
A portion of the museum's
general operating funds for this fiscal year has been provided through
grants from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.
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Sacred
Art of Tibet: Making a Mandala to be Broadcast Online from the Williams
College Museum of Art
April
15-May 3, 2003, at http://www.wcma.org/
Click
here for the live link to the Tibetan monks and the sand mandala
Download publicity images now
Williamstown,
MAWilliams College Museum of Art (WCMA) will present a live online
broadcast of its exhibition Sacred
Art of Tibet: Making a Mandala. Two Tibetan monks will perform the
sacred ritual of creating a sand mandala in the museum's rotunda. Visitors
to WCMA's website (http://www.wcma.org/) will be able to view live images
of the monks as they lay millions of grains of colored sand into place
to form the mandala. This online broadcast will take place during the
monks' entire three-week residency, April 15-May 3, 2003.
"The live feed offers a great enhancement to the overall impact of
the mandala," says Associate Director John Stomberg. "It will
never take the place of experiencing the mandala in person, but will allow
our visitors the opportunity to keep up with the monks' daily progress."
Exhibitions of Tibetan Culture
Sacred Art of Tibet: Making a Mandala is one of the highlights
of WCMA's current schedule. Visitors will be able to see the monks as
they work on the mandala during museum hours. When the museum is closed,
online visitors will be able to view an archive of still images from the
monks' previous efforts.
The two Tibetan monks are from the Namgyal Monastery in Ithaca, NY, which
is well known for its creation of sand mandalas. Formed from traditional
iconography, a mandala symbolizes the Buddhist ideals of universal wisdom
and compassion. Soon after the creation of the mandala, the monks will
perform a traditional sand dispersal ceremony on Saturday, May 3 at 2
p.m. During this ceremony, the sand will be swept up from the mandala
and deposited in the Green River in Williamstown. Online visitors will
be able to view part of this ceremony as well.
The museum also is also presenting Tibet: Mountains and Valleys, Castles
and Tents through August 3, 2003. This exhibition contains selections
of Tibetan art and artifacts, including official regalia, noble jewelry,
castle furnishings, horse gear, and weapons. These objects, from the Newark
Museum's collection, are shown in conjunction with photographs taken by
some of the earliest Western visitors to Tibet, documenting the country's
terrain and traditional lifestyles.
Publicity Photographs Available
Publicity images for this exhibition and others can be found at www.wcma.org/press.
The Williams
College Museum of Art is open Tuesday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m., and Sunday, from 1 to 5 p.m. Admission is free and the museum
is wheelchair accessible.
Contact: Jonathan Cannon, Public Relations Coordinator
413.597.3178; WCMA@williams.edu
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