The New Kadampa Tradition is an international association of Mahayana Buddhist meditation centers that follow the Kadampa Buddhist tradition founded by Venerable Geshe Kelsang Gyatso.
Images of the Buddha through 2 millennia

It wasn't until several centuries after he'd come and gone that representations of the Buddha appeared. Until then, the the Awakened One was represented by his absence—footprints, an umbrella shading an empty throne. Once his image appeared, however, an art form flourished for nearly two millennia and continues to this day.
At the new Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Gallery of Buddhist Sculpture at London's Victoria and Albert Museum, "47 masterworks, culled from the museum's renowned Asian collections, trace the Buddha's portrayal from the 2nd to 19th centuries, in places as diverse as India, Java and Japan," we read at Time.com.
If you can't make it to London, you can see several of the images at the museum's website. For a nice review by British artist Antony Gormley in the Financial Times, click here. (Gormley's artwork appeared in the the Fall 2002 issue of Tricycle in a special section called "The Body: Vehicle for Awakening.")
[Image: The Buddha competes in an Archery Contest. Java, 700-800 AD. Museum no. IM 172-1926. Victoria & Albert Museum, London]








Latest Blog Comments
Regarding the stress suffered by the Communist Party of China's colonial security forces, the question arises should...
The eminent Sakya scholar Tenpai Gyaltsan Dhongthog wrote in his "Earth Shaking Thunder of True Word":
"If one...
As long as people are able to retain and strengthen their innate humanity, extropy will not be a problem.
I'm not convinced that contemplative traditions will be lost in the face of advances in genetic, pharmacological,...