000 01627nam a2200217Ia 4500
001 2874
003 OSt
005 20250303115501.0
008 230509s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9781906576561
040 _c--
245 0 _aKesang Lamdark: Knock, Knock
260 _bRossi & Rossi;
_c2018
300 _a103p;
520 _aExhibition catalog, 22 Sept- 24 Nov 2018. With edgy humour, Kesang Lamdark mixes Western pop idols and Chinese readymades with Buddhist deities to comment on the erosion of traditional values, language and customs in his native Tibet. The artist juxtaposes classic Tibetan art and imagery with the crass consumer culture imported by Chinese tourists aching to find spiritual meaning in their lives now ruled more by consumerism than communism. The Han Chinese have been destroying the heart of Buddhism, both wittingly through forced Sinosation, restrictions on the use of the Tibetan language, the exile of the Dalai Lama and the occupation of Tibet - and unwittingly, through the introduction of modern bullet trains that now scar Tibet's virgin plateau, bringing pollution, fast food, discos and karaoke bars. Lamdark's work explores the transformation of his spiritual homeland into a kind of Disneyland, pairing seemingly antithetical images, such as Kiss's Gene Simmons with the ancient Tibetan state oracle Dorje Drakden. 'In Tibetan folklore, if you stick your tongue out and it's red, you're telli.
546 _aEnglish; Chinese
650 _aN4390-5098 Visual Arts- Exhibitions
651 _aTibet
_97269
700 _a Lamdark, Kesang
_97270
942 _cBK
_2lcc
999 _c2874
_d2874