Tabo, a Lamp for the Kingdom: Early Indo-Tibetan Buddhist Art in
the Western Himalaya
(Klimburg-Salter, Deborah (text) & Jaroslav Poncar (photogs))
Reviewed by David McClelland
Library Journal
Vol.123 No.9
May 15, 1998
pp.82-83
    
COPYRIGHT 1998 Reed Publishing USA

            It is not at all unusual for Western art historians to write 
            detailed treatments of single European or American religious 
            structures. We are all familiar with many fine books on Chartres 
            Cathedral or the great religious foundation at Assissi. Yet few of 
            these exacting, room-by-room, image-by image studies have been 
            published on Asian religious buildings. Klimburg Salter (Univ. of 
            Vienna) has taken upon herself the task of recording and explaining 
            the beautiful and extraordinarily well preserved sculptures and wall 
            paintings of the Buddhist monastery of Tabo, in the Indian Himalayas 
            in the isolated valley of Spiti, near the Tibetan border. Built in 
            996 and renovated in 1042, the monastery was a focal point for the 
            diffusion of Buddhism from its birthplace in India up through the 
            high passes to Tibet. Studded with Sanskrit terms, the text is dry 
            but readable and will be more appreciated by readers with some 
            knowledge of Buddhism Oust as European art history presupposes a 
            knowledge of Christianity). The glorious color photographs provide a 
            feeling for the vitality and quality of the art in this ancient 
            monastery. A narrative chapter of Himalayan history covers the last 
            1300 years, and evocative black-and-white photographs chart the 
            European expeditions of the early 20th century that first described 
            Tabo. This book is a privileged look at an esoteric and inaccessible 
            outpost of a religious practice steadily disappearing. Recommended 
            for art and academic libraries.