
Today I am including a recital of Lo Weda Sangarawa by Ven. Dickwelle Upatissa Mahathera. He is accompanied by a harmonium, which provides a very atmospheric backdrop to the verses.
Read More: Lo Weda Sangarawa – Towards a Better World
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![]() Today I am including a recital of Lo Weda Sangarawa by Ven. Dickwelle Upatissa Mahathera. He is accompanied by a harmonium, which provides a very atmospheric backdrop to the verses. Read More: Lo Weda Sangarawa – Towards a Better World ![]() Traditional music from Lanna played by the Lanna Orchid Ensemble of Chiang Mai University which I have been using as background music to slideshows of the photographs I made in Chiang Mai. ![]() As anyone regularly following this blog will know I like to see old subjects from the Buddhist tradition reinvented and seen in a different light. It seems to me that this shows that the tradition is really alive and that it hasn’t degenerated, at least in places, into a “souvenir art”, with no vitality. I have Read More: Sofan Chan: Buddha Paintings ![]() Video of the China Disabled Peoples Performance Art Troupe, with their lead dancer, Tai Lihua, performing the famous Buddha with a Thousand Hands dance, recorded for German TV in 2008. Read More: Buddha With A Thousand Hands (2008) ![]() Here are some wonderful paintings by Virginia Peck of Buddha Heads. I am always happy to see artists reimagine the forms of the past, which shows that they are still alive and living in someone’s imagination. Read More: Virginia Peck’s Buddha Head Paintings ![]() Links to writings by Benoy K. Behl on all aspects of Indian art, including series on Buddhist art in its earliest and later stages, besides being a sensitive writer he is also a fine photographer also so that all the articles are richly illustrated. Read More: Articles on Indian Art by Benoy K. Behl ![]() Paw Oo Thett was one of the most famous Burmese painters in modern times, producing vibrant works in both watercolour on paper and oil paintings on canvas. Read More: Paintings by Paw Oo Thett ![]() Imagine a full-scale music video of traditional Mongolian folk artists, beautifully photographed and edited, and that is somewhere near what we have here. Read More: Gobi by Boerte (Mongolian Music Video) In this extract from a longer talk on Human Rights through Universal Resposibility H.H. The Dalai Lama discusses the evolution of gender roles through history and the need for a more feminine predominance in this day and age. Read More: Dalai Lama: The Role of the Feminine ![]() This film in an innovative look at the situation facing the children and their carers on the streets of Kampala in Uganda, and also follows them back to their homeland when the authorities remove them before the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in 2007. Read More: Karamoja City Warriors ![]() Four wonderful and heartfelt songs sung by the Tibetan Nun Ani Choying Drolma. The first is a music video recorded at the Swayambhunath Temple in Kathmandu, Nepal. The others were recorded live in Germany. Read More: Ani Choying Drolma – Four Songs ![]() For a number of years I lived in ashrams in India, before eventually retiring to Sri Lanka and ordaining. One of the things I remember most fondly about my time in the ashrams there was the Bhajan and Kirtan singing which generally took place each evening. Read More: Kashi Vishwanath Gange by Krishna Das ![]() A reprint of Bhante Dhammika’s excellent article on the river Ganges from his online Buddhism A-Z, showing how important the river was for the Buddha. Illustrated with some stills from the documentaries. Read More: The Ganges by Ven. S. Dhammika ![]() Here is a re-edited short appreciation of the Buddhacarita by Aśvaghoṣa by J.K. Nariman, which can be found in full on my Ancient Buddhist Texts website. Read More: J.K. Nariman: Aśvaghoṣa and the Buddhacarita ![]() This is a beautifully photographed and edited introduction to the many faces of Zen in contemporary Japan. Made in 2005 by Jon Braeley who directed and edited the film, and having haunting Shakuhachi flute music by Yohmei Blasdel, the documentary gives an overview of Zen practice and theory. Read More: The Zen Mind ![]() In this last episode we first visit Kashgar, the Town of Beautiful Tiles, which is where the Silk Road meets up again, after crossing the Taklamakan desert via two different roads. Read More: The Silk Road 12/12: Two Roads to the Pamirs ![]() The sculptors of the second century verify our hypothesis not only in what they reproduce and in what they imitate of the works of the past: we may maintain that they do this, also, indirectly, in what they innovate. ![]() This week the expedition, which has been traveling along the southern trade routes, doubles back and explores the area along the northern route. Read More: The Silk Road 11/12: Where Horses Fly Like the Wind ![]() This is a first and certainly very important, but purely material, verification of our hypothesis. There are proofs more subtle than the proof of statistics, which open up deeper views of the development of the ancient Buddhist school. Read More: The Beginnings of Buddhist Art by A. Foucher – IV ![]() The pipa (Chinese: 琵琶) is a four-stringed Chinese musical instrument, belonging to the plucked category of instruments. Sometimes called the Chinese lute, the instrument has a pear-shaped wooden body with a varying number of frets ranging from 12–26. Read More: Liu Fang playing the Pipa (Chinese Lute) |
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