Our Land, Our People: A Reflection of Tibetan Buddhist Space in Contemporary Art

Auteurs

  • Jay Daugherty

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.2218/himalaya.2021.6589

Mots-clés :

contemporary art, Tibet, phenomenology, space, Tenzing Rigdol

Résumé

This article illustrates how a contemporary Tibetan artist disrupts expectations in the creation of his political art. Utilizing Robert Smithson’s dialogic of site and non-site, Tenzing Rigdol’s 2011 site-specific installation Our Land, Our People is interpreted as a reenactment of a culturally specific historical practice of moving space. This approach shares important similarities to historical cases in which physical spaces were relocated to and within Tibet, allowing for the application of 20th century theories arising in the spatial turn to contemporary Tibetan art.

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Publiée

15-nov.-2021

Comment citer

Daugherty, J. (2021). Our Land, Our People: A Reflection of Tibetan Buddhist Space in Contemporary Art. HIMALAYA - The Journal of the Association for Nepal and Himalayan Studies, 40(2), 50–58. https://doi.org/10.2218/himalaya.2021.6589

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Research Articles

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