Husk-E-News, August 2008
The William Benton Museum Fall Season opens with Sheila Rock's stunning photographs of Tibetan monks and 43rd annual art department faculty exhibition
July 31,
2008, Storrs, CT -- The William Benton Museum of Art opens its Fall season
with Sera: The Way of the Tibetan Monk, The Photographs of
Sheila Rock and The 43rd Annual Art Department Faculty
Exhibition. A reception honoring Ms. Rock and the faculty
artists will be Thursday, September 4, 5-7:30 pm. The public is
invited. Sheila Rock’s Sera: The Way
of the Tibetan Monk is only occasionally a photographic document of
the daily life of the Tibetan monks of the Sera Monastery at Bylakuppe in the
Mysore district of southern India. Rather, it is an extended visual essay on a
state of mind, with portraits of teenagers, children and elders who share a
common social and philosophical framework in Tibetan Buddhism. In 1998,
fashion and portrait photographer Sheila Rock visited Sera Monastery and was
struck by the quietude and serenity of both the place and the individuals. The
following year, with the abbot’s permission, she returned to photograph the
monks and novices, individually and in groups. She frequently used a plain
backdrop, which visually removed the figure from the context of the monastery
and focused attention intensely on the subject. Many of these portrait studies
appear to reveal the individual’s inner personality, yet because of the language
barrier, Ms. Rock “felt that [she] was working completely visually.”
Ms. Rock also photographed the monks in their rooms, at work, at
prayer, at play, and gathered at ceremonies. These photographs, with their
discursive subjects and more complex backgrounds, are artistically different
from the individual portraits. However, they still share one quality that is
expressive of the personality of the monks individually and collectively: They
each share a mutual joy for one another’s company and for the life that has been
chosen for them. Individual serenity is only implied in the larger numbers
presented in these images, but the collective satisfaction of the monks with
their monastic lives is complete. Ms. Rock’s images speak clearly of a Buddhist
adherence to a life of meditation and learning and the quest to overcome
humanity’s strife, anxiety, and venality. Artistically, she has created works
that are inspired and inspiring.
This exhibitions opens August 26 and
runs through December 19. A catalog, Sera:
The Way of the Tibetan Monk (Columbia University Press, New York,
2003) will be available for purchase in The Store at the
Benton. The 43rd Annual Art
Department Faculty Exhibition of painting, sculpture, illustration,
graphic design, printmaking, photography and installation art will be on view
September 2 - October 12. While much has changed in the art world since the
first exhibition in 1967, the technical excellence, modernity and artistic
quality of the works remain consistently engaging. The exhibition represents the
diversity of themes and styles of the modern art world while highlighting the
singularity of the artists’ visions. This year’s featured artists, both of whom
work on a large scale, are Professors Deborah (Muirhead) Dancy and Ray DiCapua.
Bound by Tradition and Religion: An
Exhibition of Tibetan Tangkas will serve as a complement to the
Mandala of Compassion created by monks of the Namgyal Monastery. This selection
of tangka paintings has come from the collections of Peter Polomski and Richard
Allen. Historically, the majority of Tibet's greatest art has been bound up with
religion, and the most prominent traditions include the scroll paintings of
various Buddhist and Bon divinities called tangkas. The most complex of these
are symmetrical depictions of many deities, and/or their symbolic
representations, organized around a central divinity. Very few Tibetans,
including monks, learned to read and write, and the tangka served as a pictorial
lesson that the observer could remember through painted icons rather than
printed script. Tangkas further provide an opportunity for meditation; by seeing
and concentrating on the figures painted on the tangka, the practitioner strives
for liberation or enlightenment through the act of beholding. After a
five-year hiatus, two monks from Namgyal Monastery will return to the Benton
November 4-9 to create a Sand Mandala of
Compassion in the East Gallery. The mandala will be ceremonially
dismantled on Sunday, December 7, at 2 pm. To complement and create a
context for the tangkas and the mandala, several photographs by Kenneth Hanson
has been chosen to hang in the East Gallery. They are from his book, Himalayan Portfolios: Journeys of the Imagination.
EVENTS
CALENDAR
Opening
Reception: Thurs,
Sept 4, 5-7:30 pm Wednesday Lunchtime
Gallery Talks, 12:1512:45 pm: Sept 17, 23, Oct 1, 15, Nov 5, 19, Dec
3 Weekend Tibetan Film Series, 2
pm: Oct 18 & 19, 25 & 26 / Nov 1 & 2, 15 & 16, 22
& 23 For film titles, visit www.thebenton.org. Sunday Afternoon Talk: "Landscape and Belief: A View
Camera in the Himalayas" with Kenneth Hanson / October 26, 3 pm;
Free For two decades Kenneth Hanson has been taking dramatic black-and-white
photographs of the Himalayas, particularly the regions from the Karakoram of
Pakistan to Kangchenjunga in eastern Nepal. The mountains provide a unique
experience—call it beauty, joy, terror, awe—that points beyond our reasonable
world and takes us to the boundary between life and death. This encounter is
woven into the beliefs of the people of the mountains, where a dialog is created
between an older shaman-led sacrificial culture and various forms of Tibetan
Buddhism. Increasingly, the modern world intrudes. Hanson will discuss these
interactions and show photographs from his book, Himalayan Portfolios. Sand Mandala Between Tuesday, November
4 and Sunday, November 9, Tibetan monks from Namgyal Monastery in Ithaca, New
York, will create a Sand Mandala of Compassion in the museum's East Gallery. It
will remain on view through Sunday, December 7, when the monks will return to
dismantle it in a sacred ceremony beginning at 2 pm. The William Benton Museum of Art, Connecticut's
Official State Art Museum, is located on the University of Connecticut campus,
245 Glenbrook Road, Unit 2140, Storrs, CT 06269-2140. Gallery hours are
Tuesday–Friday 10 am–4:30 pm, Saturday–Sunday 1–4:30 pm. The Store at the Benton
and Café Muse close at 4 pm each day. Ph 860.486.4520. Website:
www.thebenton.org The museum will be closed August 30–September 1 and
November 24–December 1.
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