddhist deity and bodhisattvadevi is thought to have started with the cult of Tara in the 8th century. Tara has been called the mother of all Buddhas, since Buddhas are born from wisdom, of which Tara is the embodiment.
While Jetsunma is helping the Tibetans in exile to preserve the legacy of their traditional sacred art -- for which she has commissioned the renowned master Tibetan thangka painter-in-exile, Kalsang Damchoe, the founder of the Kalsang Tibetan Traditional Art of Thangka Painting studio in India -- the charismatic nun is attracting attention for what she and Mr. Damchoe are introducing to the Himalayan tradition while setting the art of the DGL sanctuary apart. And that is the mythopoetic radicalism of the art installed -- 'mythopoetic' meaning the making of new myths. For over the last few years, Jetsunma has commissioned the creation and installation of art work that emphasizes the power of the female principle
and presence in art, life and devotion. I should here clarify that my discussion of this history in mythological terms does not mean that I am using the term 'myth' as synonymous with 'untruth' or 'fiction', as is mistakenly done in colloquial usage. Myth is a language and principle, or complex of principles, that cannot be deemed true or false, fact or fiction. Myth is another word for a model or an idea of things, rather than a description of things in the world. More concretely, myth is a model for living, not a mirror of life. And in this sense Buddhist mythopoetics is the making or remaking of myths modeling right living in contemporary society. In the DGL nunnery the myths of Tara, Vajrayoginī, Mahākāla, and their many aspects, stand in for living qualities within us all, yet which require enhanced living (whether through meditation, right living, compassion, charity, activism, and ideally all of the above). Even the wrath of a deity such as Mahākāla has a right place when considered as a protection of the righteous and downtrodden -- which is why Mahākāla appears prominently in the murals at the DGL shrine.
Green Tara surrounded by 11 of the 21 Taras that visualize aspects of the Buddhist dharma, including peaceful, semi-wrathful and wrathful aspects. Painted by Kalsang Damchoe and The Kalsang Tibetan Traditional Art of Thangka Painting studio.
It was apparent that the seasoned Buddhists in the audience at the Rubin Museum on that freezing January night were as unprepared as I for the mythopoetic character of the art being introduced to them. For no one who has studied Himalayan art would expect the brand of feminism that Jetsunma introduced quietly and without polemics in the slide projections. Jetsunma herself has expressed the character of her mythopoetics. "Our temple is at the heart of the Dongyu Gatsal Ling Nunnery Since this is a Nunnery, the inner decoration of the temple reflects female embodiments of Enlightenment - Tara, Vajrayogini and so on - and this is especially emphasized in the exquisite murals around the walls and the rounded stained glass windows. There are walls dedicated to senior nun saints surrounding Shakyamuni Buddha and Mahaprajapati who was the Buddha's stepmother and the first nun. These are rarely portrayed in Buddhist art. Also there is the great yogin Milarepa surrounded by his female disciples. When people enter they immediately feel a sense of peace together with gentle but powerful feminine energy: they feel awed and uplifted."
Two Red Taras and a White Tara, three of the 21 aspects of Tara, among whose visualization in meditation promote the self-pacification of tribulations, the overcoming of obstacles, taming of hostilities, and in the case of white Tara, the cleansing of the body and mind of impurities and disease. Painted by Kalsang Damchoe and The Kalsang Tibetan
Traditional Art of Thangka Painting studio.
Perhaps we all should have expected an espousal of feminism to come from Jetsunma. After all, she
became a Buddhist nun just when her native England and the West as a whole was undergoing a radical feminization of society. Why shouldn't feminism now be brought to fruition among Buddhists? They are,
after all, among the most civilized and democratic peoples the world has known, and it should be no more remarkable to witness feminism manifest in a Himalayan sacred art that has long depicted female deities, yoginis, and bodhisattvadevi, than it is in the art of the West. Yet remarkable it is, and for the reason that the historical characterization of the very entities that Jetsunma commissions for her art were originally
designed to placate the patriarchal sensibility written into and legislating Buddhist social structures.
A White Tara surrounded by the remaining 21 Taras (see the two images immediately above) that visualize aspects of the Buddhist dharma, including peaceful, semi-wrathful and wrathful aspects.
Painted by Kalsang Damchoe and The Kalsang Tibetan Traditional Art of Thangka Painting studio.
There is also the revelation for this writer that my own expectation not to find feminism in such a
traditional religious environment was an impediment arising from my own eurocentric world view. And
once I realized this, there was nothing to keep me from seeing feminism aligning with Himalayan
Buddhism and its art. For despite being European, eurocentrism by all appearances did not keep
Jetsunma from finding the heart of feminism beating within the very center of the Buddhist practice of
meditation. But of course she would find it there. For the discovery, spread and eventual ubiquity of
meditation is arguably the first democratic revolution in history. The world has forgotten that meditation
was developed by middle-class Hindus who posed themselves in defiance of the self-aggrandizing
practices of the Brahmin oligarchy and priests in India some three thousand years ago. They had
discovered that the simple practice of looking within oneself liberates the individual -- any and all
individuals -- from the dictates of an imposed authority over a spirituality that is for everyone to legislate
for herself through meditation. And one key to that spirituality is the visualization of the self possessed of
all the attributes of a buddha and a god. It only follows that for the individual accustomed to identifying as
feminine in gender to naturally depart into her visualization of divinity from a female avatar.
Two White Taras. The Tibetan artist-in-exile who painted this and all the other murals pictured in this article, Kalsang Damchoe, the founder of Kalsang Tibetan Traditional Art of Thangka Painting in India, describes Tara as, "a female meditational deity who is regarded as the embodiment of all the buddhas' enlightened activities. She is also sometimes
referred to as the mother of all the buddhas and is associated with pristine cognition and compassion."
What's important here for humanity as a whole (and what we who demand a more avant-garde and
abrasive art of dissent have to come to terms with), is that the new Himalayan convent that Jetsunma has
built and outfitted with art is the kind of cultural environment that is necessarily traditional and
indigenous, and thereby welcoming to the young novitiates who gather everyday to study, meditate and
perform the rituals around which the Buddhist monastic calendar revolves. Most importantly, the nunnery
that receives these women of a Himalayan heritage -- many who flee the many faces of East- and South-
Asian authoritarianism and the subsuming corporate globalism which together threaten to annihilate their
heritage -- supplies them with an iconography of resilient and active feminine character aspects to
reinforce their conviction and practice as women students, professionals, artists and Buddhists.
Stained glass artist Tsunma Jamyang Donma of Yulokod Studios with Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo at Tibet House in NYC, standing in front of two of her designs in the exhibition, TENDREL - �������� - Interconnections, curated by Chrysanne Stathacos, and installed permanently at the Dongyu Gatsal Ling Nunnery, as seen in the photo immediately
below.
Jetsunma's project is no less than one of liberating the feminist aspects that lay dormant within these
myths and icons for centuries. A good portion of the figures that decorate the temple and study halls
derive from the 4th century CE, when the feminine principle first gains acceptance in the Mahayana
traditions that Himalayan Buddhism partakes in. It was around the 6th century that the goddess Tara,
who dominates the DGL temple in the number of her aspects represented, appears as the region's female
personification of Kannon, who was before this always represented as male in India and China, where he
was only just being introduced. There was a feminist activism attendant to their assimilation into
mainstream society even in these early centuries, as Kannon in Japan and China very quickly became
represented as a female bodhisattvadevi and after that as the Goddess of Mercy and Harmony.
Throughout Buddhist Asia, there was a renewed assimilation of the female principle that originally
departed from, or was conferred by, the male bodhisattva and deity. For example, Tara's origins have her
as no more than Kannon's wife.
The nuns of the Dongyu Gatsal Ling Nunnery surrounded by murals of the 21 Taras and stained glass windows depicting Taras by artist Tsunma Jamyang Donma of Yulokod Studios.
For this viewer, the renewed representation of real women grounded in history yet neglected or
underestimated by historical accounts is the most substantial contribution to the visualization of women
active in Buddhism. The six figures pictured at the beginning of this post are attributed with being
historical, that is if we count the legendary Mahapajapati Gotami, the Buddha's stepmother and aunt who
is attributed with being the first woman to receive ordination from the Buddha. On the walls of the
nunnery we find her accompanied by five other nuns, the first to have followed her example.
Are Jetsunma, her nuns and artists achieving something truly radical and unprecedented at DGL? In the
context of tradition-laden India, Nepal and Bhutan, they are, For however many exceptional women in the
region of the Indian-Pakistani-Bangladeshi subcontinent have emerged in recent decades as national and
international leaders, it is their very exceptionalism that informs us that not enough women benefit from
their example because inspiration without means are inert for not being able to sustain life through the
kind of bond the mutually beneficial partnerships produce. Women require the opposite of exceptionalism
to build a society in their image. They need women in great numbers to bring change. Jetsunma's
emphasis on the female form in meditation is productive because she also supplies the means -- the
housing, clothing, food, books -- the protection -- that the young women cannot find on their own amid
the conservative male populace and who are making headlines regularly for their treatment of women. We
need only recall the Hindu mobs in India who burned down the movie sets for Deepa Mehta's Academy-
award nominated film, Water. And this for a story that did no more than plead for a humanist and
compassionate end to the archaic Bhahmin practices of grown and often old men taking child brides; of
forcing widows into isolation and abandonment upon their husbands' deaths, and the desperate
prostitution to which the most desperate resort.
Vajra Yogini, a semi-wrathful protective entity painted by Kalsang Damchoe and The Kalsang Tibetan Traditional Art of Thangka Painting studio.
Jetsunma herself has recounted obstacles imposed on her for her gender, "When I first came to India I lived in a monastery with 100 monks. I was the only nun... I think that is why I eventually went to live by myself in a cave... The monks were kind, and I had no problems of sexual harassment or troubles of that sort, but of course I was unfortunately within a female form. They actually told me they prayed that in my next life I would have the good fortune to be reborn as a male so that I could join in all the monastery's activities. In the meantime, they said, they didn't hold it too much against me that I had this inferior rebirth in the female form. It wasn't too much my fault." In fact the gender bias has only made her more resolved to doing her part in ending it, "I have made a vow
to attain Enlightenment in the female form - no matter how many lifetimes it takes".
Palden Lhamo, a wrathful protector painted by Kalsang Damchoe and The Kalsang Tibetan Traditional Art of Thangka Painting studio.
Jetsunma in collaboration with her artists and donors are reversing the historical equation of gender
prominence to bolster the confidence of her charges. With the exception of a handful of paintings and
sculptures representing the Buddha and other male bodhisattva and yogis, such as Milarepa, who are
significant in Buddhist history, the walls are covered and the niches filled with scores of women's sacred
figurative imagery and statues overlooking the study and temple areas.
Detail of Palden Lhamo, a wrathful protector painted by Kalsang Damchoe and The Kalsang Tibetan Traditional Art of Thangka Painting studio.
Given that the art of the DGL temple and monastery is of a traditional nature, it stimulates comparison
with the visualization of women in the artistic traditions of the world's religions and faith systems in
general, both those living and dead. Which is why I close this post with a range of iconography that have
promoted and still promote strong feminine principles and presences to compare with the DGL
iconography of deities, saints, bodhisattvadevis, yoginis, and real women religious.
Mahākāla, a wrathful protector, the fierce and powerful emanation of Avalokiteshvara, the bodhisattva of compassion, painted by Kalsang Damchoe and The Kalsang Tibetan Traditional Art of Thangka Painting studio.
--Special thanks go to Venerable Aileen Barry, assistant to Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo for the images and
information regarding the Dongyu Gatsal Ling nunnery installations and the names and
characterizations of the subjects depicted. And thanks to Chrysanne Stathacos and the Dongyu Gatsal
Ling Initiatives for setting up the correspondences necessary for this article.
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