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Heller places the artwork within its historic, social and religious context, utilising in situ photographs from Tibet. She incorporates the latest research material and features works of international renown as well as those that have never been published. The author approaches Tibetan art through the religious anthropology of Tibetan Buddhism. Tibetan Art will provide accessible and valuable information for both the specialist and the interested novice. The photographic content of the book is superb - detailed colour photographs of mandalas, paintings, gold pieces, metalwork and the stunning Tibetan landscape and architecture reveal the splendours of this long hidden country.
Tibetan Art: Tracing the Development of Spiritual Ideals and Art in Tibet 600-2000 A. D., Amy Heller, Jaca Books, Hardcover, 1999, 240 Pages, $75.00
Amy Heller is a Tibetologist and art historian. Born in New York, after graduation from Barnard College of Columbia University, she lived in Paris where she completed her studies in Tibetan history and Philology at Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (La Sorbonne) and Institut National de Langues et Civilisations Orientales. Since 1986 she is affiliated with the Paris Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique ( Tibetan studies unit 8155). Visiting Professor at the Centre for Tibetan Studies, Sichuan University, Chengdu, 2007-2012, her previous books include Tibetan Art, Tracing the Development of Art and Spirituality in Tibet, (1999, Jaca Book), and Early Himalayan Art (2008, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford). She was VIsiting Professor at La Sapienza, Roma, 2006 and 2008. Author of numerous articles on art, rituals and history of Tibet and the Himalayas, she has collaborated on exhibitions for Mus�e Guimet, Art Institute of Chicago, Abegg Foundation (Switzerland), the Tibetan Collection of The Newark Museum, and Museum for Ethnography of Zurich University. In parallel to her research, she travels extensively in Tibet and the Himalayas where she has worked on conservation projects. Under the auspices of the Swiss government, she supervised the roof conservation project of the ancient Ramoche Temple in Lhasa from 2004-2006.
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